Online FavoritesSpecial IssuesPhoto Galleries |
The Outside Guide to Food The Shape of Things to Come Fitness guru Dave Scott is intent on telling us when to eat. Why? Because ultimate performance is all about perfect nutritional timing. By Lindsay Yaw
"Athletes know they need a higher level of, and commitment to, training if they want to build the desired strength they need to win," says former Ironman champ and Boulder-based multisport coach Dave Scott. "Maintaining that level of
Enter the fast-growing strategy of nutrient timing. Even if a jog with the dog is the extent of your fitness regimen, you can benefit from Scott's nutritional guidance as much as his pro-caliber clients. Our plan below is based on a 90-minute workout and outlines your minute-by-minute nutrition breakdown. Peak-Performance Timeline Day of EventIf your workout or event is scheduled for the afternoon, reduce the size of your meals and
0:10Weigh yourself naked ten minutes before you work out; afterwards, you'll need to know how much fluid weight you've lost during the workout. 0:00-0:15Start activity. Knock back up to eight ounces of fluids every 15 minutes. "The first thing to cause muscle fatigue isn't stress, lack of sleep, lactic acid, or muscle-fuel levels; it's dehydration," says Scott. Try a sports drink that's 6 to 8 percent sugar for easy digestion. 0:16-1:30Nibble an energy bar (avoid hard-to-digest high-protein bars) or gel, and keep sucking down fluids. During your session, replace up to a third of the calories you're burning. A 170-pound man exercising at a moderate pace burns 550 calories an hour. Over 90 minutes, he'll want to consume up to 275 calories.
1:31-2:15Here's your critical recovery zone, known as the glycogen window. Within 45 minutes of the end of your workout, replace half the calories you just burned, minus the calories downed during your session. (E.g., in 90 minutes, our 170-pound man burned 825 calories and ingested 250 calories. Now he should eat 288 calories, 60 percent of which ought to be high-quality carbohydrates.) After this window, strive to make a third of your recovery food vitamin- and mineral-richleafy greens and fruits and vegetables. Immunity-boosting vitamins E and C are the most vital and can be found in blueberries, raspberries, red beans, and kiwi. Get in omega-3 fatty acids for heart health; they're abundant in cold-water fish like salmon, as well as walnuts, almonds, and pumpkinseeds. 2:16-3:30If you haven't had to urinate within two hours of a workout, you're dehydrated, so drink up. Consume the remaining half of the calories burned from your exercise session within three hours of exercise. Nighttime"Your metabolism revs up during the day but slows down at night, when the body stores more food as fat," says Scott. "So get your dinner in before 7 p.m." LINDSAY YAW is a writer and athlete based in Boulder, Colorado. Subscribe to Outside and get a FREE Gift! Give the gift of Outside Magazine! Subscribe to Outside Online's free weekly e-mail newsletter featuring gear reviews, fitness advice, galleries, podcasts, and more. |
TODAY'S NEWS UPDATE!
The Gear Junkie: Ski and Snowboard Gear... By Stephen Regenold Winter is upon us, and with it ski areas across the country are ... ![]()
The Spoke Word: Armstrong to do Tour
Lance Armstrong has accounced that he will race in the 2009 Tour de France, according to a brief ... ![]() advertisement
advertisement
Vacation PackagesMore Travel Deals |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||