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#1 (permalink) |
Happy as a hippo
Location: Southern California
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After a workout.
So after a workout, I get really hungry. I know that's a good thing because it means my body was working, but my question is what is the best thing to eat after my workout? I usually crave steak or something equally meaty
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"if anal sex could get a girl pregnant i'd be tits deep in child support" Arcane |
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#2 (permalink) |
Poo-tee-weet?
Location: The Woodlands, TX
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well after the workout its usually good to drink a lot... and eat protien and carbohydrates to replenish your energy
im a fan of hard or soft boiled eggs... lotsa protien... and yum.. usually after a workout im not hungry for an hour or 2... then I get starving all of a sudden
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-=JStrider=- ~Clatto Verata Nicto |
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#6 (permalink) |
The Northern Ward
Location: Columbus, Ohio
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That's normal. When you're working out you have a period where your muscles immediately try to fix themselves and replenish strength and then you have an ongoing healing for a couple days. It's important you give them what they want to rebuild. Protein.
Probably why you crave steak and such. Studies I've seen show that eating right after lifting is necessary, and that there is no real impact after cardio. I've heard that you aren't supposed to eat for an hour after cardio, but the evidence I've seen says otherwise. So go ahead and eat.
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"I went shopping last night at like 1am. The place was empty and this old woman just making polite conversation said to me, 'where is everyone??' I replied, 'In bed, same place you and I should be!' Took me ten minutes to figure out why she gave me a dirty look." --Some guy |
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#7 (permalink) |
Too Awesome for Aardvarks
Location: Angloland
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you'll want to take in a good amount of protein and carbs after exercise, preferably before an hour passes (as this is when your body is most receptive to nutrient uptake).
a good couple of litres of water is always appreciated by ones body, helping in inumberable ways. after a workout, try to mix between low glycemic foods such as fruit, and higher glycemic foods such as breads, sugar stuffs e.t.c, along with, of course, a nice bit of protein. |
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#8 (permalink) |
Crazy
Location: Seattle, WA
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One of the more satisfying things I've eaten after a workout is an open-faced sandwich of sorts. Nice wheat bread, peanut butter, strawberry pulp and honey.
The strawberry pulp is something I picked up from my grandmother. When strawberry season hits out here (WA), we buy several flats of strawberries, wash them, and then mash them like you would if you were making mashed potatoes. Then they can be frozen. Seriously some of the best stuff in the world... but that might be more appropriate in Tilted Cooking. |
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#9 (permalink) |
Psycho
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I took a nutrition class two semesters ago.
HerThe following information comes from the book, "Nutrition Concepts and Controversies 9th Ed" by Frances Sizer and Eleanor Whitney. "For athletes wishing to maximize muscle glycogen synthesis after strenuous training, however, eating foods with a high gycemic index may help restore glycogen more rapidly" Essentially, that says eating certain types of food after major exercise may improve results. Here is a list of foods that have a high glycemic index: Cornflakes, "Cheerios", "Rice Krispies" cereals French, white, and whole-meal breads (soft textured" Sticky rice, medium grain (brown or white" Waffle Mashed potatoes Watermellon Honey, jelly beans, "Life savers" and "skittles" candies, sugar -sweetned sfot drinks For comparison purposes, here is a list of foods that has a low glycemic index: Long grain rice Bran cereals, whole oats Pasta Whole grained bread (heavy textured) Baked beans, soybeans Apple, apple juice, carrot, orange, peach Milk, yougurt "Snickers" candy bar, "M&Ms" candy and "Dove" chocolate bar |
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#17 (permalink) |
Insane
Location: not there
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Protein Protein Protein after a workout. And what Phaenx said - Protein. This is what your musles are craqving to repair and rebuild. Carbs aren't that important immediatly after as you will get them during your next regular day of eating.
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#21 (permalink) | |
PIKE!
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Quote:
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#22 (permalink) | |
Wehret Den Anfängen!
Location: Ontario, Canada
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Quote:
Carbs are easy to turn into energy, and have no other use to the body, so it grabs those first. (I am not a nutritionist, but my mother teaches this stuff. I am not quoting anything, just explaining how I understood it.)
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Last edited by JHVH : 10-29-4004 BC at 09:00 PM. Reason: Time for a rest. |
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#23 (permalink) |
Insane
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I didn't read the entire thread but this sums it up: After working out have a high Glycogen index Carbohyrdate + a quick digesting protein (yes some proteins digest faster then others)
Pretty much the reason is this: After a workout your muscles glycogen is depleted and overall muscles have priority over adipose tissue in terms of priority for nutrients. So, you have a high GI food (maltodextrin and dextrose are best) and a quick digesting protein (whey protein digests faster then any other protein but if you cant get that chicken and egg whites are next fastest) What happens now is your body reacts with a massive insulin spike which normally would be bad, however, since almost all the nutrients go straight to the muscles the insulin spike is acctaully necesary to promote protein synthesis (recreation of muscles) and in the end is best even if most of the time we preach that high GI foods are the devil. So don't let anyone tell you not to eat a high GI carb pwo, that is the only time that they are necesary other then that stay with oats and other low GI foods The biggest issue with most whole foods PWO ex. Oatmeal etc, is the fat, even a couple of grams of fat can slow digestion and you can miss the deadline to promote the most muscle gain. The only real PWO carb you can consume that is fat free is solid sugar ex. dextrose and maltodextrin and since they are also the highest GI food possible thats a good thing ![]() Protein + fat PWO = bad Protein + high GI carb PWO = good Protein = ok, but with no insulin its rather pointless since protein cant move on its own very well ;p Protein + low GI carb PWO = debatable, some people say they make better gains eating a low GI carb but for the most part its agreeable that high GI is best (Ill track down some studies that back up all the facts I crammed in here in a few mins gotta do a few things though) EDIT: Chi_town knows his stuff and I just wrote a brief summary if you want the entire scientific outlook on the matter go here: http://forum.bodybuilding.com/showth...hreadid=231345 Last edited by cait987; 06-09-2004 at 11:24 AM.. |
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