Tagged: nutrition

October 12th, 2009

Matching Nutrition with Training: An Athlete’s Paradox

Today’s post is from guest blogger Miki, who writes for RunReviews.com. In this article, she writes about the balance of eating and training for athletes of all levels.

Athletes have a very serious chore in the matter of matching their diet with their training frequency. A healthy diet must be one of their main concerns. In extent, a healthy eating program right before workout must be closely looked upon. An eating program ensures performance during exercising and comfort afterward.

The balance between eating time and training time must be carefully kept. A golden rule is not to exercise with a full stomach. It’s not desirable; it’s not good for your body and neither for your performances. Food remnants may cause stomach aches and nausea and will cease energy supplies.

A workout session must be conceived wisely. This implies also rationalizing the steps prior to training itself. In the preamble of this kind of physical effort you must build up a nutrition schedule to supervise your meals one hour, two hours, three or four hours before the effort. Time depends on what you choose to eat in order to make sure the digestion process is completed by the time you start exercising. You should experiment a few times prior to workouts to determine what hours work best for you.

Waking up early in the morning can be a challenge. If this applies for you too, you should make an effort and have your pre-exercise meal at a proper time. Still, if the race is early in the morning and you don’t succeed to wake up at an appropriate time, you can eat or drink something easily to digest. Liquids are a better choice as they go easier in the stomach. This way you get right nutrition and no discomfort.

Always have in mind that glucose is an important energy source and a metabolism intermediate. Its contribution to brain activity is of no match. For sports, glucose income is sine-qua-non, which is why foods like fruit, pasta, bread and liquids are recommended before exercise.

On the race day it is best not to experiment with neither new shoes nor new foods. You cannot anticipate how your body reacts and you don’t want to have a bad surprise. So you need to know in advance how to match time, how and what food you need and the energy fuel that works for you.

If there is only one hour separating you from the race, you should have liquids at hand (and not just any kind). Choose fresh juice, like orange or tomato juice and fresh fruit such as pears, watermelon or grapes.

If you still have two hours left, go for some fresh fruit, vegetable juice, yogurt (but only low fat) or starchy food like bread or bagels. Do not overload your stomach; it will not have enough time to digest and it will kick you back when you at least expect it.

If there are three or four hours left, the range of products you can choose from is more various and you may be picky between fresh fruit, fresh vegetable juice, starches, cereals, low fat milk, yogurt, cheese or even some peanut butter.

Energy bars or sport drinks may give you energy, but they don’t work for everyone so make sure you test them before the actual race.

Don’t forget that every body reacts differently and what works for you may not work for the one sitting next to you. Find out what your body’s needs are, respect them and be in permanent watch over changes that may occur.

This article is a guest post by Miki, writer for runreviews.com, a site where you can read all kinds of treadmills reviews.

October 19th, 2007

Why Don’t Family Restaurants Make Their Nutritional Info Available?!

All right, I’ve got a little beef with the “family” restaurants—Applebee’s, Chili’s, Cheddar’s, TGI Friday’s, Olive Garden, Zio’s. Of course, I’m trying to be a gazelle (a Dave Ramsey term) and be mindful of what I eat, so when Chris and I decided to go on a date for dinner, I raced to the restaurant’s web site to look up the menu’s nutritional information. What did I find? Nadda.

WTF? Every fast food restaurant (and even some sit-down places) I can think of has their nutritional information posted:

And since those family restaurants don’t have nutritional information on their sites, here’s what I could find thanks to other health-conscious consortiums:

And if there are any restaurants I’ve missed, here’s an index of restaurants with links to nutritional info. I guess, in this age of information, I don’t understand why I can’t have the nutritional information from the franchise restaurants I love. It just seems silly that fast food restaurants can have their nutritional info available while these other restaurants don’t. Don’t they know that obesity is an epidemic in this country? Some of us want to go out to dinner prepared for the decision ahead of us, for crying out loud!

October 17th, 2007

Does Measuring My Food = Insanity?

I’m not sure if it was the nutrition seminar last week, but this week I’m on this nutrionista kick. I’ve been following the Abs Diet with mediocrity all summer—which means I followed the plan during the day and quasi-pig out in the evening. This week I am not only following the plan as tediously as possible, but I bought a food scale to measure my turkey and cheese (and Baked Cheetos).

And this is the rundown of my eating plan while I’m at work:

  • Breakfast: Fiber One bar (150) + hard-boiled egg (70)
  • Mid-morning snack: V8 (35) + 25 almonds (210)
  • Lunch: Turkey (45) and cheese (80) BBQ sauce (50) sandwich (bread–100) + fruit cup (70) + Baked Cheetos (65)
  • Mid-afternoon snack: Apple (75) + peanut butter (188)

Then in the evenings we’re eating some whole-grain carbs and some good protein. Of course, last night I sort of ruined my day with a sugar cookie at Churchill’s (but hey, I was working hard on that thesis).

So now I’m watching The Biggest Loser, and I’m glad that I resisted the urge to stop at McDonald’s for chicken McNuggets and fries on the way home…but something fried sounds good. I still have my mid-evening snack left…I’ll have to raid my cabinets for something yummy—but healthy.

EDIT I gave in and went to Sonic for cheddar bites for 360 calories. But they were SO worth it!

Oh, and thanks to Taryn for the heads up about the Champion bra sale (and if you buy a bra, be sure to get the discount code from Taryn’s post—it saved me $8 plus shipping)! I bought two for the price of one! Oh, happy day, indeed!

October 11th, 2007

Highlights from the Nutrition for Runners Seminar

Tonight I attended the Nutrition for Runners Seminar at the CoxHealth Meyer Center. Here are the highlights from David Dade’s presentation:

  • Main Point Performance is directly related to nutrition.
  • Training increases the heat your body produces thus increasing the need for nutrients.
  • The right training diet provides energy at the right time in the right amount.
  • Your diet should follow the 4:1, carbs to protein ratio:
    • Carbs: 60–70%
    • Protein: 15–25%
    • Fat: Less than 25%

Training Diet

Carbs: We can only store 1600–2100 calories in glycogen stores (carbs breakdown to glucose which are stored as glycogen). There is no limit to how much energy we can store in fat. We get our running energy from our muscle glycogen. Training increases our glycogen stores and teaches our bodies to store it efficiently.

Protein: Used for muscle repair. Eating a lot of protein will not make you bulk up.

Fat: Don’t be afraid of it.

Pre-competition / Event Day

  • Practice your nutrition during your training. Don’t try anything new near the event.
  • Eat complex carbs and lean meats.
  • If you have a nervous stomach, drink liquids like chocolate milk, Ensure, and Boost.
  • Drink 16–20 oz. 2–3 hours before the event.
  • Drink 7–10 oz. 10–20 minutes before the race.

During the Event

  • Again, practice your nutrition before the event.
  • Ingest 120–240 calories/hour
  • Start replenishing as soon as the event starts.
  • Ingest sodium with liquids.
  • Don’t only rely on water.

Recovery Nutrition

  • Replace energy, fluids, and electrolytes.
  • Eat within 30 minutes of finishing.
  • Eat again in 2 hours.
  • It takes 20–24 hours to replace glycogen and the first few hours after your run are the most important

Those are the highlights, and the seminar further convinces me that runners are awesome. We have no dignity whatsoever—I mean what other group of people can have such a candid discussion about “runner’s trots” and bowel movements?

 

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