As long as weightlifting has been around, people have asked themselves some version of this question: "How many calories should I eat?" Recommendations might be anything from eating everything in sight, to only eating foods from countries that start with the letter A. The thing with generic recommendations is that, well, they're generic. You'll have to do a bit more than slamming protein shakes to make a meal plan work for you. In order to set up a proper diet, there are building blocks to consider -- most people have them
all upside down.
Here is how your diet should break down:
Alan Aragon has a formula that's easy and works very well:
We'll start with the king of all nutrients: protein. The name is actually not far-fetched since it means the "one" or "the first" in Greek. The old gym saying is that you need one gram of protein for every pound of body weight. A gram of protein or carbs has four times as many calories. Using our 200-pound beach bum again, here's how many calories a proper protein regimen would add.
Protein should be evenly spaced out, think anywhere from four to seven meals a day. Again, using our 200-pound example, a set up of five meals with 40 grams each would make sense.
Fats have an inverted relationship to carbs, eat them away from the workout. They slow down digestion and bunt the insulin response which makes them less helpful post-workout. The meals that are farthest away from the workout should contain only fats and protein, since there is no need for carbs on rest days. Try to cut your carbs in half or eliminate them altogether to better your insulin sensitivity. If you cut them out totally, double your fat intake, this way you'll eat the same amount of calories without constantly raising insulin.
Every diet stalls at some point, so try to weigh yourself once a week and tweak things from there.
all upside down.
Here is how your diet should break down:
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- Calories in vs calories out: 40%
- Macronutrient breakdown: 40%
- Nutrient timing: 10%
- Food quality: 5%
- Supplements: 5%
Calories In vs Calories Out
Alan Aragon has a formula that's easy and works very well:
- Take the number of hours you train per week and add 10 (substitute eight or nine if you're a more sedentary person).
- Multipy that number by your goal weight.
190 x (10 + 4) = 2660 calories
Nutrient Breakdown
We'll start with the king of all nutrients: protein. The name is actually not far-fetched since it means the "one" or "the first" in Greek. The old gym saying is that you need one gram of protein for every pound of body weight. A gram of protein or carbs has four times as many calories. Using our 200-pound beach bum again, here's how many calories a proper protein regimen would add.
200 grams of protein = 800 calories
Next in line would be carbohydrates, for those we shall give him 1.5 grams of carbs per pounds since he is trying to cut bodyfat.200 x 1.5 = 300 grams of carbs
That comes to 300 grams of carbs, which would equate to 1,200 calories. After we subtract our carbs and protein calories, we'll have just 660 calories to play with each week.2,660 - 1,200 - 800 = 660 remaining calories
If you want to gain mass, add 100 grams of carbs every week without ever going over three grams per pounds of body weight. If that doesn't work, it would mean that you need even more calories, simply increase your fat intake.Nutrient Timing
Protein should be evenly spaced out, think anywhere from four to seven meals a day. Again, using our 200-pound example, a set up of five meals with 40 grams each would make sense.
Timing matters a lot with carbs, the reasons are two-fold:
- Carbs provide energy for the workout.
- Carbs cause an insulin spike.
Fats have an inverted relationship to carbs, eat them away from the workout. They slow down digestion and bunt the insulin response which makes them less helpful post-workout. The meals that are farthest away from the workout should contain only fats and protein, since there is no need for carbs on rest days. Try to cut your carbs in half or eliminate them altogether to better your insulin sensitivity. If you cut them out totally, double your fat intake, this way you'll eat the same amount of calories without constantly raising insulin.
Every diet stalls at some point, so try to weigh yourself once a week and tweak things from there.
Personalizing your calorie intake is the best way to reach your goal physique. Do not rely too much on supplement, but on natural food supplies that are rich in protein, carbs, fiber, vitamins etc. Protein supplements are meant to enhance your calorie lagging and not the other way around as seen in the chart.
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