Post Workout Nutrition That Builds Lean Muscle

post workout nutrition to build lean musclePost workout nutrition and your ability to build lean muscle mass are vital for sustained fat loss. Find out why here…

It doesn’t matter whether you want to build a large, lean muscular frame with bulging six pack abs, or a tight, toned, svelte physique with a flat stomach. One attribute makes both goals possible – lean muscle mass.

 

Why Exercise And Lean Muscle Mass Are Important To
Losing Weight & Burning Fat

Obviously the way you train your muscles will be different depending on which goal you have in mind, but the overall rule is the same. Lean muscle increases RMR (Resting Metabolic Rate), helping your body burn fat.

By the way, the best exercises are always the most functional result producing, body changing exercises, no matter how much weight you lift – this never changes.

The best exercises will put your body in fat burning turbo drive for up to 48 hours post workout. (Yep, burn fat even while you’re not at the gym or working out!) But a lot of this depends on getting your post workout nutrition just right.

I can’t stress this point enough. If you don’t get this right then you’ll never achieve the results your efforts deserve. Whether you’re trying to get big, or trying to get lean and toned.

What Happens To Your Body After Exercise

Now we could go into some HUGE scientific detail about what happens in your body after exercise, but for the purpose of this article, let’s keep things simple. But you can read a more scientific explanation in this free report (science even I could understand!): What to NEVER eat post workout.

After an intense workout your body enters a catabolic state. Basically this means that the gylcogen in your muscles has all be used up, and your body is starting to break down your muscle tissue as a source of energy.

But wait a minute, didn’t I just say that lean muscle mass was important? So we don’t want our bodies breaking it down do we? Heck no!

And this is where proper post workout nutrition comes in. We need to get our bodies out of this catabolic state and back into a fat burning, muscle building anabolic state as quickly as possible.

Time For A Friendly Insulin Spike

a friendly insulin spike shuttles nutrients to your muscles post workoutOK, so now we’re at the really important part, the actual nutrition stuff. What should we actually eat and drink post exercise?

Well if you’re a regular visitor to this site you’ll know that we’re always aiming to regulate our blood sugar levels with slowly digested carbs, slow release proteins and healthy fats.

But for the post-workout meal we’re looking for the opposite characteristics; quickly digested carbs and quick release proteins. Notice I didn’t mention fats, as they slow the absorption of carbs and protein.

The purpose here is to elicit an insulin spike, which will send the nutrients to your muscles as quickly as possible. By doing this you’ve reversed the catabolic state, and your body can now use the quick release carbs and proteins to replenish muscle glycogen and repair muscle tissue.

Also remember to rehydrate post workout, with a water based (or just water!) drink. This is a very important point, not to be forgotten!

What To Eat And Drink Post Exercise

Now don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying that you need to chomp down a candy or chocolate bar post workout to spike your blood sugar levels. And I’m not saying that you should add a few spoonfuls of sugar to your protein powder either.

We’re still going to keep things natural, and we’re going to be getting our quick release carbs from healthy sources. We’re looking for natural foods towards the higher end of the glycemic index (GI). Here are a few good examples:

Banana

Watermelon

Mango

Pineapple

Raw, Organic Honey

Organic Maple Syrup

Good sources of quick release protein are natural, fat free/ low fat yogurt and milk. But I get the majority of my post-workout protein from a top quality whey protein isolate.

Now here is where things get a little complicated. Most of the commercial whey protein powders, soy protein powders and post workout formulas are full of junk and xenoestrogens that ruin your post workout nutrition, stunt muscle growth and sabotage fat loss.

What you need to look for is a natural source of whey isolate, from organically reared, grass fed cows. While I’m in the UK I go for Pulsin Natural Whey Protein. I’m fairly sure they only ship to the UK, but haven’t tested.

Fortunately for those not in the UK, I’ve also heard amazing things about Prograde (also the guys who wrote the report I mentioned earlier). These are the guys recommended by countless fitness enthusiasts and personal trainers.

Your Workout Is Important Too

I hope this article has shown you that post workout nutrition is vitally important if you want to be lean, no matter if you want to build huge muscles or a toned physique. But I also want you to know that the type of exercise you do is important. If you just spend hours every week on the treadmill or elliptical trainer then the advice in this article will do nothing for you.

But if you really want to learn how to workout for a lean physique then watch one of the videos below to make sure you’re not working out the wrong way, or eating the wrong kinds of foods. This will blow your mind!

Back to the fat burning foods homepage.

Have you heard about negative calorie foods and the negative calorie diet?

Does Diet Soda Make You Fat?

 

Does diet soda make you fat?Does diet soda make you fat? Are sugar-free soft drinks just as bad for your health and your weight loss as the full-sugar alternative? Find out here…

I’m going to start off by asking you all a question… Hands up if you’ve ever chosen diet soda because it’s the “healthy” option.

Yep, that’s quite a few hands I see raised in the air.

Now, hands up if you’ve ever been standing at a vending machine, out for a meal or in a store and heard somebody else comment on their choice of diet soda.

“I’m on a diet, better get the diet soda.”

Or my personal favorite:

“I can drink as much diet soda as I like because it is calorie and sugar free!”

Just as I thought, even more hands waving at me!

Better put them down now though, you look kinda weird sitting there waving your hand at the screen :-)

Well it might surprise you, and all of those other diet soda drinkers you were just thinking about, to learn that there is absolutely NOTHING even remotely healthy about diet soda.

Learn about the crazy “Health Foods” that are SABOTAGING your Fat Loss!

Artificial Sweeteners Can Cause You To Gain Weight

It might sound crazy, but even though the artificial sweeteners in sugar free drinks have no calorific value (zero calories) there is evidence to show that they cause you to gain weight.

Even more frightening, there is a good chance that “diet” drinks are actually MORE fattening than their full-sugar brothers and sisters.

Wait a minute, what the deuce!?

Hormonal Response To Artificial Sweeteners

Did you know that it is NOT the number of calories you eat and drink every day that causes you to gain weight? It is actually your body’s HORMONAL RESPONSE to the calories you ingest.

In the case of diet soda there are no calories, but the chemicals you are drinking trick the body into believing it’s eating something sweet.

Let’s take Aspartame for example (found in Diet Coke). This chemical actually blocks your brain’s production of serotonin (controls mood and appetite amongst other things).

And what does your body do when it is suffering from low serotonin levels? It tells your body to go and get some of the foods that it knows will stimulate the release of the chemical.

And guess what, this just happens to be the waistline expanding, high-calorie, carbohydrate-rich, processed “junk” foods that every dieter fears!

So sugar free sodas are actually fueling your sugar and junk food cravings. Not good.

diet soda link to obesity?

Insulin Response

Scientists also suspect that no-calorie sweeteners trigger the release of insulin in your body. (Insulin is released by your pancreas to allow your cells to absorb blood sugar and provide energy).

The problem is that artificial sweeteners are tricking your body into releasing insulin because they taste sweet. But there is no sugar to feed your cells. And as soon as your body figures out there is no food, it decides that it better go and get some! This, of course, triggers your appetite!

And again you’ll be craving sugary foods that produce a quick “spike” in blood sugar levels, quickly followed by a “crash”. This is how we get into a hunger-craving-snacking cycle that adds on the pounds.

Just think about how many time you’ve told yourself “man, I need a sugar hit”. You know that candy bar is bad for you, but you NEED it! Wouldn’t you like to get rid of these cravings or control them if you had the chance?

Drinking Diet Soda Causes Obesity?

Nobody has yet actually taken the time to prove scientifically that diet soda causes obesity. But there is one study from the University of Texas that proven a very strong link between the two.

Sharon Fowler and colleagues conducted an 8-year study on the links between soft drink use and weight gain.

“What didn’t surprise us was that total soft drink use was linked to overweight and obesity,” Fowler tells WebMD. “What was surprising was when we looked at people only drinking diet soft drinks, their risk of obesity was even higher.”

In fact, the researchers found that nearly all of the obesity risk came from diet sodas.

“There was a 41% increase in risk of being overweight for every can or bottle of diet soft drink a person consumes each day.”

Read more on the study at WebMD.

The results of this study are pretty conclusive. If you had any lingering doubts, it proves that there is absolutely NO place in your life for soda, diet or otherwise, if you care about your health and your body.

Artificial Sweeteners – If It’s Not Sugar, Then What Is It?

Saccharin – Discovered in 1879 by a chemist researching coal tar derivatives.

Sucralose – Developed as a pesticide in the 1970s. Re-branded as a no-calorie sweetener. (Actually contains trace amounts of chlorine).

Aspartame – Discovered by a chemist looking to create an anti-ulcer drug in 1965. Finally approved for human consumption in 1980 after years of wrangling over its alleged contribution to cancer in lab rats.

So next time you feel like reaching for a sugar-free soft drink, why not just take a moment to remind yourself of what you will be drinking. “I’ll have a dose of pesticide, coal tar derivative or anti-ulcer drug please.”

And remember, the next time you feel like reaching for a “diet” drink, there is absolutely NOTHING “diet” about it.

Artificial sweeteners and other man made foods are making you FAT. Find out more here…

Clever stuff:

Aspartame Wikipedia

Sucralose Wikipedia

Saccharin Wikipedia