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Bodybuilding Nutrition FAQs

May 26, 2008

Five of the top asked questions about Bodybuilding Nutrition

1. How Key Is Protein To My Muscle-Building Efforts?

You can’t construct a building without adequate raw materials, and it’s pretty much the same in building muscle. Amino acids, the small components of protein, are commonly referred to as “building blocks” because they’re used to build and add new muscle tissue.

Lower-fat sources of protein include poultry (skinless white meat), fish, flank steak, top sirloin steak, protein powders and low-fat dairy products such as cheese, cottage cheese, yogurt and milk.

2. How Many Calories Do I Need Daily?

In addition to protein and carbs, you need adequate calories to grow. Muscle growth requires energy: if you don’t provide enough energy in the form of calories, you won’t grow. As a general rule, you need about 20 calories per pound of bodyweight per day to put on muscle. That’s 4,000 calories for a 200-pound bodybuilder. But everybody’s biochemistry is different. If this doesn’t pack on the mass, up the calories. If you’re packing on mass along with too much bodyfat, lower the calories.

3. How Much Water Do I Need?

Failing to drink adequate liquid can affect your gains in mass. How so? Water comprises up to 75% of the body, and maintaining a hydrated body aids growth. When the body becomes dehydrated, water leaves muscle cells and can initiate a trigger that sends the body into a muscle-wasting state. Research also shows that even slight dehydration decreases muscle strength. In fact, one way that creatine and glutamine work is by hyperswelling the muscles with fluid. They push water into muscles to facilitate an anabolic or growth state. Be sure to drink about a gallon of water each day.

4. What’s The Best Thing To Eat First Thing In The Morning?

As soon as you wake up and before you cook breakfast, down about 20-40 g of fast digesting whey protein and 20-40 g of fast-digesting carbs such as white bread or sugar. You wake up in a catabolic state due to the long night of fasting. To stop the catabolism (muscle breakdown), getting in fast-digesting protein and carbs will quickly put you into an anabolic state.

5. What Should I Eat Before Bed To Fuel Bodybuilding Gains?

Before you go to bed, you need to consume 20-40 g of a slow-digesting protein such as casein or cottage cheese. While you sleep, you fast for seven to nine hours. During this time, your body will turn to your muscles to break them down for fuel, because the amino acids that make up muscle protein can be converted into glucose. If you ingest a slow-digesting protein that delivers a steady supply of amino acids throughout the night, these aminos will be converted to fuel, sparing your muscle mass.

To get your fill, aim for at least 1 gram of protein per pound of body-weight and upward of 1½ g, spread over six to eight meals each day. This can maximize absorption while minimizing bloating. A 200-pound bodybuilder, for example, would need 200-300 g a day.

Bodybuilding Meal Plan - Hard Gainer

April 11, 2008

I will keep it short and sweet, wouldn’t want to make you read more than you have too. Below is meal plan for people on a budget, so its perfect for students.

Example menu plan for someone wishing to gain quality weight on a budget.

Time Food Protein
7:30 1 scoop of whey protein 20g
8:00 Breakfast Large bowl of whole wheat breakfast cereal with 1/3 pint skimmed milk
Two slices wholemeal bread toasted + olive oil spread
½ portion weight gain drink with water and multidextrose powder
100ml orange juice + 1 tblsp olive oil
37g
10:30 25g
12:30 Tuna (95g) + 1 tblsp natural yoghurt
½ small chicken breast (60g)
Four slices wholemeal bread + olive oil spread
salad
low fat yoghurt
52g
15:00 sandwich (wholemeal bread + olive oil spread + filling)
drink of skimmed milk - 1/3 pint
Fruit
32g
17:00 ½ portion weight gain drink with skimmed milk and multidextrose powder 27g

Training

18:30 After Training Two scoops whey protein 40g
19:30 mackerel (95g)
½ small chicken breast (60g)
either 2 medium jacket potatoes
or 200g boiled brown rice
or 350g boiled wholewheat pasta
vegetables
low fat yoghurt
45g
22:00 large bowl wholewheat breakfast cereal with 1/3 pint skimmed milk 15g
23:30 One scoop whey protein in skimmed milk 25g

Total Protein - 320g

Bad Bodybuilding Eating Habits

March 28, 2008

You might be one of the bodybuilders that are training hard but no results are visible or the rate of development is simply low. In this case we might be dealing with a problem that is not given by your Bodybuilding routine but your bad eating habits. They can actually keep weight loss unreachable and even building muscles can become very difficult. Let us take a look at these bad nutritional habits you might be having.

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Shopping List for Getting Huge

March 13, 2008

Complex Carbohydrates
10 Potatoes
2% milk (more carbs than protein)
1 Pound Brown rice
3 Pounds of Pasta
1 pound oatmeal
1 Loaf of bread
Yogurt
1 Squash
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