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Food For Sport
Sport and exercise nutrition. Research based information, local eating advice, recipes and interesting bits and pieces.
Monday, 6 February 2012
Sunday, 5 February 2012
GI - what a load of...
GI. Joe.
Glycaemic index. In
scientific lingo what the glycaemic index is = the area under the blood glucose
curve over a two hour period in response to consuming a test food providing 50g
of glycaemic carbohydrate which is compared to a 50g sample of a reference
food. The reference food being glucose
or white bread. These foods are expressed on a scale of 100. Or something like
that. In brick layer chat this means how
much a food effects your blood sugar levels. Or does it?
The glycaemic effect of a food or how much it affects your
blood sugar is influenced by the type of carbohydrate present, as well as the
presence of fat, fibre or protein in the food or what other food is being eaten
at the same time. Add to this the
acidity and temperature of the food item, how refined it is, it’s ripeness, it’s
variety and how much you have chewed it and you may have a number of different factors
affecting glycaemic responses. Then
throw in there the fact that this slice of brown bread was made with 50% white
flour, but the one I had yesterday was 100% unrefined. Or that today I boiled my potato but yesterday
it was baked. All of these factors give
us absorbable carbohydrates at a different rate.
Why is this control of blood glucose important anyway? Well
for general health we want to avoid highs and lows in our blood glucose levels
to prevent a loss in insulin sensitivity. Insulin is the hormone the controls glucose
levels amongst other things, without it we are diabetic and that is not a great
place to be. We also struggle to control body composition with these
fluctuations and our hunger cues are linked to our glucose levels. So too are hydration, heart rate and
cognitive (brain) function. For an
athlete you want the right type of carbohydrate at the right time, either a
quick or slow releasing carb. With these
goals in mind some spark decided to test a few foods on a few people and see
how they fared compared to white bread or glucose.
First problem: there are two scales of GI, one uses white
bread, the other uses glucose. There are
arguments to pros and cons of using a different reference food, but mainly
confusion. On the white bread scale all
foods have a higher GI than on the glucose scale.
Next: not all foods that are given a GI rating are tested.
They are merely estimates according to their ingredients. And what about all the factors like ripeness,
variety, cooking method etc etc..
Then only small samples of people are needed to provide a GI
value for a food, the number is 10. This somehow provides us with a consensus
on how 6 billion people would react to a food when compared to white bread..or
glucose..
An example of a high glycaemic index food: watermelon has a
GI of 96 (I don’t know which scale this is). You would think that watermelon
would have so much sugar in it because it got an A+ in the GI exam. You know how much you would have to eat for
it to affect your sugar at all! Most of it is water, it is not called sugar
melon. To provide the 50g of sugar necessary for the test you would have to eat
about 900g of the stuff.
Anyway if we were to follow the GI route and believe its
value then perhaps the slightly more relevant scale of glycaemic load (GL) is
worthwhile. This takes into account the
GI of a food and the amount of carbs in a portion that you would actually eat.
We don’t hear too much about GL though.
I am not saying we should ignore the value of understanding how foods affect us but I dont agree this is the way. Knowing which foods provide quick releasing,
simple sugars is quite easy to figure without the mystical GI. High fibre foods or those containing fats and
protein are not quick releasing. Foods with a lot
of water or other non-carbohydrate ingredients can’t have too much available sugar
in an average portion. Sugary and
sweetened foods and drinks, refined grains and a few fruits like bananas,
grapes and peaches are quick releasing.
So for everyone out there choose the high fibre, slow
releasing foods for most snacks and meals.
Wholegrains, vegetables, legumes and fruit should be predominant. The quick releasing sugar foods are only
really valuable before, during or after exercise or when you feel like a little
treat. A diet high in added sugars and
refined carbohydrates are strongly linked to obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular
disease. There is no point in giving
these foods an arbitrary number that means you might miss out on valuable food
options because they have been wrongly classified. Don’t fall for the gimmicky low GI labels,
read the ingredients and make your own choices.
A fibre content of at least 5g per 100g is a guide and the ingredients
list is in order of quantity, most to least. Learn what the labels on food
mean!
G bye.
Thursday, 2 February 2012
Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates. An
athlete’s best friend?
As discussed in an earlier post, carbohydrates are the
single most important nutrient in an athlete’s diet. Research also shows that carbohydrates are
the most commonly deficient nutrient in the majority of athletes’ diets. Carbohydrates give us both immediate energy
and energy we can use later after we convert glucose from carbohydrates in
glycogen that is subsequently stored in our muscles and liver. When we need energy during exercise the first
fuel we use is carbohydrate based (well this is not entirely true, the first
few seconds of exercise actually uses creatine phosphate but this runs out very
quickly and I am sure you get my point).
As an ergogenic aid carbohydrates consumed before or during exercise are
the most successful in terms of performance enhancement when compared to other
supplements and nutrients.
Our carbohydrate stores, however, only get us as far as
about 60 minutes of exercise. We can
then top up and “pay-as-you-go” but nonetheless our bodies eventually switch to
fat utilisation and protein breakdown.
Ensuring our stores are at their maximal before exercise is the point of
a high carbohydrate diet and the well talked about carbo-loading regimens some
athletes choose. A high carbohydrate
diet will provide sufficient glycogen in our muscles to push the 60 minutes a
little further toward the 90 mark before we again increase the rate of burning
other fuels.
Regularly active individuals may need somewhere in the
region of 3-5g carbohydrate per kilogram body weight per day. More strenuous exercise will up this to
6-8g/kg/day and endurance and ultra endurance may need 10-12g/kg/day. This is a lot of carbohydrate but includes
snacks and drinks taken pre/during/post exercise. Bear in mind these
recommendations are tweaked according to the periodisation of your training (future
post).
Your general meals and snacks consumed should provide a
variety of carbohydrate foods and ideally be high in fibre. Cereals, grain products, fruits, vegetables
and legumes should be the basis of the carbohydrate portion of the diet. Foods eaten around or during exercise should
be quicker releasing carbohydrates and sugars, something like the high GI
foods. The glycaemic index is a post I
will come to in time as I believe it to be a load of.... Anyway, sweetened
foods or foods with sugars (sweets, chocolates, carbohydrate drinks) and
processed grains (white bread, muffins, cereal bars) can be consumed around the
exercise times mentioned earlier. Certain
fruits (bananas, grapes, peaches, dried fruit) provide sugar quickly too that
may assist recovery or provide immediate energy during exercise. Remember to add a little protein to post
exercise snacks to get the most out of recovery, a good goal is a 50-60g
carbohydrate portion with 20g protein. A
carb-protein recovery drink, a couple bananas and a yoghurt or 500ml of sweetened
chocolate milk sound pretty good.
Eating regularly, 5-8 times a day, will help you get to the
higher intake levels if this is needed.
More than that it will also assist in body composition management,
control of insulin and blood glucose and increase the thermic effect of
food. This is the energy we spend digesting
and using our food which helps with that energy balance and body composition
thing. Regular eating will also ensure we are topped up before we train to get
the most out of any session.
Below – a table of carbohydrate rich foods and how much we
actually get from each.
Food item
|
Portion
|
Grams of carbohydrate
|
Bread
|
1 slice
|
15-20
|
Muesli
|
60g
|
40
|
Oats
|
60g
|
45
|
Weetbix
|
2
biscuits
|
30
|
Pasta
|
100g
|
35-70
|
Potato
|
Large
(200g)
|
70
|
Sweet potato
|
Large (200g)
|
60
|
Beans/lentils
|
2
Tablespoons
|
15
|
Banana
|
1 medium
|
20
|
Grapes
|
Handful
|
12
|
Pear/orange/apple
|
1 medium
|
10
|
Dried fruit
|
Small
handful (60g)
|
40
|
Yoghurt
|
175ml tub
|
30
|
Sweetened milk drinks
|
330ml
|
30
|
Energy/cereal bars
|
1 bar
|
20
|
Energade/Powerade
|
500ml
|
40
|
Over the next few days I will add posts on the glycaemic index
vibe as well as the hot topic of very low carbohydrate diets.
Wednesday, 1 February 2012
Energy balance
Energy = carbs + protein + fat (+alcohol)
Energy balance. Our
food gives us energy (calories). We
spend energy to stay alive, to watch Rafa vs Rog on the HD TV, to trim the
grass patch outside, to walk to the pub, to chase the dog, to do those 3km on
the treadmill. If energy in (from food)
is more than energy out (from daily activity) we store energy and put on
weight. If the converse is true we lose
weight. The weight we put on or lose can
be in the form of fat, protein or carbohydrate stores. How we eat and how we train effects that.
Not all calories from food were made the same. Each gram of protein, fat, carbohydrate or
alcohol in our diet gives us a different amount of calories. Finding the right ratio of all these in your
diet will affect your body composition, your performance and your
recovery. Add to that the timing of
eating these nutrients and you have another aspect to take note of.
The man on the couch, the woman on the bike and the china on
the squat machine all have different needs.
The energy they spend is all different, their goals are all different
and so too their energy needs from their diet will be different. Getting to grips with what your food is and
what you are getting from it in order to reach your goals is the first step in
successful nutrition.
Carbohyrates. Carbs. Starches.
Sugars. These words are all used
for the same group of things really and are the single most important nutrient
to us all. These puppies give us about 4
calories per gram. We break down most of
our carbohydrates into smaller sugars to be absorbed. These sugars give us energy to use
immediately or to store as glycogen for later use. They should make up between 45% and 65% of
our diet. We can tweak this ratio in
order to lose weight or to meet the demands of strenuous exercise. That guy who is still on the couch might need
only 3-4 grams per kg body weight* every day. Our fine lady on the bike training for an
ironman (ironwoman?) may need up to 3 times that amount! Not only should carbohydrates be the backbone
of meals, but pre/during/post exercise nutrition is based on carbohydrate
intake. The type and timing of which is
very important. Grains, cereals, fruit,
sugar, dairy are all sources of carbohydrate.
The topics of simple and complex sugars, fibre, GI, low carb diets and
nutrient timing are for another day I think.
* You will
note I refer to recommendations quite a lot as grams per kilogram body
weight. Everyone’s needs are different
and this allows for fine tuning of an individuals intake. Research and documented guidelines often work
on this basis too *
Protein. This is the
building blocks of a helluva lot in our bodies and another essential element to
our diet. Like our carbohydrates, Mr
Protein gives us about 4 calories per gram too.
We break these down into amino acids which later get rebuilt to make
muscle fibers, hormones, connective tissue (ligaments etc) and assist with any
repair or immune function fighting that needs to go on. Usually 15-20% of our
total dietary energy should be from protein.
Our friend is obviously still on the couch and he needs about 0.8g per
kg (15% total energy) every day.
Endurance and strength athletes need a bit more depending on their
training. For weight loss we often
choose to go higher at the expense of carbs.
Lean sources of protein should be plentiful in our diet. Lean meat, legumes and dairy are common
sources. Many more posts will follow on
this one!
Fat. Sounds evil doesn’t it? Not true. We need fat; it is vitally important for
proper functioning of our immune systems, hormones, enzymes and to physically
protect our organs and provide a source of energy. We get a whopping 9 calories per gram with
these big boys. A dense source of
energy. I am sure we have all heard of
good fats and bad fats, a nice simple way of discriminating. I fear that my views on this may be against
the grain of that which many others believe and profess. Please feel free to argue with me. I feel too much attention is placed on
pounding and criminalising fat. My views
are based on research, evidence and common sense which we will come across in
future posts. Obviously too much of
anything is going to have a negative effect but tread wisely when choosing your
sources of fat. Widely available information
describes bad fats as animal sources (meat, butter, dairy) or saturated fats.
Also in this group of baddies are trans fats which are for the vast majority
manufactured fats not naturally occurring.
We find these guys in baked products, processed foods, chips and cooking oils
and on and on. No qualms here with trans
fats. Avoid. Our good fats are unsaturated fats from fish,
nuts, seeds, avo, olives etc. A bit of a
blanket statement that we should also be careful about. Once again the truism that too much of a good
thing… Watch this space.
Alcohol. An empty
calorie they say. About 7 calories per
gram. Not much nutritional benefit comes
from these calories and the requirement of our bodies to process the
alcohol is one we should keep to a moderate level. The metabolism of alcohol takes preference over a lot of
important processes. The champ on the couch isn’t
helping his blood pressure, cholesterol, blood glucose control or weight by
knocking back 2 tinnies every day. In
balance with a healthy lifestyle I can’t mock it and I am sure along the way my
love for wine will provide a post or two on the booze. There are some beneficial nutrients in wine
anyhow, plus some research evolving for the benefits of yeast (beer and wine)
on recovery. This is likely to be alcohol free however. For now exercise moderation and don’t indulge
when you should be recovering, or if you are on medication. Any complicated health issues are another
sign to stay away.
Post…done
Tuesday, 31 January 2012
Welcome
Welcome to Food for Sport.
The inaugural post for my blog is some groundwork and a little
chin-wag. The point of this blog is to
get information out to whoever wants it, information that is correct and backed
by evidence. Free of media hype and
financial gains. We all get a lot of
advice from friends, colleagues, coaches, team mates, Men’s Health and “sport
nutritionists”, many of them saying something slightly different to the other
or completely contradictory for that matter.
Who to believe???
Eating right
for your exercise and sporting demands is not rocket science but we often get
led astray by all the different sources of information. I am going to try keep regular posts of
various topics as we go along. To start
off I will cover the basics and then move into specific topics. Any new trends, products, research that comes
up I will dive into and give the evidence based info. I want this to be an open
forum for topics and discussions for anyone interested so post questions,
personal experiences, concerns, arguments or agreements as you go.
This is not just a platform for serious sportsmen. From the weekend cyclist to the tri-athlete
to the couch potato I will cover healthy guidelines, sport specific
recommendations, supplement use, recipes and cooking advice, buying guidelines,
restaurant reviews and tips for eating out. Plus anything else that might pop
up or pass your lips of interest.
By appointment I am going to be available for private
consults, body composition analysis, dietary analysis, meal planning and
nutritional advice. Please contact via
my email foodforsport.penzhorn@gmail.com
for more information.
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