Finish Line Fueling: An Essential Guide to Runner's Nutrition
By Jackie Dikos
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About this ebook
Recipes are divided into helpful sections that include not just the traditional meals of breakfast, lunch, and dinner but also pre-activity snacks, post-workout recovery nibbles, racing fuel, and carbo-loading meals for intense activity. Mouthwatering morsels such as Sweet Potato Avocado Deviled Eggs, Buckwheat-Oat Granola, High Heat Roast Beef, Vegan Pinto Bean Burgers, Wild Rice and Mushroom Pilaf, and Cilantro-Lime Burrito Bowl are just a few of the dozens of yummy and nutrient-packed recipes included here. Additionally, every recipe includes a helpful breakdown of the number of calories, fat grams, grams of fiber, grams of protein, and vitamin-types that it provides, as well as strategies to modify the recipe based on your age, gender, and performance goals.
With additional sections on getting the most nutrients from your diet, foods to avoid, and the best food pairings, Finish Line Fueling is essential reading for every runner.
Jackie Dikos
Jackie Dikos, RD, CSSD, CLT is a Sports Dietitian and two-time Olympic Trials competitor in the marathon. She earned a 15th place finish at the 2007 Chicago Marathon and won the 2010 Indianapolis Monumental Marathon with a personal record of 2:45:26. Dikos aims to empower runners through simple fueling strategies in an effort to maximize the achievement of health, performance, and overall quality of life goals. She lives in Westfield, Indiana.
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Finish Line Fueling - Jackie Dikos
GOAL-SETTING ESSENTIALS FOR EVERYDAY HEALTH AND OPTIMAL PERFORMANCE
What does a loyal runner want most from his or her day? They want to run. A day without taking in the fresh air, working up good sweat, and feeling the smooth rhythm of a spirited stride feels like it’s missing something. A run makes the day feel more complete.
Feeling great when we run—now that’s a state of contentment beyond measure. It feels like cashing in a winning lottery ticket. It makes a good day brighten into a great one with an extra ray of sunshine. The lasting state of contentment that comes with a great run makes the countless miles and endless effort of basic daily training worth every tiresome second.
When we just want to run, everything else, including food, seems to just complicate things. One more mile on a run can easily take precedence over post-run flexibility and refueling. Long workouts, a busy schedule, and working in enough sleep to do it all over again can demand a lot out of the day. Over time the pantry becomes lined with prepackaged foods, sports performance energy products, and fad diet books in an effort to find simple answers to support efficiency in life and performance. The message of what entails quality fueling and goals to support performance can get muddled.
Food doesn’t have to be complicated. Keeping food simple and making the effort to put together basic food choices can fuel even the most demanding lifestyle. Bringing simple, high-quality ingredients together with a fundamental fueling thought process offers fuel to sustain health and performance, and leaves time to do what makes you feel most like you—run.
The aim of Finish Line Fueling is to inspire ditching the pre-packed foods and performance products laced with less ideal ingredients. Emphasis is placed on a simple whole food grocery list packed with essential nutrients every caliber runner requires to thrive. Focusing on whole food, nutrient dense ingredients allows for a healthy, high performance regimen to unfold and open the door to many aspects of a good quality life.
Fundamental Fuel
Are there goals you strive for when you put together a meal or snack? What do you want to achieve from your plate? Some runners reach for favorite and routine comfort foods because it offers a sense of security in weight management and predictability. Other runners yearn to fill a void response to cravings and overwhelming hunger. Sometimes simply working in a quality source protein or having a vegetable land on the plate feels like blue ribbon kind of meal.
Think of fueling the mind, palate, and body in support of health, performance, and overall quality of life. What we feel like consuming can often be driven by factors beyond taste or good
and bad
food choices.
Consider a runner who eats very little fat. This naturally creates an urge, and maybe even sense of anxiety, to consume a very fatty meal because the body sends a strong enough message to answer the fat discrepancy. By consuming a small source of fat with meals and snacks as often as possible, the runner will feel more at peace while satisfying the palate and body. The more one can identify with what the body needs, the more one can appropriately respond without going to extremes.
The monitoring of calories-in and calories-out plays a major role in weight management, race weight, and overall health. However, the foundation of a true high quality diet can be lost with calorie-driven fueling; it can also instigate a negative food relationship with thoughts of feeling good
or bad
about eating. A shift in focus should be to achieve target ranges of macronutrients—carbohydrates, protein, and fat—in meeting individual nutrition needs. This offers a spirit of fueling,
not just eating.
It’s essential for a runner to develop a base understanding of macronutrient needs as they relate to individual weight, training, and overall life goals. This will be a tremendous help to understanding what type of balance your body needs in the day between food groups as well as fueling great training and racing. Knowing the body requires 400 grams of carbohydrates a day, yet realizing an average day holds around 250 grams of carbohydrates offers the opportunity to gradually adjust the diet and better sustain needs.
While it’s advantageous to gain understanding in target macronutrient goals, over-calculating food can be overwhelming to many runners. This is especially true when labels are not present or life gets hectic. To limit the number of variables in analyzing what the body needs, support decision making at meals, and find a balance between life and meeting macronutrient goals, I encourage a concept called fundamental fueling. Fundamental fueling is the basic goal a runner should strive for at meals and snacks as often as possible. It supports hitting daily target nutrient needs, and minimizes nutrient deficits and eating extremes, while optimizing health and performance.
There are five key components to focus on as the basis of fundamental fueling. The objective is to be aware of each component and their source at meals and snacks. When a runner focuses on these five components at meals and snacks as often as possible, nutrient goals for the day are much more likely to come together in an ideal fashion. It takes the stress out of hitting a daily grand total number by breaking mealtime into smaller parts. It simplifies performance fueling and a well-balanced diet.
The five key components are to 1) consume a source of quality carbohydrates that contains fiber; 2) eat lean protein; 3) eat healthy fat; 4) enhance meals with colorful anti-oxidant-rich foods such as fruits and vegetables; and 5) be sure to drink enough fluid to maintain hydration.
5 Key Fundamental Fueling Components
*** Strive to consume a source of each of the five fundamental fueling components at meals and snacks as often as possible. ***
There are a lot of powerful foods to choose from with fundamental fueling, but no single food is super
enough to single out as the ideal single source of nutrition. It is easy to be coaxed into thinking a single food or ingredient can heal all wounds. As with all forms of life, balance is required. Striving for balance through many different high quality food sources daily is ideal.
The learning curve of putting together a meal that contains a source of quality carbohydrates, lean protein, healthy fat, antioxidants, and water comes with a basic understanding of what the sources of these components are. It is very easy for one or more of the components to slip through the cracks.
Consider a meal of grilled chicken over a bed of green leafy vegetables and topped with low fat salad dressing. Sounds healthy,
but this meal does not offer fundamental fueling balance. As the day continues, discrepancy in fuel sources compound and over time can contribute to nutrient inadequacies and hard to suppress cravings.
The same healthy
meal becomes more balanced using a fundamental fuel philosophy by eating a bed of green leafy vegetables topped with grilled chicken, avocado, white beans, and fresh fruit. The meal reaches a whole new level in terms of healthy.
Chicken and beans serve as protein sources, avocado supplies healthy fat, and the beans and fruit serve as quality carbohydrate sources. A colorful plate suggests an array of powerful antioxidants. Drinking water, milk, or juice with the meal supports hydration.
Macronutrient is a term to describe carbohydrates, protein, and fat. The three macronutrients serve as fuel for the body in meeting energy needs in the form of calories. A balance between carbohydrates, protein, and fat is essential for health, weight management, and performance. While every athlete should strive for the balance of macronutrients, all too often runners place great emphasis on a single macronutrient for weight management purposes and neglect a healthy balance of macronutrients. While heading down this weight management and isolated macronutrient path, the idea of achieving necessary micronutrients beyond iron and calcium is disregarded.
Micronutrient is the term for the substances and chemicals, such as vitamins and minerals, required in small amounts that allow the body to perform normal processes. I lump micronutrients into the category of antioxidants to simplify the fundamental fueling concept; however, the broad category of micronutrients entails more than just antioxidants. Focusing on antioxidants in terms of color is a great starting place. The more colorful a meal or snack, the more likely one is to achieve a broad range of micronutrients. Examples of micronutrients are iron, calcium, potassium, zinc, vitamin K, and magnesium. Foods that are high in micronutrients are considered good quality and dense in nutrients.
Questions may remain in understanding why we need to eat certain foods, what sources are high quality, when do we eat, and how much is needed to offer the most benefits. The below sections will hopefully help.
Carbohydrates: Why, What, When, and How Much?
WHY Carbohydrates?
Carbohydrate availability plays a major role in a runner’s ability to sustain an intense training load and perform well in competition. Carbohydrates are the most efficient way for the body to break down energy in the form of glucose to be used by working muscles and the brain. The body stores carbohydrates in the liver as glycogen. When the blood supply of glucose is depleted, the liver is responsible for converting glycogen to glucose as a fuel source. If there is not enough glycogen stored or if stored glycogen is depleted during a long or intense training session, a source of fast absorbing carbohydrate, such as sports drink or energy gel, is useful in replenishing blood glucose and sustaining performance.
Depletion of carbohydrates is a major cause of fatigue during exercise. Optimizing the carbohydrate status of the body can minimize fatigue. The longer and more intense the exercise, the more important it is to consume adequate carbohydrates in the diet.
WHAT Carbohydrate Sources?
It is important to think of carbohydrates in terms of quality. Reducing, if not eliminating, candy or cookies makes more sense than cutting fresh fruit, brown rice, sweet potato, or whole grain pasta. Runners often justify sweets, but find it no problem to cut quality carbohydrates. The better quality choices consistently made in the diet, the more likely required nutrients to maintain good health and performance can be achieved.
Most often a runner should reach for natural forms of quality carbohydrates that are processed as little as possible. Quality, slow carbohydrates typically contain fiber, are absorbed more slowly, and contain a greater amount of nutrients. Many of these foods can be prepared in bulk and stored in the freezer or refrigerator for use like many of the convenience foods that line the shelf, yet aren’t laced undesirable ingredients.
Great carbohydrate sources include: sweet potatoes, brown rice, beans and lentils, fresh and dried fruit, oat and oat bran, quinoa, barley, whole grain wheat germ or bran, spelt, corn, peas, and white potato.
Under certain training and racing circumstances various forms of sugar, or fast carbohydrates, will serve as a rapid fuel source. Fast carbohydrates are necessary because they enter the blood stream quickly and support fueling goal performance. Examples of common fast carbohydrates are sports drinks, dried fruit, sports gels, honey, sport jellybeans, and maple syrup. Figuring out what source of carbohydrate is best tolerated during training sessions will help runners support a solid race day plan.
Outside of training windows and racing, many of the fast sugar sources should be limited. Take for instance an opportunity to eat Greek yogurt with fresh fruit and granola instead of yogurt made with sugar syrup and outdone with food-dye laden candy toppings. Natural forms of sugar such as those present in milk and fruit are beneficial to a healthy diet. Consuming high quantities of sugar in processed foods can contribute to a diet low in nutrients and increase risk of inflammation.
WHEN to Consume Carbohydrates
Daily Needs
The number of carbohydrate grams a runner needs daily varies significantly based on activity level, age, weight, medical history, and more. There is no one-size-fits-all in meeting carbohydrate goals. With that in mind, a carb-free diet is not recommended. There may be stories of the runner who ran endlessly for hours on low or no carbohydrates, but this is not the best strategy for a training runner who desires to maximize their personal performance.
Low or no carbohydrates may work for a short time, but eventually the discrepancy in fuel can compound, as will the stressors on the body. Chronic low carbohydrate dieting for heavily training runners can snowball to ups and downs in body weight, insufficient calories and nutrients, depleted immune function, increased injury risk, and even the potential for overtraining syndrome. Very low volume beginner runners may feel sufficiently fueled with a lower carbohydrate approach, but as training requirements increase, so do carbohydrate requirements.
Slow carbohydrates should make up most of the carbohydrates in the diet, and be part of meals and snacks as often as possible. Consume quality carbohydrates in frequent doses. Including carbohydrates often throughout the day allows a runner greater opportunity to hit target goals by the end of the day instead of cramming as many carbohydrates as possible into a single meal. Spacing carbohydrates throughout the day also offers the body greater ability to manage the carbohydrate load which supports healthy digestion, blood sugar control, and consistent energy levels.
The more often a runner makes an effort to consume high quality carbohydrates at meals and snacks, the less likely they will feel the urge to binge on a sleeve of cookies or fall into the evening bowl of ice cream routine. Craving sweets in general may be the body communicating that a diet is low in sufficient quality carbohydrates. Be sure quality carbohydrates are a priority at meals and snacks.
Training and Competition Needs
When to consume carbohydrates relative to training can become somewhat strategic. To narrow how carbohydrates should be used in training, remember three key windows: 1) carbohydrates should be consumed as part of the pre-run meal, 2) during training and racing sessions lasting greater than 60 to 90 minutes, and 3) within about 30 minutes after long, challenging, or glycogen depleting efforts.
Fast carbohydrates are quick to