Ok, so I have a question. I don't get done lifting till around 7pm and I know you said unless you do a late night gym session avoid carbs. My meal after working out is usually full of chicken, broccoli, bell peppers and mushrooms and then I take in two bowls of oatmeal because I do an early morning cardio session before PT. Am I taking in to much carbs before bed?
Also, the whole grains thing shows that the author is behind the times. Grains are not human food. They need to go.
Claims of being gluten-sensitive, the authors write, “seem to increase daily, with no adequate scientific support to back them up. ... This clamor has increased and moved from the Internet to the popular media, where gluten has become ‘the new diet villain.’”
"Carbohydrates are an essential macronutrient"
False, end of the reading.
anaboliko said:No carbs at night? better in the morning? bro science at its best. This article is total BS.
Elaborate?
EasyEJL said:its just that. there is 0 science backing it, if anything there is science that shows carbs later in the day being more beneficial.
hvactech said:most do respond to lower carb or carb cycling for weight loss, although this article has no relation to the last cut i did with a "high" carb diet....
What did u do? Just decrease cal?
AutoKal47 said:"Carbohydrates are an essential macronutrient"
False, end of the reading.
If you eat all your protein in the first half of the day...if anything there is science that shows carbs later in the day being more beneficial.
I understand not eating processed carbs that sort of garbage.
The part I Want to understand is a slow carb vs. A fast carb. Let's say a red potato plus a sweet potato, nutrients aside...,
Do people put faith in that faster carbs such as a white potato will most likely be stored as fat over slower carb as a sweet potato?
AutoKal47 said:"Carbohydrates are an essential macronutrient"
False, end of the reading.
I understand not eating processed carbs that sort of garbage.
The part I Want to understand is a slow carb vs. A fast carb. Let's say a red potato plus a sweet potato, nutrients aside...,
Do people put faith in that faster carbs such as a white potato will most likely be stored as fat over slower carb as a sweet potato?
I understand not eating processed carbs that sort of garbage.
The part I Want to understand is a slow carb vs. A fast carb. Let's say a red potato plus a sweet potato, nutrients aside...,
Do people put faith in that faster carbs such as a white potato will most likely be stored as fat over slower carb as a sweet potato?
I think I feel the same way on this one.It's bs: Invalid Link Removed
^^ and what is you're current body fat %?
"behind the times" says who? A bunch of other nutritionists, with no scientific data backing them either. Gluten sensitivity seems to be way over-reported. Here's an article on that
Invalid Link Removed
If you feel better after cutting white bread out of your diet that doesn't mean you were gluten intolerant before.
It may be somewhat pro inflammatory but enough to make a significant health/goals difference?
Exercise is pro inflammatory and we still do it.
It mostly is convenience, and its not that easy to ignore convenience. Busy lives, work, learning, gym, families, etc. a sandwich is convenient way to get your carbs and protein. And gluten free bread is more expensive.
Ok, the exercise being inflammatory is different, but there are plenty of other pro inflammatory foods. Depending on who you get info from, honey, potatoes, rice and any non-free range meats are proinlammatory too.
I'm not saying go ahead and eat as much inflammatory food as possible but just that the gluten free craze has already gone too far. Gluten free bread made witb hfcs and canola oil is probably not much less inlammatory to average person than bread with gluten.
I mean Christ how many places now sell gluten free cookies, cakes and cupcakes? Sure if you have celiacs that's nice, but otherwise?
Based on daily macros what's considered low carb? 25% of overall daily calorie intake?
AutoKal47 said:A % that force your body to switch to a different source for energy I'd say.
Otherwise I wouldn't see the point..
Yeah but if you ate that more in the morning and not later in the day hopefully you could burn them off in the earlier part of the day, either way I never tried it so I'll have to.
Yeah but if you ate that more in the morning and not later in the day hopefully you could burn them off in the earlier part of the day, either way I never tried it so I'll have to.
AutoKal47 said:I'll run the risk of being very unpopular but I truly believe it doesn't change a rat's a## when you eat them...
Body comp's turnaround is not that fast
Well I respect your answers cause your avi tells all.
EJ, people like carbs right? Sometimes it's hard to escape...
EasyEJL said:Still what makes you think you burn it off? glycogen reserves are glycogen reserves. If you don't eat the carbs earlier in the day, what you eat later in the day will go primarily towards filling the glycogen reserves. So burning it off or not burning it off is pretty irrelevant.
EasyEJL said:Sorry if I sounded negative, I was mostly trying to prompt you down the path of thinking about it critically. Your body has the ability to store some amount of excess aminos as muscle, a fairly unlimited amount of fatty acid into fat cells, and a limited amount of glycogen in the glycogen reserves. Your body doesn't respond super rapidly to any of the above, it takes hours to days to make a significant difference. The glycogen reserves are the fastest of them though. And thats sort of why evening carbs make more sense. Your body can go through the day using the glycogen reserves, and then you refill them later in the day. Done the reverse you go through the night with your glycogen reserves low which along with the low physical activity means not much in fatty acids is being released from fat cells. So what fuel is the body more likely to use? Proteins.
The primary scientific evidenc showing morning carbs to be beneficial over later in the day carbs is psychological. People eating a larger amount of carbs in the morning as a dessert (not oatmeal but something sweet) psychologically can easier avoid sweets later in the day as they feel they've already got their "fix" in.
The thing with there being many theories is that most of them have no scientific backing, just the repeated mantra of years of bros saying it.
Yeah I've heard that too, cake in the AM lol...
So you're saying carbs are better in the night?
hvactech said:that was an interesting study, i havent had sweet potatoes or brown rice or wheat pasta in forever...i beleive carbs are an individual process and more of a mental setback for most
What do u mean mental set back?
hvactech said:basically the average thought process, im a bigger guy for my height and if i tell 5 guys thats carbs arent good after 6pm and to only eat wheat and grains every 3 hours to get as "big" as me i can bet that 4 outa the 5 guys will do it just because i told them to...
lmao...
Look I'm just trying to figure out what works, and it boils down to trial an errors
EasyEJL said:sort of, and sort of not. The problem with trial and error is you can do the less optimal thing long enough and hard enough, and still seem to get results. So you'd say "it works" because you don't realize how much simpler it might be another way. You can put a screw in to hold two pieces of wood with a hammer, but that doesn't make the hammer the optimal tool for the job.