Showing posts with label marathon nutrition. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marathon nutrition. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 28, 2018

Eat, Eat, What to Eat

Proper fueling is often a problem for runners. Whether it's a time issue, an allergy issue, or a gut issue, runners have to make the time to figure out what works best for them.

One of the most frequently asked questions I get as a running coach, is "What's the best thing for me to eat?" Problem is there is no "best food" for a runner to eat. There are however, some parameters that runners need to keep in mind when fueling for a run. From that point on, it's up to the runner to figure out (by trial and error) what works best for him/her. I always tell my runners that the training period for a race isn't just physical training, it's also mental and the nutritional training. Use those long runs to test out different foods to see what works best to meet your individual hydration and fueling needs.

Often, a runner will come to me exasperated because his/her runs have felt so fatigued and labored. Many times, after talking through various reasons that might be contributing to the lack-luster runs, improper fueling surfaces as the culprit.

Ongoing good daily nutrition is vital to a runner in training for an endurance race, such as a marathon. On a daily basis, runners need a healthy balance of carbohydrate, protein, and fat.

For a while now, carbohydrates have gotten a bad rap. The rising popularity of low- and no-carb diets has given the general public the impression that carbs are their enemy. Carbs are like anything: In excess they can be bad.

Your body needs carbohydrates to function properly. Carbs provide fuel for the body. They also help regulate the metabolism of protein and fat. If the body does not receive sufficient carbohydrates, it could begin breaking down protein for energy production. Protein can be used as fuel, but it’s not very efficient, and when protein is used as fuel, less is available for its main function—rebuilding and repair. The protein-sparing action of carbohydrates protects the body’s stores of protein.

More important, command central—your brain—needs carbohydrates for proper function. Through the digestion process, carbohydrates are converted to glucose. Glucose is the fuel on which the body functions. Unlike other muscles in the body, the brain can’t store glucose. Instead, it depends on a steady supply of glucose from the blood circulating through the body. Ever feel light-headed during an afternoon workout and then realize you skipped lunch? That light-headed feeling might be the result of low blood sugar, which means you’re low on that steady supply of glucose in the blood flowing to the brain. Not a good feeling. When you eat something, that light-headedness usually subsides.

There are “good carbs” and “bad carbs.” It’s the bad (simple) carbs that give the good (complex) carbs a bad rap. Unfortunately, simple carbs are prevalent in our diet. They are found in convenience foods such as cakes, cookies, crackers, breads, and so on. Foods such these are made with refined/processed grains, which are quickly digested and converted to fat in the body unless activity ensues soon after ingestion.

Complex carbs take longer to digest; therefore, the body has more time to use them as fuel. These include vegetables and whole grains. Complex carbs are also high in fiber, which has many benefits for the body.

Forty-five to 65 percent of your daily calories should come from carbohydrates. That’s about 225 to 325 grams of carbs per day. The USDA recommends a minimum of 130 grams of carbohydrates per day. To get a better idea of how that correlates to portion sizes, MyPlate.gov recommends that adults eat 2.5 cups of vegetables, two cups of fruit, and six ounces of grains every day. When working out intensely or training for a race, your carb intake should be closer to 65 percent. On days when you’re not working out or running, your carb intake should be closer to 45 percent.

When shopping for complex carbohydrate products such as bread or pasta, look for 100 percent whole grain or 100 percent whole wheat. If it’s unclear how much whole grain a food contains, check the nutrition label. Low fiber means more refined (or processed) grains. Also check to make sure the sugar content is low. Then check the ingredients list. The ingredients are listed in order of how much the product contains. “Whole grain” or “whole wheat” should be listed as the first ingredient. If you’re still not sure, buy products that have the highest fiber content per serving (at least three grams or more).

Products that contain 100 percent whole wheat will also contain more protein since the grains have not been refined. Try to find products offering at least eight grams of protein. Whole-grain foods also provide many important vitamins and minerals, such as vitamin E, iron, magnesium, potassium, and phosphorus, just to name a few.

Avoid products made of “enriched flour” or “enriched bleached flour.” That means refined grains have been used. These grains have been stripped of most of their fiber, vitamins, and minerals. “Enriched” sounds good, but it really means that some of the vitamins and minerals have been added back to the flour. Fiber, however, can’t be added back to the flour.

As previously mentioned, raw or cooked vegetables are great sources of complex carbohydrates. Technically, fruits are a simple carbohydrate, but that doesn’t mean they are bad. Whole fruit is full of fiber and is nutrient dense, so while the body may digest it more quickly, whole fruit is a great source of both carbohydrates and fiber. Go light on fruit juice. Even if it’s 100 percent fruit juice, this very concentrated version of the fruit greatly increases the sugar content. Whole fruit (fresh or frozen) is a better choice. Dried fruits are also a great choice. Dairy products such as skim milk and cheese are more good sources of carbohydrates.

Protein is easily one of the most overused supplements. Supplement advertisements have the public believing that protein makes muscle bigger. This is very misleading. Protein doesn’t zoom to your muscles and magically make them grow bigger. Protein does, however, help rebuild and repair muscle fibers. After a hard workout, protein is a necessary ingredient in the muscle-rebuilding process, which makes muscles stronger. Protein is found in muscles, bone, blood, hormones, antibodies, and enzymes. Protein also helps regulate the body’s water balance and transport nutrients, supports brain function, and makes muscles contract. Protein also helps keep the body healthy by fighting off disease. Important for runners, protein helps produce stamina and energy, which can keep fatigue at bay.

Protein is definitely a key ingredient for a strong, healthy body, especially if you’re in training. Research has shown, however, that the body has a limit at which it stops using extra protein. Studies have found that the body maxes out at two grams of protein per kilogram of body weight. If you take more than that, your body voids it, unused, as waste. Only individuals such as bodybuilders doing heavy resistance training need that higher level of two grams per kilogram of body weight. Endurance runners need protein in the range of .8 to 1.5 grams per kilogram of body weight. Sedentary people need only .8 grams per kilogram of body weight.

An average male runner who weighs 175 pounds needs 64 to 119 grams of protein per day. That might still seem like a lot of protein to ingest during a day, but remember that one cup of tuna has almost 40 grams of protein. A cup of black bean soup contains about 12 grams of protein. It doesn't take long to get enough protein just by eating a healthy diet. Vegetarians may have to be a little more diligent in making sure they get the required daily amount of protein.

If you’re eating a well-balanced diet with a variety of fruits, vegetables, lean meats, whole grains, and healthy fats, then you’re probably getting everything that big canister of powdered protein has to offer. So why not go the natural route?

Below are some suggestions for different types of foods to try for before the run, during the run, and after the run. These are only suggestions and by no means is a comprehensive list. 

Before Your Run
90 minutes to 2 hours before running:
Eat 30 to 80 grams of carbs.
  • Bagel with peanut or almond butter
  • English muffin with peanut butter or almond butter and fruit preserves
  • Waffle with peanut butter or almond butter
  • Banana sandwich with peanut butter
  • Graham crackers with peanut butter or almond butter
  • Oatmeal with added nuts and fruit
  • One egg on an English muffin
  • Hard-boiled egg and toast with preserves
  • Dry cereal and fruit (Add milk if dairy doesn’t bother you on the run.)
  • Energy bar with sports drink
  • Greek or traditional yogurt with fruit and/or granola
  • Small container of yogurt and a banana slathered with peanut butter
  • Yogurt fruit smoothie

Oatmeal with added dried fruit, walnuts, banana slices, and a dollop
of peanut butter mixed in to thicken up the oatmeal and lessen the "slime."

Toasted English muffins topped with peanut butter and then either
bananas and honey or preserves.


30 to 60 minutes before running:
Eat foods that are quickly and easily digested.
  • Animal crackers or Teddy Grahams with water or sports drink
  • Sports drink
  • Energy bar (Eat bars that are low in fat/protein soon before running.)
  • Energy gel
  • Fruit (A medium orange is great; choose whole fruit over juice.)
  • Small container of traditional yogurt with fruit and/or granola
  • Handful of pretzels
  • Peanut butter crackers (two or three)
  • Fig bar

Greek yogurt (I like the pineapple) with added walnuts
and banana slices.
During Your Run
Typically during a long run, it's recommended that a runner ingest about 100 cals about every 45-60 minutes. The individual prepackaged gels, chews, beans, chomps, etc. each have around 100 calories. The chews and sport beans are great because they can be rationed out, but the entire contents of the chew or bean packet needs to be ingested within that 45-60 mins. Runners often make the mistake eating one packet over the course of the entire run (say like 15 miles). That means they're only getting an extra 100 calories in during that 15 mile run. Not going to be enough.

Keep energy stores topped off during long runs with the following:
  • Energy gels, chews, beans
  • Sports drink (drink water when washing down an energy gels, chews, or beans)
  • Gummy bears or jelly beans
  • Tootsie Rolls
  • Pretzels
  • Energy bars (low-fat, low-protein varieties)
  • Fig bars
  • Gingersnaps
  • Rice Krispie treats
  • Bagel

A few examples of pre-packaged "during-the-run" fuel. Remember,
other foods like pretzels, ginger snaps, and fig bars work
great too!

After Your Run
Refueling within 30 minutes after running is vital for providing your body with the energy required to begin rebuilding. Select foods that provide a four-to-one ratio of carbs to protein (about 40 to 80 grams of carbs and 10 to 20 grams of protein).
  • Eight ounces skim or low-fat chocolate milk (Note: Alternative milk products such as soy, almond, etc. can be used, but check the label, many do not have the same ratio of carbs to protein as dairy milk. Some alternative milk products have versions with extra protein added that may be a better choice, but still read the label to be sure that what you're purchasing is what you want.)
  • Peanut butter and jelly sandwich and skim milk
  • Bagel with peanut butter, almond butter, or Nutella
  • Whole-wheat crackers and peanut or almond butter
  • Brown rice pudding and a banana
  • Bowl of cereal and milk
  • Turkey sandwich
  • Hard-boiled egg, toast, and fruit or juice
  • Peanut butter and banana sandwich
  • Fruit and yogurt smoothie
  • Fruit smoothie with protein powder
  • Energy bar and sports drink
  • Trail mix

Chocolate fruit smoothie with 1% chocolate milk, Greek yogurt,
and fresh fruit like strawberries and/or bananas, and ice. Frozen
fruit works great too and then you don't have to add ice!


Wednesday, July 22, 2009

Don't Skip Breakfast on Marathon Morning!

With all the anxiety and nerves that go along with marathon morning, sometimes eating is that last thing on many runners' mind. Oh but what a big mistake. Not eating or eating too little can spell disaster. Even though you may have carb-loaded days before the race and even though you may have attended that pre-race pasta dinner, you'll still need some fresh fuel in the tank come race time.

Leading sports nutritionist Nancy Clark recommends that runners eat about 500 calories of breakfast 1-3 hours before race time. In her book, Nancy Clark's Food Guide for Marathons, Clark provides several examples of a good 500-calorie pre-marathon breakfast such as
2 oatmeal packets made with (300 calories)
1 cup of low-fat milk (100 calories)
1 medium banana (100 calories)

I've found that two English muffin halves each spread with a little peanut butter and a little jam or preserves does the trick for me. Some other good pre-run foods I've tried include:
a bagel with peanut butter and banana slices
a whole-grain waffle with peanut butter
two graham crackers with peanut butter
whole-grain cereal with skim milk
(FYI: test on a short run; milk doesn't set well with some runners)
Greek yogurt with fruit
Uncrustables
a sports bar (check the label and make sure it's not loaded with saturated fat)

Over the past 10 marathons that I've run, I've learned a few things by trial and error about the pre-marathon breakfast.
1. Make sure your breakfast is high in carbs (i.e., bagels, toast, English muffins). A little protein is fine such as an egg, yogurt, or peanut butter, but try to stay way from excessively fatty foods. The extra fat may not settle well in your tummy during the race, plus the fat (especially saturated fat) isn't going to provide your muscles much fuel at this stage in the game.

2. Be sure that whatever you eat, it's something that you'd nornmally eat prior to a run. It's a good idea to test out various breakfast foods during your training. This way you get a good idea of which ones provide you the fuel you need as well as which ones may have adverse affects. Never, Never, Never eat something on race day that you've never before eaten prior to a long run.

3. If you're having to travel to a different city for your marathon, be advised that the hotel you're staying at may not have the breakfast foods you need or it may not prepare them the way you're accustomed to. I've found it very helpful to either pack the foods I'll need or purchase them from a local grocery store once I get there. I've also found it very helpful to book a room that has a mini-fridge. This way you can keep your water and sports drinks cold.

4. Be sure to hydrate starting the day before the marathon. No need to over do it, but I've found that sipping on several bottles of water throughout the day is helpful. The morning of the race be sure to drink water with your breakfast. Then drink your last glasses of water or sports drink about 2 hours prior to the start. This will give it plenty of time to pass through your system, giving you time to void any extra before the start. Then drink some more about 5-15 minutes before the start. Just like the food, only drink liquids you normally drink before running. Don't all the sudden decide to try a sports drink before the run, because they're handing them out free.

Monday, June 15, 2009

Kids Actually Do Pay Attention (Sometimes)

The great thing about magazines like Family Fun is that they're full of cooking and craft ideas for kids to do. The bad thing about magazines like this is that they're full of cooking and craft ideas for kids to do. You see, our youngest is in a constant state of creating. From painting our beagle pink, to tying up the family room with dental floss to make a spider web, to painting our solid oak dining table with a bottle of Wite-Out®, to making "potions" in the bathroom, Ellery, our 8-year-old, is constantly making and doing. I'm trying to convince myself that our house is her canvas and that one day it will pay off when she's a world-renowned artist or possibly a chemist for Crayola. Until then, I'm never quite sure what I'll come home to.

This past Saturday after my long run with my running group, I walked in the door stinky, damp, and encrusted in salt. My plan was to hit the shower and then take a nap. What I was greeted with instead as I walked in the door was, "I'm ready Dad!" Ellery was in the kitchen, apron on, a cantaloupe under one arm and a big mixing bowl in the other. Let me back up to fill you in on a few things. On Monday, one of those kids craft magazines arrived in the mail and as usual, Ellery began scouring its pages in search of the next craft or cooking project to conquer. By Thursday she and I were in the local grocery store buying what she so desperately needed for her projects. Friday was my older daughter's 8th-grade graduation and we just didn't have enough time for Ellery to get involved in a messy project, so we planned on doing it over the weekend. In my mind that meant Saturday or Sunday afternoon, not Saturday morning at 10:00AM after running 11 miles in hot/humid conditions. So I took a deep breath, exhaled, and said, "Okay missy, let's get to it!"

By now you're probably wondering what in the heck this has to do with running, fitness, or nutrition. I kind of am too. Oh yeah, all my talk around the house about good nutrition and how food is fuel for the body evidently has rubbed off on Ellery. You see, the creation she wanted to make was a recipe for "Shimmering Fruit Salad." She thought I'd like it since it was healthy. It actually is a pretty healthy recipe and it ended up being a great post run snack containing protein, carbs, and fiber, not to mention all the vitamins and antioxidants in the fruit and nuts. Ellery had to make me promise not to eat the entire bowl!

Ellery's Shimmering Fruit Salad
Ingredients:
1 cup of skim milk
2 tbsp. lite or reduced fat mayo
1 tsp. honey
2 oranges cut into chunks
1 apple diced
2 bananas sliced
2 cups of cantaloupe cut into chunks
1 cup of grapes
1/2 cup of chopped pecans or walnuts

Directions:
Mix together in a small bowl the milk, mayo, and honey to create a sauce. In a large mixing bowl, combine the remaining ingredients. Pour the sauce over the fruit, cover with a lid or plastic wrap, and place the bowl in the fridge until it is chilled. Makes about 10 cups.

Saturday, June 13, 2009

Go Green! Super Foods for Runners

I'm gearing up for my fall marathon training that starts in July. I've experienced some good marathon training and some not-so-good marathon training. I'm hoping this marathon will qualify me for Boston, so I want this to be a great training experience. I revealed in an earlier posting that I'm going to be using the FIRST marathon training plan, so I feel confident in my weekly workout plan. But I also want to feel just as confident in my nutrition training plan. As runners we all know about sports drinks, energy bars, and sports gels; not to mention shot bloks, chomps, and sports beans. But, what does Mother Nature have to offer? What does she provide (food-wise) that can prepare me, sustain me, and help me recover during my training and after the race?

If you've been reading the blog for any length of time, you know by now that once I have a question in my head, I have to do a little digging until I find some answers. Here's what I dug up on one of the best types of foods for runners.

Not only is "going green" great for the environment, it's great for the runner. I discovered that if it's green (unless it's that 2-month-old unrecognizable leftover in your fridge) it's good for you. It's really more than just good. For a runner, green fruits and vegetables are super foods. Green fruits/veggies are vitamin and nutrient-rich. They're also great sources of minerals, fiber, and anti-oxidants. In addition to these great things, green veggies contain chlorophyll (responsible for the green color). According to Rick Morris of RunningPlanet.com, chlorophyll helps increase the oxygen uptake in the body. This increased uptake of oxygen improves your endurance, recovery time, and energy levels.

Green fruits/veggies are also slightly alkaline. Morris further explains that "one of the causes of running fatigue is a rise in the acidity of your blood." Consuming green veggies on a regular basis can improve your performance by acting as a buffer to the increased acidity of your blood helping to keep fatigue at bay. Morris also says that phytochemicals in green fruits/veggies "help protect your cells from the oxidation caused by free radicals produced by strenuous training."

Great Green Fruits and Veggies to Add to Your Diet:
Broccoli
Spinach
Kale
Collard greens
Romaine Lettuce
Arugula
Bok Choy
Brussels Sprouts
Celery
Asparagus
Cucumbers
Zucchini
Artichokes
Okra
Green Bell Peppers
Cabbage
Tomatillo (similar to a green tomato; often found in Mexican cuisines)
Nopalitos (cactus pads; often found in Mexican cuisines)
Avocado
Kiwi
Honeydew Melon
Lime

How to eat all those greens? Simple, add them to a soup, make a salad, put them in a wrap, steam them, stir-fry them, eat em raw! The possibilities are endless.