CrossFit Nutrition Handbook
CrossFit Nutrition Handbook
CrossFit Nutrition Handbook
eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch, and no sugar
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Contents
Introduction Clean Eating Paleo or Zone? Paleolithic Diet Paleo FAQ Zone Diet Day in the Zone Zone FAQ Appendix A. Further Resources Appendix B. Food Blocks Appendix C. High Glycemic Index foods Appendix D. Paleo Food List Credits
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Introduction
In a very real sense, proper nutrition is the most important thing you can master here. You cant out train bad nutrition. It will form the basis for all of your training success as well as attainment of any body composition goals you may have. We train for performance. We eat to enhance that performance. Food intake should be adequate to support activity levels, but not body fat. We will introduce two eating modalities that follow that concept, the Paleo diet and the Zone diet.
The Greg Glassman Pyramid The theoretical hierarchy of a development athlete, each layer builds on the layer below it.
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If you are working out without eating right, you will not get the results of this program, you will get half the results. Nicole Carrol (CrossFit Director of Training)
Clean Eating
In plain language, base your diet on garden vegetables, especially greens, lean meats, nuts and seeds, little starch, and no sugar. Thats about as simple as we can get. Many have observed that keeping your shopping trolley towards the fresh food and avoiding the aisles is a great way to protect your health. Food is perishable. The stuff with a long shelf life is all circumspect. If you follow these simple guidelines you will benefit from nearly all that can be achieved through nutrition. What Foods should I avoid? Excessive consumption of high-glycemic carbohydrates is the primary culprit in nutritionally caused health problems. High glycemic carbohydrates are those that raise blood sugar too rapidly. They include rice, bread, potato, pasta, sweets, sodas and processed carbohydrates. What is the Problem with High-Glycemic Carbohydrates? The problem with high-glycemic carbohydrates is that they give an inordinate insulin response. Insulin is an essential hormone for life, yet acute, chronic elevation of insulin leads to hyperinsulinism, which has been positively linked to obesity, elevated
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cholesterol levels, blood pressure, mood dysfunction and a Pandoras Box of disease and disability.
Paleo or Zone
You have two options when choosing a crossfit nutrition modality: the Paleo diet or the Zone diet. The Paleo diet is concerned more with food quality. The Zone diet is concerned more with food quantity. Paleo Only certain foods allowed Relative food portions 1-2 week time frame to begin to experience full benefit Zone Any food allowed Specific calculated portions 6-8 week time frame to begin to experience full benefit
Read through the guides for each diet and make an informed decision on which one you can reasonably implement. Certain factors in each diet might make one more attractive than the other. Our CHALLENGE to YOU: Commit to 1 of these nutrition plans for 30 days. Reasons people pick Zone over Paleo: Zone exactly defines portion sizes. You can eat whatever you want as long as you eat the proper portion size.
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People do not want to give up grains and dairy, which are not allowed on the paleo diet. Reasons people pick Paleo over Zone: You dont have to weigh and measure every single food item. You need a drastic solution to a drastic problem. Examples: Diabetes, high blood pressure, high cholesterol, inflammatory bowel diseases, rapid weight loss. Can you do both? Certainly! Paleo Zone is considered the Holy Grail for Crossfit nutrition. We recommend getting comfortable with one before doing both, however.
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Paleolithic Diet
The Paleo Diet is a way of eating in the modern age that best mimics the diets of our hunter-gatherer ancestors - combinations of lean meats, seafood, vegetables, fruits, and nuts. By eating the foods that we are genetically adapted to eat, followers of the Paleo Diet are naturally lean, have improved athletic performance, and have lower risks to cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, obesity and a host of other diseases. The Paleo Ground Rules 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. All of the lean meats/fish you can eat. All of the fruits and non-starchy vegetables you can eat. No cereals or grains (wheat, oats, grain etc). No Legumes (peanuts, beans). No dairy products. No processed foods.
How to do this? EVERY MEAL should contain 3 things: 1. Protein Chicken Turkey Beef Lamb Fish/Shellfish Eggs (80 -120g) (80 -120g) (80 -120g) (80 -120g) (80 -120g) (2 to 3 whole eggs)
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2. Carbohydrates (Fruits and non-starchy vegetables) Vegetables all varietiesas much as you want, especially Broccoli Spinach Cabbage Asparagus Tomatoes
Fruits try to eat what is in season, frozen is ok & avoid canned as they usually have sugar added. All berries Melons Oranges Grapefruit Apples
3. Fat (Nuts & Oils) Almonds Cashews Pecans Walnuts NO PEANUTS Avacado Olive Oil (A small handful) (A small handful) (A small handful) (A small handful) (medium sized one) (1 - 2 tbs)
Note: Fat does not make you fat, it is important each meal contains protein, carbohydrate and fat. Spices can be added, but no salt.
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Drinks Mainly water (big surprise!) Coffee and Tea are OK (Black) - No sweeteners or milk products ABSOLUTELY NOT All sugars All flour products (bread/cake/cookies/scones/tortillas/pastries etc.) Dairy (cheese/milk/butter etc.) Potatoes, corn, beans or other starchy vegetables Artifical sweeteners Cappuccinos, Lattes, Mochas
Additional Information Eat 4-6 meals per day. Breakfast/lunch/dinner and snacks as needed. You should not go hungry, if you are hungry then eat, that is one of the benefits of following Paleo. Every meal contains Protein, Carbohydrate and Fat. 100% compliance is neurotic, 90% is realistic. Plan 1-3 cheat meals or a cheat day into your week; this gives you the freedom to eat an unexpected nonpaleo meal. Just dont let this turn into a cheat week/month.
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Paleolithic FAQ
Q: What is Paleo? A: Meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and no sugar. Its the way our bodies are designed to feed. Q: What about potatoes and corn? A: Not vegetables, sorry, high on the glycemic index and a high glycemic load. Q: Whats that mean? A: The sugar these foods carry is too rapidly delivered into the bloodstream (glycemic index) and the amount is too high (glycemic load). Q: There's no bread on here? A: No grains here at all. Pretty high on the glycemic index, high glycemic load and gluten issues. Q: What about whole grains? Aren't they good for you? A: No. The only difference between whole grain and refined white flour is the ratio of fiber to the other stuff. Q: I can't live without alcohol. How much can I have? A: Technically, none. Beer, Whisky, etc are all made from grains and this is one of the things we want to avoid. Wine is not grain-based, obviously, but has a pretty high carb load. Drink it sparingly. Note: If you're celebrating a significant event a wedding, a death, a divorce, a stag/hen party Enjoy! Just use some sense. BUT, and it's a big but, a significant event is NOT having your dog neutered, getting a haircut, buying a new lawnmower, or sundown. We're trying to change our lives. Q: My parents/wife/husband/significant other are Italian/Jewish/etc, not cave people, I can't avoid grains! A: Yes, actually, you can. I don't want you to go hungry; I want you to replace some of what you're used to eating with other stuff. Substitute pasta with spaghetti squash for example. You're a CrossFitter, you can do it.
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Q: What about portions? Isn't portion control a big deal? A: Baby steps, if you're already Zoning and want to shift to Paleo foods, go for it. If you're eating a typical western diet then our major concern at this point is food quality. We'll address portions/macronutrient ratios and meal timing at a later date. For now, a palm sized serving of protein, as much vegetable matter as you want and a chunk of good fats. Don't go around hungry. If you are then eat something. Don't get hung up in the numbers. Eat, enjoy, live your life, repeat. Q: Hold on one damm minute! No dairy, either? A: Everybody is allergic to cow dairy to some extent. It's an immune system stressor. Avoid it as best you can. Think of this as a chance to break out of your old life...you can go back to it if you want after the 30 day challenge is over. Q: That's a lot of cooking/I don't cook/I can't cook because . /I really don't have time for all this. A: Thinking and preparing ahead is the key here. Veggies are easy. Fresh can be eaten raw most of the time, frozen steam or brown up in no time so canned don't even have to be an option. Prepare your proteins in batches and refrigerate until needed. Reheat or eat cold. Q: What about eating out? A: Same basics apply. Sub the potato for the steamed vegetables. Don't eat the bread. Evaluate your priorities and make smart choices. Q: I travel for work/school. What do I do? A: Prep ahead. Zip Locs and disposable plastic tubs are your friend. Reheat or eat cold. Whatever works for you. Q: What about when the 30 day challenge is over? What then? A: You'll have a whole new outlook on eating and a new set of skills to go forward with. As your performance improves you'll need to dial in your nutrition more and more and you'll be ready. But, the results you get are
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going to make you want to continue. Hear me now, believe me later. In the end this is pretty simple stuff. Follow the basic prescription, practice a little, and you'll find it's not that hard.
Zone Diet
Dr Barry Sears created the Zone Diet, sometimes referred to as the 40-30-30 eating plan (40 percent carbohydrate, 30 percent each fat and protein). With the Zone Diet you have to carefully balance the nutritional content of each meal. Dr Sears created the Zone Diet based on his experience gained through research into the effects of foods on hormone production and metabolic activity. CrossFits best performers are Zone eaters. When our second-tier athletes commit to strict adherence to the Zone parameters, they generally become top-tier performers quickly. It seems that the Zone diet accelerates and amplifies the effects of the CrossFit regimen. The Zone Ground Rules 1. All foods allowed. 2. All meals must be weighed and measured out. 3. Limited amount of food blocks per day. What is a food block? A food block is a unit of measure used to simplify the process of making balanced meals. 7 grams of protein = 1 block of protein. 9 grams of carbohydrate = 1 block of carbohydrate. 1.5 grams of fat = 1 block of fat.
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Note: There is an assumption that there is about 1.5 grams of fat in each block of protein, so the total amount of fat is actually 3 grams per block. So a 1 block meal/snack consists of 1 block of protein, 1 block of carbohydrate and 1 block of fat. How many blocks can I have per day? Method 1: Chart Total Body Type Blocks Small 10 female Medium 11 female Large 13 female Athletic, well 14 muscled female Small male 16 Medium 17 male Large male 19 X Large 20 male Hard 21 gainer Large hard 23 gainer Athletic, well 25 muscled Male
Breakfast 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 4 5 5 5
Lunch 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 4 5 5 5
Snack 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 4 3 4 5
Dinner 2 3 3 4 4 5 5 4 5 5 5
Snack 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 4 3 4 5
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Method 2: Calculate a) __________ x __________ = _____________ Weight Body fat (decimal) Fat Weight b) __________ - __________ = ______________ Weight Fat Weight Lean Body Mass (LBM) c) __________ x .7 = ___________ LBM Activity Level g protein/day d) __________ x 7 = *___________* g protein/day g/block daily blocks Online calculator available at http://www.dbhonline.com/zoneful/p_calculator.htm How to do this? Use the block chart (appendix A) to construct meals.
Drinks Mainly water Other drinks allowed but must be calculated using the block chart.
Additional Information 100% compliance is neurotic, 90% is realistic. Plan 1-3 cheat meals or a cheat day into your week; this gives you the freedom to eat an unexpected non-zone meal. Just dont let this turn into a cheat week/month.
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Zone FAQ
Q: What is zone? A: The key factor in Zone Diet is the hormonal balance you achieve while eating each skillfully prepared meal. Q: How does this hormonal balance work? A: Eating carbohydrates effects your production of the hormone insulin and eating protein effects your production of the hormone glucagon. We need to maintain a healthy balance of these two hormones for optimal health, mental & emotional balance, and physical performance. (Eating fat is hormonally neutral and supports the balance.)
Q: How long before I can expect to see results on the zone? A: Within two to three days you should see a noticeable reduction in your carbohydrate cravings and increased mental focus. Within five days you should notice better physical performance and after two weeks your clothes will fit better. Q: Do I have to be obsessive about the zone for it to be successful? A: No, but obviously, the greater the precision the greater the results. Just pay close attention to your responses after a meal. Q: What about the calories? Im not eating as many. A: If you have excess body fat (greater than 15% for males and 22% for females), then you have all the calories you need on your body. Q: Im already lean, wont I waste away? A: Following the zone, body fat comes off fast. When your body fat falls to an acceptable level you will need to increase your fat intake. The majority of Crossfits best athletes end up on X blocks of protein, X blocks of
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carbohydrate and 4 or 5X blocks of fat. Lean to modulate fat intake to a level that optimizes performance. Q: I want to increase my lean mass (muscle) what do I do? A: To build one pound of muscle per month is a noble goal. To do so would require you to increase you daily block prescription by 1. Q: Do I need to eat my meal/snack even if Im not hungry? A: Yes, this is the best time to eat in order to maintain hormonal equilibrium. Q: What about my vitamins and minerals, can I still use them? A: Yes, vitamins and minerals are an excellent low cost insurance policy. However the zone diet provides an excellent base and requires less supplementation. Q: Why is a fat block only 1.5g? A: Every lean protein block contains approximately 1.5g of hidden fat, so you actually consume 3g of fat per block. If you are using fat free products such as isolated protein powders then you will need to double the fat added to a meal to compensate for this. If you are eating higher fat protein choices you may not need to add any fat to your meal. Q: Can I cut back on the fat blocks as long as I match the protein and carbohydrate blocks? A: You can do this but ironically you will not lose as much fat. The small amount of fat added acts to control insulin secretion. This makes it possible for your body to access and use the stored fat on your body. Q: I dont believe all this zone stuff works, can you show me some proof? A: Google Manuel Uribe, one of the heaviest people in history before following the zone diet.
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Books The Paleo Diet Loren Cordain, Ph.D The Paleo solution Rob Wolf Mastering the zone Barry Sears, Ph.D.
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Note: The quantity for each item on the block chart corresponds to one block. 1 cup = 250ml (approx)
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HIGH Glycemic Index 80 to 100 Grain-Based Bread, rye, whole meal Bread, rye, crisp bread Bread, wheat, whole meal Corn,sweet Grapenuts Muesli Porridge Oats Rice, brown Rice, white Shredded Wheat Tortilla, corn Fruits Apricots Bananas Mango Papaya Raisins Simple Sugars Sucrose
Snacks Cookies Corn Chips Crackers Ice Cream, low-fat Mars Bar Pastry
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MODERATELY HIGH Glycemic Index - 60 to 80 Grain-Based All Bran Bread, rye, pumpernickel Buckwheat Bulgur Macaroni, white Spaghetti, brown Spaghetti, white Fruits Fruit Cocktail Grapefruit Juice Grapes Orange Juice Pears, canned Pineapple Juice Snacks Cookies, oatmeal Potato Chips Sponge Cake
Vegetables Baked Beans, canned Green Peas, frozen Green Peas, marrowfat Kidney Beans, canned Sweet Potatoes Yams
Note: Eat the above foods in moderation (where possible) or accurately measure out if following the zone diet.
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Oils
Eggs (limit to six a week) Chicken (go for the enriched omega 3 variety) Duck Beverages Goose Coffee Tea Other meats Wine (two 4-ounce glasses; Note: Dont Rabbit meat (any cut) buy cooking wine, which is loaded Goat meat (any cut) with salt.) Beer (one 12-ounce serving) Spirits (4 ounces) Organ meats Beef, lamb, pork, and chicken livers Beef, pork, and lamb tongues Beef, lamb, and pork marrow Beef, lamb, and pork sweetbreads
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Encouraged Foods Game meat Alligator Bear Bison (buffalo) Caribou Elk Emu Goose Kangaroo Muscovy duck New Zealand cervena deer Ostrich Pheasant Quail Rattlesnake Reindeer Squab Turtle Venison Wild boar Wild turkey Fish Bass Bluefish Cod Drum Eel Flatfish Grouper Haddock Halibut Herring Mackerel Monkfish Mullet Northern pike Orange roughy Perch Red snapper
Foods To Be Eaten In Moderation Paleo Sweets Dried fruits (no more than 2 ounces a day, particularly if you are trying to lose weight) Nuts mixed with dried and fresh fruits (no more than 4 ounces of nuts and 2 ounces of dried fruit a day, particularly if you are trying to lose weight) Foods You Should Avoid Dairy Foods All processed foods made with any dairy products Butter Cheese Cream Dairy spreads Frozen yogurt Ice cream Ice milk Low-fat milk Nonfat dairy creamer Powdered milk Skim milk Whole milk Yogurt Cereal Grains Barley (barley soup, barley bread, and all processed foods made with barley) Corn (corn on the cob, corn tortillas, corn chips, corn starch, corn syrup) Millet Oats (steel-cut oats, rolled oats, and all processed foods made with oats) Rice (brown rice, white rice, top ramen, rice noodles, bas mati rice, rice cakes, Rice flour (all processed foods made with rice)
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Encouraged Foods
Rockfish Rye (rye bread, rye crackers, and all Salmon processed foods made with rye) Scrod Sorghum Shark Wheat (bread, rolls, muffins, noodles, Striped bass crackers, cookies, cake, doughnuts, Sunfish pancakes, waffles, pasta, spaghetti, Tilapia lasagna, wheat tortillas, pizza, pita Trout bread, flat bread, and all processed Tuna foods made with wheat or wheat flour) Turbot Wild rice Walleye Any other commercially available fish Cereal Grainlike Seeds Amaranth Shellfish Buckwheat Abalone Quinoa Clams Crab Legumes Crayfish All beans (adzuki beans, black beans, Lobster broad beans, fava beans, field beans, Mussels garbanzo beans, horse beans, kidney Oysters beans, lima beans, mung beans, navy Scallops beans, pinto beans, red beans, string Shrimp beans, white beans) Black-eyed peas Fruit Chickpeas Apple Lentils Apricot Peas Avocado Miso Banana Peanut butter Blackberries Peanuts Blueberries Snowpeas Boysenberries Sugar snap peas Cantaloupe Soybeans and all soybean products, Carambola including tofu Cassava melon Cherimoya Starchy Vegetables Cherries Starchy tubers Cranberries Cassava root Figs Manioc Potatoes and all potato products (French fries, potato chips, etc.)
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Encouraged Foods Gooseberries Grapefruit Grapes Guava Honeydew melon Kiwi Lemon Lime Lychee Mango Nectarine Orange Papaya Passion fruit Peaches Pears Persimmon Pineapple Plums Pomegranate Raspberries Rhubarb Star fruit Strawberries Tangerine Watermelon All other fruits Vegetables Artichoke Asparagus Beet greens Beets Bell peppers Broccoli Brussels sprouts Cabbage Carrots Cauliflower
Foods You Should Avoid Sweet potatoes Tapioca pudding Yams Salt-Containing Foods Almost all commercial salad dressings and condiments Bacon Cheese Deli meats Frankfurters Ham Hot dogs Ketchup Olives Pickled foods Pork rinds Processed meats Salami Salted nuts Salted spices Sausages Smoked, dried, and salted fish and meat Virtually all canned meats and fish (unless they are unsalted or unless you soak and drain them) Fatty Meats Bacon Beef ribs Chicken and turkey legs Chicken and turkey skin Chicken and turkey thighs and wings Fatty beef roasts Fatty cuts of beef Fatty ground beef Fatty pork chops Fatty pork roasts
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Encouraged Foods Celery Collards Cucumber Dandelion Eggplant Endive Green onions Kale Kohlrabi Lettuce Mushrooms Mustard greens Onions Parsley Parsnip Peppers (all kinds) Pumpkin Purslane Radish Rutabaga Seaweed Spinach Squash (all kinds) Swiss chard Tomatillos Tomato (actually a fruit, but most people think of it as a vegetable) Turnip greens Turnips Watercress
Foods You Should Avoid Lamb chops Lamb roasts Leg of lamb Pork ribs Pork sausage Tbone steaks Soft Drinks and Fruit Juices All sugary soft drinks Diet sodas (These often contain artificial sweeteners such as aspartame and saccharine, which may be harmful; youre better off drinking bottled and mineral waters.) Canned, bottled, and freshly squeezed fruit drinks (which lack the fiber of fresh fruit and have a much higher glvcemic index) Sweets Sweets Honey Sugars
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Credits
Web
http://journal.crossfit.com Crossfit Journal http://robbwolf.com Robb Wolf CrossFit DownTown Winston Nutrition info Pack Front Range CrossFit Nutrition info Pack (Provided by John Pilkington) http://www.thepaleodiet.com Paleo info http://www.zonedietinfo.com Zone info
Books The Paleo solution Rob Wolf Mastering the zone Barry Sears, Ph.D The Paleo Diet Loren Cordain, Ph.D
I would have been unable to produce and compile this document on behalf of Crossfit Citheroe without help from the above resources Thank you! Scott Townson
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