{"id":10446,"date":"2022-11-23T21:45:27","date_gmt":"2022-11-23T21:45:27","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ultimatehealthreport.com\/what-to-eat-before-a-workout\/"},"modified":"2022-11-23T21:45:27","modified_gmt":"2022-11-23T21:45:27","slug":"what-to-eat-before-a-workout","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ultimatehealthreport.com\/what-to-eat-before-a-workout\/","title":{"rendered":"What to Eat Before a Workout"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Pre-workout nutrition is one of those areas where people love to lose themselves in the minutiae. They obsess over what to eat, when to eat it, and how much of it to eat. Instead of just getting into the gym or out into the world and getting active and lifting something heavy, they read blogs and watch videos for weeks, searching for the one pre-workout meal to rule them all.\u00a0They end up avoiding the gym altogether because they can\u2019t figure out the \u201cperfect\u201d pre-workout meal, or whether they should eat something at all.<\/p>\n
Even when you figure out what to eat before a workout, you can go too far.\u00a0You know the type of guy. This is the guy who travels with a suitcase full of powders, pills, and packaged foods. He\u2019s so wedded to the pre-workout ritual that he can\u2019t skip a day\u2014even on vacation. If he doesn\u2019t get his 40.5 grams of waxy maize, 30.2 grams of whey isolate, and preworkout blend of superfoods he can\u2019t operate in the gym. He crumbles without the perfect, most optimal pre-workout nutrition.<\/p>\n
Don\u2019t be like this. Let me tell you what to do so you can stop stressing about what to eat before a workout. Let\u2019s simplify things.<\/p>\n
What you eat will depend on what kind of workout you\u2019re doing, what your goals are, and what kind of diet you\u2019re already following, but there are general rules that apply to everyone.<\/p>\n
Since running, cycling, and rowing sprints and intervals burn through a ton of glycogen, most conventional sources recommend ample carbohydrates before the workout\u2014around 4 grams per kilo of bodyweight in the hours leading up to the session. These aren\u2019t \u201cwrong.\u201d If you\u2019re a serious high intensity athlete training to compete or perform at very high levels, you should eat a good amount of carbs before your training sessions. That\u00a0will<\/em> maximize force output and optimize subsequent training adaptations. And besides, you\u2019re burning through your muscle glycogen, boosting insulin sensitivity and opening up a ton of space for dietary carbohydrate to be partitioned.<\/p>\n If you train hard and intensely enough, you can even eat a big carb-rich pre workout meal and still reach ketosis after a session.<\/p>\n Unless you\u2019re going for a specific goal and absolutely must avoid all carbohydrates, I\u2019d recommend that everyone who wants to eat a meal before a HIIT session have 15-30 grams of fast-digesting carbs along with 30 grams of protein, half of which is collagen, 45 minutes before a workout<\/strong>. If you want to go a bit higher carb, get 40-60 grams two hours before<\/strong> in addition to the 15-30 45 minutes before.<\/p>\n Again: you don\u2019t have to eat before sprints or HIIT. But if you do eat, this is what I recommend.<\/p>\n The kind of low level aerobic training I recommend in Primal Endurance\u2014where your heart rate never exceeds 180 minus your age, where you can breathe through your nose and hold an easy conversation, where it feels easy enough to maintain for well over an hour if you had to\u2014doesn\u2019t require much pre-workout nutrition.<\/p>\n If you\u2019re metabolically-flexible or fat-adapted, I recommend fasting before these workouts to really boost fat burning and mitochondrial biogenesis. No need for food at all.<\/p>\n If you\u2019re more carbohydrate-dependent, you can still probably get away with fasting, but you can also eat 15-20 grams of easily digested carbohydrates and 20 grams of protein<\/strong>. That could be a scoop of whey isolate protein powder, some collagen peptides, and a small potato or an apple. It could be a few eggs with a banana.<\/p>\n As lifting can be a very glycogen-intensive activity, you can treat this similarly to HIIT or sprints only with a stronger focus on protein. If you\u2019re going to eat before a lifting session, aim for 30-40 grams of protein (half from collagen)<\/strong>, either from whey isolate or actual food plus collagen. Eat 15-30 grams of easily digestible carbohydrates<\/strong>, like bananas, rice, potatoes, dates, or other fruits. You could even sip on some coconut water.<\/p>\n There are specific foods with uniquely ergogenic effects. that you should consider including in your pre-workout meals.<\/p>\n I usually fast before workouts. It just works for me.<\/p>\n In fact, except for very rare occasions, either I go into the workout fasted or take 20 grams of collagen beforehand. Since collagen doesn\u2019t directly contribute to muscle protein synthesis or affect mTOR or autophagy or fat-burning, I consider these to be fairly equivalent. The only thing that changes between fasted training and pre-training collagen is the collagen plus 50-100 mg vitamin C helps me fortify my connective tissue.<\/p>\n Anything resembling lower level \u201ccardio,\u201d like walking, hiking, standup paddling, and bike rides are all done totally fasted.<\/p>\n Before heavy lifting or sprints sessions, I\u2019ll drink 20 grams of collagen peptides with some vitamin C. This isn\u2019t to \u201cfuel\u201d me. The collagen provides the raw material my connective tissue (tendons, ligaments, cartilage) needs to adapt to the training stress and the vitamin C helps that collagen go where it\u2019s supposed to\u2014the connective tissue. This drink doesn\u2019t contain many calories, nor does it provoke a huge insulin response that derails the fasting benefits. I\u2019m technically breaking the fast because I\u2019m consuming calories, but I\u2019m retaining most of the benefits.<\/p>\n I favor collagen on heavier or more intense days because at my age, I\u2019m most interested in maintaining the integrity of my joints. Having intact and durable ligaments, tendons, and cartilage is what allows me to play and stay active as I age. It\u2019s not the big muscles, which are easy to maintain once you\u2019ve got them. It\u2019s the connective tissue.<\/p>\n If you\u2019re trying to decide whether you should eat or not before a workout, I\u2019ve explained the potential benefits of fasted workouts before. To summarize, fasted workouts can:<\/p>\n Keep in mind that fasted training isn\u2019t optimal if your primary concern is gaining mass. It\u2019s great for lean mass maintenance, fat burning, and even gaining strength and muscle provided you eat enough calories when you do eat, but for pure muscle hypertrophy and weight gain and absolute performance you\u2019re better off eating.<\/p>\n It\u2019s probably smart to try both pre-workout meals and pre-workout fasting to see what works best for you.<\/p>\n However there\u2019s nothing wrong with eating actual meals or taking in protein\/carb supplements before a workout, nor is there anything wrong with fasting. All that matters is what works for you\u2014what helps you stay consistent with training, what gets you the best results, what makes training the most enjoyable.<\/p>\n Use this article as a guide, but don\u2019t let it decide for you. What do you eat before your workouts?<\/p>\nWhat to Eat Before Low Level Aerobic Workouts<\/h2>\n
What to Eat Before Strength Training Workouts<\/h2>\n
Specific Foods That May Be Helpful Before a Workout<\/h2>\n
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What I Eat Before Workouts<\/h2>\n
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