NJbigtime said:so how many carbs should i eat after i workout. i get home around 7 at night. i was thinking eating half of baked patotoe and 1 slice of wheat bread. what do you think abou that?
diamonddiceclay said:you should only eat carbs after your full body workout and not for more than 36 hrs
sweets said:
huh what![]()
Nathan said:I agree that some carbs are needed after you workout, but I have a follow-up question: Should you drink simple carbs right after lifting or just a protein drink? If you lift at in the evening? Should your next meal then consist of something like brown rice, or would veggies be better for carbs? This question always bothers me cause you don't want too many unused carbs in your system when you go to sleep and you generally want to avoid high GI carbs (except post-workout).
Phemomena said:HOWEVER, it's not a great idea to just stuff yourself right before you go to sleep... you most likely won't get a good night's sleep and feel like crap the next day
BigAndy69 said:Yes you are right when you say that the body doesn't know when you get carbs. The fact is that you shouldn't consume many calories regardless of whether they are from carbs, protein or fat in the evening because your METABOLISM has slowed down significantly. You are no burning food that efficiently anymore. You also need to take in consideration that 97% of excess fat is stored as fat, 77% of excess carbs are stored as fat, and 70% of excess proteins are stored as fat.
Lots of people are fat because they skip breakfest, have small lunch at work and gorge themselves would food in the evening. They did not eat that many cals overall but they ate at the wrong time. I know my father was like that.
endpoint said:par deus:"Fat loss is determined primarily by daily calorie balance"
That makes it sound like just before you go to bed your body, gets out a calculator a note pad and a calorie guide........adds it all together and decideds whether you gain fat or lose it.
shouldnt it be
"Fat loss is determined primarily by momentary calorie balance"
or something like that? like if you consume 500cals......and during the time it is converting to energy, you only use 300 of it.......200cals gets stored as fat.
or is that tottally wrong.
BigAndy69 said:Mr BMJ, I agree with what you say, but I think it is too general. Yes, you might not gain weight if you don't exceed your daily caloric range for the day, but from my experience with dieting it can have a negative impact on fat loss because of a slower metabolic rate and release of insulin.
Par Deus said:
This reasoning is faulty. Yes, if you eat more at night, you will lose less fat during that period (or perhaps even gain a bit) because you do burn less calories while sleeping -- however, when you eat less the next day while you are awake and you are burning more calories, you will burn more fat, thus making up for it.
Vageta said:BigAndy you're making a lot out of nothing.
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