Thread: Advice on diet - Lean muscle
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08-19-2010, 12:12 AM #1New Member
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Advice on diet - Lean muscle
Hey everyone, new member, I posted over the introduction forum, I'm not sure your allowed to link to other threads, so search for "getting serious" in there and that will be me
Ok, so I will admit, up until now my diet has been terrible, I'm surprised I've added any weight the way I'v been eating, but im far more on track now and feeling really good about it. For the last 1-2 weeks I've gotten this down as my daily diet.
Basically If you have any advice I'd love to hear it.
Current stats
male, 27
76kg (167 or so pounds)
12% body fat
supplements - whey protein
anabolics - none
Been weight training for about 1.5 yrs, id say only about 6 months serious though where I'm consistent and lifting right. Starting weight was 70kg or (154 pounds), obviously still have a lot to learn though.
Target goal
85kg (187 pounds)
8% body fat
I'm also 100% Lactose intolerant, so i can't touch Milk, Cheese, Yogurt, Ice cream. Otherwise I get horrible stomach cramping, bloating and intense other things that I won't mention. Although Whey shakes don't seem to affect me in the slightest.
If i left anything out just ask
Current Diet
8am - Whey shake - 1 scoop 30g (24g p / 3g c / 2g fat)
8.30am, - bowl of oats + fruit nut mix (cashews, cranberries, almonds, raisins, sun flower seeds), with oat milk
11am - Either
Sandwich - 2 slices turkey, 2 slices wholemeal bread, olive spread
or
100g fruit nut mix (as listed above)
1pm lunch - 250g chicken breast or white fish, 150g mixed vegies (brocli, cauliflower, carrot, beans capsicum)
Green tea with honey
4pm - 2 slices turkey, 2 slices wholemeal bread, olive spread
Green tea with honey
5pm - banana
7pm or 8.30pm - Dinner
Training day 8.15pm - 2 scoops whey protein after workout + a Dinner below
else 7pm
Either
- 250g chicken breast, 100g mixed vegies, 100g sweet potato
- 250g white fish, 100g mixed vegies, 100g sweet potato
- 3 beef or pork lean heart smart sausages, 150g mixed vegies
- 200g kangaroo steak, 150g mixed vegies, 1 egg
Typically with one teaspoon olive oil, 1-2 grams of sea salt (basically its just a sprinkling i have no idea what it would weigh :P )
11pm - Whey shake - 1 scoop 30g
I'm sticking hard by that diet for now, But i'd also like to know how to tweak it.
Here is my current workout scheduele in its simplest form
Monday - 5pm Weights, 6.15pm 1hr Kick boxing, 7.15pm 1 hr teaching Kick boxing
Tuesday - off
Wednesday - 5pm Weights, 6pm 1hr boxing, 7.15pm 1hr Kick boxing
Thursday - off
Friday - 5pm Weights, 6pm 1hr teaching boxing
Sat / Sun - Try to stay active on weekends, but certainly don't do any hard physical work
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Current weight program. 3 days a week cycling between two workouts (2 weeks in currently) Only posted it for helpful info, Im going to change my workouts every 10 - 12 weeks
(Day 1)
Chest-
10 degree Decline Press- 3 sets (8-10 reps)
10 degree Incline Press- 2 sets (8-10 reps)
Shoulders-
Dumbbell over head shoulder presses- 3 sets (8-10 reps)
Lateral raises- 2 sets (8-10 reps)
Lats-
Medium/wide grip pull-ups - 3 sets (8-10 reps)
Close grip pull downs (plams facing each other)- 2 sets (8-10 reps)
Traps-
Seated Dumbbell shrugs-3 sets (8-10 reps)
(Day 2)
Biceps-
Seated dumbbell curls 3 sets (8-10 reps)
Seated dumbbell Hammer curls 2 sets (8-10 reps)
Triceps-
Lying Tricep extensions 3 sets (8-10 reps)
Tricep pushdowns with small straight bar 2 sets (8-10 reps)
Quads-
Squats- 3 sets (8-10 reps)
Partial dead-lifts -1 set (8-10 reps)
Leg press 2 sets (8-10 reps)
Hams-
Lying leg curls 3 sets (8-10 reps)
Calves-
Standing calves raise 3 sets (8-10 reps)Last edited by phrenetic; 08-19-2010 at 02:11 AM.
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08-19-2010, 07:04 AM #2
I was the same way bro, I came on this forum thinking I had a good diet and I was happy with it. The members proceeded to rip it apart and pointed out so many things I had wrong, I realized I didn't know much at all about dieting. I'm glad they did!!!
Honestly, the diet needs ALOT of work. Suggestions above in bold. Also, i'm confused on your PWO/dinner situation, times, etc. Will need to see macro info (protein/carbs/fat/total cals) for each meal next time you post.
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08-19-2010, 07:21 AM #3
My diet feedback is above in bold. It's a lot to take in but if you can absorb it, you'll be gaining like mad. Just avoid all those processed foods and sugars - stick to the foundation.
Now, even with my changes, you don't have nearly enough healthy fat in your diet. Especially with my changes actually, since I removed all the nut mix. So, get yourself some extra virgin olive oil, macadamia oil, almonds, cashews, natural peanut butter, organic guacamole, or whatever it is you like in terms of healthy fat and add 15g to your pre-workout meal and dinner. Shoot for 50g of poly/monounsaturated fats intentionally - the rest of your fat intake will be derived of animal protein and the small amount in carbs. Also, take a fish oil, omega-3 supplement to make sure you're getting 8g a day of those EFAs or more.
I don't care for your lifting routine. It is fine for overrall fitness, but won't build you a jacked upper body really. Post it in the workout section and in the mean time, look at what others are doing.
I'll post some info for you below to help understand how many calories you should be eating and the food choices they'll be derived from. When you feel good about it, post a better diet so we can check it out.
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08-19-2010, 07:23 AM #4
First, calculate your BMR/TDEE so you know how much you should be eating (for a strict cut, I'd suggest 300-500 calories below TDEE with cardio 5-7 days per week - for strictly gaining LBM, 300-500 above).
BMR/TDEE formula:
Let’s start with BMR. This is your Basal Metabolic Rate. AKA – how many calories you burn each day by just sitting on your ass. In order to figure out your BMR, you need to know what your lean body mass is. In turn, you need to know what your body fat percentage is.
If you don’t know your body fat percentage, go to your gym and get tested (please don’t use electronic scales to get your bf % checked, they're horrible). If you don’t have a gym that offers this service; ask me and I’ll give you a pretty good estimate.
With your bf % in hand, here’s the formula:
BMR (men and women) = 370 + (21.6 X lean mass in kg)
Total weight x bf % in decimal form = total bf weight
Total weight - total bf weight = total lean body mass
For example:
I am 6'1 210 lbs at 10% body fat... so I would multiply 210 by .10 (converted from percent to decimal) = 21 lbs
210 – 21 = 189 lbs lean body weight
189 / 2.2 = 86.0 lean mass in kg
370 + (21.6 x 86) = 2227.6 BMR (this is high for the average person)
Now that we have a BMR figure, we can move on to TDEE. Total Daily Energy Expenditure. This is how many calories we actually use during the day via our BMR and activities such as work, exercise and various tasks. We can figure this number out with simple math but be honest because this figure is to be the cornerstone of your diet and healthy lifestyle. We need to determine your activity level. We’ll choose from a few levels:
§ If you are sedentary (little or no exercise): Calorie - Calculation = BMR x 1.2
§ If you are lightly active (light exercise/sports 1-3 days/week): Calorie-Calculation = BMR x 1.375
§ If you are moderately active (moderate exercise/sports 3-5 days/week): Calorie-Calculation = BMR x 1.55
§ If you are very active (hard exercise/sports 6-7 days a week): Calorie-Calculation = BMR x 1.725
§ If you are extra active (very hard exercise/sports & physical job or 2x training): Calorie-Calculation = BMR x 1.9
For example:
I train with weights 5 days for 90 minutes per week. I play hockey three times per week
for 90 minutes. I do 60 minutes of cardio training 5 times per week as well. I also practice my sport 3 times per week for 90 minutes. Either via skating or puck/shooting drills. All are high-intensity. I am between very and extra active. Let’s say BMR x 1.8. My TDEE is 4010.
In terms of food choices, here goes:
I love analogies. Let’s use a good one. Think of your perfect body as a house that you must build. You’ve figured out your BMR and TDEE, so you know the exact specs of the property you have to work with. You know how exercise affects weight loss and how much of a caloric deficit/surplus we must create to lose/gain said weight; so you know how to build - you understand architecture. You also know the pace you intend on losing/gaining weight at based on these other factors, so you know it will be harder to get your house built in weeks as opposed to months. The only thing left is the tools/building material you must use and because you don’t know how to eat, you still can’t build anything. At least, not well. Sure, you can starve yourself for a few months but you’ll just gain all the weight back in a couple weeks of binge drinking and shitty eating on a vacation – you’re house will fall down!
So, let’s talk tools baby. Let’s talk food. First off, there are only 3 types of foods/macronutrients. Protein. Carbohydrates. Fat. That’s it.
Protein – 4 calories per gram - Building material. Bricks. You can’t gain energy from protein, you can only use it to build muscle/skin/hair/nails. It’s basically just amino acids and it’s what our bodies are made of. As such, we need lots of it. 1g of protein per body lb is a good number to shoot for . Go as high as 2g per body lb if you’re lifting weights and trying to build muscle. For example, I am 207 lbs and I eat between 300-400 grams per day. Our body can only break down so much at one time however, so we want to eat 20-40 grams of protein in every meal, several times per day. Protein, being building material only and not energy/labor – the body can rarely find a reason for it to be stored as fat. If you must over-eat – make it lean meat/fish.
Carbs – 4 calories per gram - Think of these as human labor for your house. Think of sugar as dudes you pick up out front of home depot and oatmeal as a skilled carpenter. Both are carbs, both serve very different purposes. Carbs help transport essential nutrients to the muscles, create glycogen stores, and as such, increase protein synthesis but do not build muscle; they are simply an energy source. As such, they should only be eaten/used when we need energy. Any carbs we ingest before bed or before watching a movie, or something sedentary are not used as energy, and as such, are more likely to be stored in the body as glycogen (glucose/water in our muscles that we will use when doing high-intensity exercise). Once our glycogen reserves are full, they will spill over and be stored as fat. Yes, they will make you fat. Carbs can be your best friend or your worst enemy.
Fats – 9 calories per gram - Like carbs, fats are an energy source, not a building material like protein. They provide nowhere near as much energy as carbs however. Ask anyone who's on a ketogenic diet. With regard to our house, think of fats as the glue/cement. They provide much needed essential fatty acids, which are great for joint/organ health and increase our protein synthesis. Going back to our analogy, cement/glue increases the effectiveness of bricks! If we give our bodies the right fats, it will be able to burn stored body fat quickly as it won’t see any use in keeping it. Remember, like carbs – not all fat is good and ALL fat is high in calories so watch out. A tablespoon of peanut butter can be a good addition to a meal. Snacking on 5-6 tablespoons, however, means you’ve just eaten over your TDEE for the day.
Acceptable proteins for your healthy lifestyle diet:
The goal is to eat lean protein. Meats/other sources low in fat/carbs.
§ Ground beef (93% lean or better)
§ Lean steak (Flank, flat iron, or top sirloin)
§ Bison sirloin (the highest quality red meat)
§ Chicken breast
§ Turkey breast
§ Tuna (canned or sushi grade)
§ Salmon
§ Tilapia (mostly all white fish)
§ All shellfish
§ Venison
§ Whey protein (post-workout recovery purposes only)
§ Casein/Cottage cheese (before bed only)
Black-List Protein sources. Do not eat these because they are high in fat. And not the
good kind we find in nuts and olive oil – I’m talking about cholesterol raising saturated
fat!
§ Bacon
§ Sausage
§ Expensive fat-marbled Steaks (Ribeye, Strip, Filet)
§ Pork and beef ribs
§ Pork/Lamb chops
§ Restaurant ground beef (80/20 fat – most burgers)
§ Duck
§ Chicken legs/thighs
§ Chicken skin
§ Cheese
Acceptable Carbs for your healthy lifestlyle:
Complex carbs are now your creed. These are slower-digesting, natural, low on the glycemic index carbohydrates that digest slowly and provide us with sustained energy. They do not drastically affect our blood sugar and do not cause insulin spikes. Thus our body sees no reason to store them as fat, it would rather burn them for energy. Simple carbs such as enriched white breads/pastas/rice/potatoes/sugars (including most fruit) cause insulin spikes and are high GI foods. They should not be eaten when on a strict diet. Fruit can be consumed early in the day or pre/post-workout because of it’s high nutritional value but should usually be avoided due to being a form of simple sugar. Remember, healthy, low-calorie foods aren’t always the correct foods and such is the case with fruit.
§ Oats/Oatmeal
§ Grits/Cornmeal
§ Unsalted/non-buttered popcorn (great, low-cal snack)
§ Sweet potato (the best choice)
§ Butternut squash
§ Whole wheat pasta (not enriched)
§ Organic whole wheat bread (not enriched wonder bread crap)
§ Brown rice
§ Ezekiel bread
§ Swedish grain bread
§ Gluten free bread
§ Wheat couscous
§ Corn
§ Quinoa
§ Lentils
§ Beans
§ Many more, look up the GI (glycemic index) for healthy choices
Black List:
§ White pasta
§ White bread
§ Baguette
§ Bagels
§ Cookies, cake, muffins, cupcakes, all sweets basically.
§ White couscous
§ White rice
§ You get the idea…
Don’t get discouraged upon reading this list. I still make desserts all the time with whole
grain flour and splenda. I buy bagels and baguettes at the health food store that use
complex carbs as a base. If you’re dedicated, you don’t have to miss out 100%
Acceptable fats for your healthy lifestyle:
We look for fat sources that are high in omega-3, 6, and 9 fatty acids. Also, many are high in protein. We do not want saturated fats such as butter, cream, meat fat. We don’t want test tube fats like trans (the worst). We want mono/polyunsaturated fats that our body can use for something other than calories. Remember, even good fats are high in calories.
§ Natural peanut butter (no sugar added, just roasted peanuts)
§ Natural almond butter
§ Cashews
§ Almonds
§ Peanuts
§ Flax seeds
§ Flax seed oil
§ Salmon and Trout (great fatty proteins)
§ Fish oil
§ Extra virgin olive oil (should be used on all veggies/salads)
§ Chia seeds
§ Grapeseed oil
§ Macadamia nut oil
Acceptable miscellaneous foods:
These foods don’t provide much as far as macronutrients but are great for adding vitamins/minerals and taste. Notice some of these other foods are dairy. Dairy is another animal’s milk. We lack the enzymes to digest it as they do and it’s high in fat/sugar. It should only be eaten early in the day for nutrient purposes with the exception of whey and casein (cottage cheese).
§ Skim milk (Hood brand is only 45 calories and 3g of sugar per cup)
§ Greek yogurt (no sugar added)
§ Berries (all berries are much lower in sugar than other fruits and packed with fiber/nutrients – eat berries)
§ Green Vegetables. These are technically carbs but they are packed with fiber (a type of carb that isn’t used as energy or stored). In bodybuilding/nutrition – we refer to most vegetables as fibrous carbohydrates. While a serving of Broccoli may have 6g of carbs, 5 are from fiber. Meaning that it contains only 1g of storable carbohydrates. In addition, green vegetables are a calorie neutral/negative food (our body uses more calories to digest them than they contain – think celery). Veggies should be eaten with every meal. Every day. If you do this, you can become almost impervious to getting sick. Some vegetables are better than others for healthy diets.
§ Many non-green vegetables. Most are fine – just check labels, some have a good bit of sugar and should be eaten in moderation only (carrots)
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08-19-2010, 07:26 AM #5
I'm happy to see that me and Damien have provided almost identical critique/changes to your diet. Implementing these changes will really kick up the diet to be that of a bodybuilder instead of an average person who wants to be healthy, as Damien mentioned.
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08-19-2010, 07:32 AM #6
Bah, that was overkill - 2 heads is better than one of course!
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08-19-2010, 06:22 PM #7New Member
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hehehe, cool, yeah everything in stages right, trust me current diet is far better then what it was, and already seeing body fat fall off, specially round the stomach.
Thanks heaps for the advice I will go through it and make the changes, work out my BMR cals etc. I find it difficult to figure all that shit out every meal..
Cheers bros
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08-20-2010, 12:35 AM #8New Member
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Damienm05 & gbrice75
Heya, Ok the casein should be fine, my whey protein is Optimum Nutrition 100% gold standard blah blah, they also make a casein, pretty expensive, but if I'm having that at night it halves the cost the whey anyway. So happy to do that for night time shake
Will the extra virgin olive oil give me enough fats, I typically have it with dinner and lunch, either on the fish/chicken and sometimes on the vegies, maybe 1 - 2 tablespoons. Or should I chuck in some avocado also?
Regarding brekky - I have known for a while I need more protein in the mornings, as obviously the oats + fruit nut mix is pretty high in carb content. But dam I feel good after eating a bowl of it, and the energy lasts for hours. I get really brain fuzzy in the mornings if I just smash eggs and toast, and it does my gut in all day if I start that way. I'm not debating its good for me, just that I have tried that before and wasn't able to continue with it.
Would a casein shake in the morning with the oats, be a decent morning protein source?
Thank you for all the other info, sausages are goneski will substitute with more fish.
deli turkey breast and wholemeal bread gonna ditch em in favour of a can of Tuna, pretty sure I can get used to eating that daily. See how I go
Banana is mostly before training, or other vigorous forms of activity
Honey in the green tea, ok ditched, I'm sweet enough already.
Couple quick questions:
Chicken Breast - How the hell do you guys eat so much of it, seriously I normally bake mine in the oven with some olive oil on top and a sprinkling of garlic and chilli powder for taste, but honestly I can't force it down more then a couple nights each week. Is it just one of those things you gotta suck up and shut up about, or can you guys recommend some good ways of cooking it
Soy based products - As I'm lactose intolerant, I typically use soy milk when I can't get my hands on things like rice and oat milk. I've heard stories about the high levels of estrogen in soy, obviously we want to avoid estrogen as much as possible, so just wondering what peoples take on it is, as soy milk is high in protein.
Soy based pasta - I love cooking up a big spaghetti full of vegies and lean mince on weekends as a bit of a treat, I used to use white pasta, switched to wholemeal but don't like it much. I've recently tried "Gluten free, organic soy spaghetti pasta", its not to bad and has more protein in it then carbs.
Here's its NI
Per 100g
Protein - 41g
Fat - 9g (sat 0.8g)
Carbs - 32g (sugars 0g)
Fibre - 1g
Sodium - 155mg
Bloody salt... Anyway what do you reckon, good substitute or steer away from it?Last edited by phrenetic; 08-20-2010 at 07:32 AM.
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08-20-2010, 07:55 AM #9
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08-20-2010, 05:26 PM #10New Member
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Ok pretty much what I thought
My little brother is a chef so he might have some good recommendations on the chicken breast, I will get my cooking hat on and if I find something tasty and amazing I will post it up for everyone.
Going to work out my cal intake today after I go vote, wonder if we will have a female PM for the next three years, or an evil little monkey. Those are my choices :/
Soy, yeah ditched soy milk these days, don't like the estrogen, hell I'm even thinking of buying free range chicken breast to remove the hormones you ingest from the normal store bought Chicken breast.
Aight report back soon with my stats.
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08-20-2010, 05:40 PM #11
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08-20-2010, 07:23 PM #12New Member
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Aawwww common, you can marinade chicken, thats gotta put you above 90% of the populace when it comes to the culinary arts
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08-20-2010, 10:57 PM #13New Member
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OK here we go
Current weight - 76kg or (167 pounds)
Body fat - 15% (thats probably higher then what I actually am) but I'm alright with that.
body fat% .15 * 76 = 9.88
lean mass = 76kg - 9.88kg
BMR : 370+(21.6 * 66.12kg)
BMR = 1798
I guess since I only train 3 days a week I'm moderately active.
TDEE : 1.55 * 1798
TDEE = 2786
Pretty sure I did that correctly?
Ok so im saving the Nutritional information section of everything of eat, Once the casein arrives, and I do my shopping this weekend, I will have all the necessary foods to give a protien / carb/ fat breakdown for a typical day of what i'd eat.
So Tomorrow I will post up that stuff and you guys can rip into it, and get me on track.
Is there anything to look out for with the Tuna? I'm guessing you only want to eat the stuff that comes in the spring water yeah. Anything else to watch out for?
good times
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08-21-2010, 06:47 AM #14
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08-21-2010, 07:01 AM #15
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08-21-2010, 05:04 PM #16New Member
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Yeah I'm pretty happy with moderately active. Yes I work a office type desk job, 3-4 days a week as a web developer, but spend my weekends hiking, bushwalking, rock climbing and generally trying to remain somewhat active.
Add to that the intense cardio that is my fight training and my spontaneous push ups when im bored and I think Moderately active is perfect, and once summer comes back I can get back to hitting the beach and swimming too. Also thinking of taking up indoor soccer once a week as soon as my ankle heals.
Aight Im off to the supermarket to get my food for the week, I actually enjoy the fact that I know exactly what to buy and dont have to stuff about. 8 billion pieces of fish, 3 trillion pieces of chicken, 10 tonnes of kangaroo and 7 thousands bags of broccoli
easy
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08-23-2010, 11:40 PM #17New Member
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New diet
Ok finally got around to counting the protein / carb / fat ratio for my daily intakes.
Here is my new diet.
protein / carbs / fat
8am -
Whey + Casein shake (50/50) - 1 scoop 30g
Should I have a full 30g whey shake here and casein shake with breakfast?
Multi vitamin, zinc + magnesium, fish oil (1000mg)
25g / 3g / 1g
8.30am -
Should I have a full 30g Case in shake here to up the protein intake?
bowl of oats + mix (cashews, almonds, sun flower seeds, goji berries)
with oat milk
Breakdown
oats 50g - 5.4g / 31g / 4.3g
oat milk - 1g / 9.1g / 1.8g
nut mix 20g - 5g / 10g / 5g
total - 11.4 / 50.1 / 11
11am -
Can of Tuna - 100g
(22g/0g/1g)
1pm lunch -
250g chicken breast or white fish, 150g mixed vegies (brocli, cauliflower), 50g Brown rice
60g / 39g / 23.4g
White tea
******************
Lunch
brown rice - 4 / 35 / 1.4
vege - 3.9 / 3.9 / 0
chicken - 57.7 / 0 / 3.1
almond, cashew, brazil nut butter - 1.7 / 0.8 / 6
total - 65.6 / 39 / 10.5
******************
4pm -
Can of Tuna - 100g
White tea
(22 / 0 / 1)
******
if training day 8.15pm - 2 scoops whey protien
(48 / 6 / 2)
+ banana
(2 / 20 / 0)
********
Dinner 7pm or 8.30pm
Dinners
- 250g white fish, 150g mixed vegies, 100g sweet potato
(44 / 28.6 / 10.3)
- 225g kangaroo steak, 150g mixed vegies, 100g sweet potato
(52.5 / 28.6 / 8.25)
Typically with one teaspoon olive oil
(0 / 0 / 18)
11pm -
Casein shake - 1 scoop 30g,
fish oil (1000mg)
(25 / 3 / 1)
/*************************/
The daily counts
----------------------------------------------------
*****Non training day
1. 25 / 3 / 1
2. 11.4 / 40.1 / 11
3. 22 / 0 / 1
4. 65.6 / 39 / 10.5
5. 22 / 0 / 1
6. 44 / 28.6 / 10.3 + (0 / 0 / 18)
7. 25 / 3 / 1
Total For NON training day
p 215 / c 114 / f 54 = 383
p 56% / c 30% / f 14%
----------------------------------------------------
*****Training days
1. 25 / 3 / 1
2. 11.4 / 40.1 / 11
3. 22 / 0 / 1
4. 65.6 / 39 / 10.5
5. 22 / 0 / 1
6. 2 / 20 / 0 (banana)
7. 50 / 6 / 2 (2 scoops whey)
8. 44 / 28.6 / 10.3 + (0 / 0 / 18)
9. 25 / 3 / 1
Total For training day
p 267 / c 140 / f 56 = 463
p 58% / c 30% / f 12%
----------------------------------------------------
Ok, advice, critique. Etc
.
I'm feeling amazing on this diet its only been 4 days
Casein doesn't seem to upset my stomach at all which is great.
Although I reckon i might get sick of the Tuna, whats another good easy protein source for those in between meals?
Thanks for the all the help so far guys!Last edited by phrenetic; 08-24-2010 at 01:05 AM.
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08-23-2010, 11:46 PM #18New Member
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Oh and my body type is Ectomorphic, most certainly ectomorphic
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08-24-2010, 07:33 AM #19
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08-24-2010, 11:45 PM #20New Member
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Aight thanks gbrice, I didn't understand correctly about separating the fats and carbs.
Yes the whey and banana is PWO, well kinda, explained below.
Typical training day
****************
5pm - weights
- Banana
- Whey 30g
6.15pm kick boxing or tactical fighting
- Whey 30g
7.15pm Teach boxing/kickboxing
8.30pm - Dinner
*****************
Ok, will split up carbs and fats, that shouldnt be an issue.
I still can't do eggs in the morning, it just upsets my gut all day bro. I'm gonna try it out over the weekend again though with egg whites, fingers crossed.
Removing the nut mix from breakfast, goji berries only.
Will redo and come back with breakdowns
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Yes sir, when you drop your estrogen down to nothing you generally feel shitty and ache like hell. Try backin off the AI some next time.
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