Stopstalking2
Member
- Awards
- 0
I always mix my post workout whey isolate (isomorph 28 from APS) with 8oz egg white.
do the egg whites effect the quick digestion of the whey ?
do the egg whites effect the quick digestion of the whey ?
thanks for being helpful idiot.
No, but uncooked egg whites actually have pretty low bioavailability. If you are getting them in a carton (not straining your own eggs) they’re pasteurized so they’re safe to drink routinely, but you’re not actually getting all of the protein the label would indicate.
I never heard of this muscle eggs brand, but I love that they have whole egg powder. Can the whole egg and white powders be eaten just as is like a protein shake?thanks for being helpful idiot.
I did not know this. I get them from muscle eggs buy them by the gallon
Most ppl are avoiding fat post workoutYou can just crack whole eggs into your post workout shake. Jussayn
True but whole eggs are a more complete protein. Would be a problem when cutting I suppose.Most ppl are avoiding fat post workout
You want to avoid fat into pre and post workout meals at all cost. It needs to be absorbed asap and there’s no need for fat in there. It’s actually very detrimental to the whole idea of a post and pre workout meal.True but whole eggs are a more complete protein. Would be a problem when cutting I suppose.
ThisYou want to avoid fat into pre and post workout meals at all cost. It needs to be absorbed asap and there’s no need for fat in there. It’s actually very detrimental to the whole idea of a post and pre workout meal.
thanks for being helpful. Been a member here over 15 years and can’t stand when people like
They make a delicious product, had them at many expos, but it’s just not optimal. They’re taking advantage of the average lifter’s knowledge that egg protein is a tremendously bioavailability and quality protein source - but not everyone knows they must be cooked. Also, if you begin to overcook and burn the eggs the protein begins to degrade and amino content availability reverses backwards again. So don’t cook them into oblivion; just turn them white.I did not know this. I get them from muscle eggs buy them by the gallon
Egg whites alone will indeed lower biotin, but a biotin supplement is like $3 on Swanson or similar, so if they’re a staple of the diet it’s easy to prevent biotin deficiency.I wonder what is lost the pasturization process of egg whites. no it won't slow down other proteins, but it is supposed to deplete biotin. and yolks have biotin. I'd suggest switching to whole eggs and use the yolk.
Whole egg powder has been cooked, and an awesome source of protein if you digest it well.I never heard of this muscle eggs brand, but I love that they have whole egg powder. Can the whole egg and white powders be eaten just as is like a protein shake?
All of the protein effectively comes from the white; you don’t need the yolk for anything but the fat and micronutrients.True but whole eggs are a more complete protein. Would be a problem when cutting I suppose.
They make a delicious product, had them at many expos, but it’s just not optimal. They’re taking advantage of the average lifter’s knowledge that egg protein is a tremendously bioavailability and quality protein source - but not everyone knows they must be cooked. Also, if you begin to overcook and burn the eggs the protein begins to degrade and amino content availability reverses backwards again. So don’t cook them into oblivion; just turn them white.I did not know this. I get them from muscle eggs buy them by the gallon
Egg whites alone will indeed lower biotin, but a biotin supplement is like $3 on Swanson or similar, so if they’re a staple of the diet it’s easy to prevent biotin deficiency.I wonder what is lost the pasturization process of egg whites. no it won't slow down other proteins, but it is supposed to deplete biotin. and yolks have biotin. I'd suggest switching to whole eggs and use the yolk.
Whole egg powder has been cooked, and an awesome source of protein if you digest it well.I never heard of this muscle eggs brand, but I love that they have whole egg powder. Can the whole egg and white powders be eaten just as is like a protein shake?
All of the protein effectively comes from the white; you don’t need the yolk for anything but the fat and micronutrients.True but whole eggs are a more complete protein. Would be a problem when cutting I suppose.
I don't think this part is true...quick Google searches confirm the yolk has just as much protein as the white...All of the protein effectively comes from the white; you don’t need the yolk for anything but the fat and micronutrients.
The amino acid profile is complete though; this remark was in reference to needing the yolk. You do not need the yolk for the high protein bioavailability of cooked egg white.I don't think this part is true...quick Google searches confirm the yolk has just as much protein as the white...
Egg yolks are a big source of lecithin and lecithin keeps fat moving through your system instead of depositing in your arteries. Years ago, people were being told to stay away from eggs, now newer studies and research is starting to show that eggs are not only good for you, but it turns out that eggs don’t significantly raise blood cholesterol in most people. Yes, the egg yolk contains cholesterol, but it appears that consuming cholesterol in the diet doesn’t significantly increase blood cholesterol or the risk of heart disease. Newer studies show that eating eggs is associated with an increase in HDL cholesterol.Compare that to the huge quantities of cholesterol (and calories) a normal lifter will consume just eating a traditional 5-6 egg meal once a day, and it may not be the right fit for everyone.
Whole eggs routinely in my diet do a serious number on my LDL, which I can’t afford in conjunction with my AAS use.
All of the protein effectively comes from the white; you don’t need the yolk for anything but the fat and micronutrients.
This conversation is not about pro/anti-whole egg. OP was asking about egg whites.Egg yolks are a big source of lecithin and lecithin keeps fat moving through your system instead of depositing in your arteries. Years ago, people were being told to stay away from eggs, now newer studies and research is starting to show that eggs are not only good for you, but it turns out that eggs don’t significantly raise blood cholesterol in most people. Yes, the egg yolk contains cholesterol, but it appears that consuming cholesterol in the diet doesn’t significantly increase blood cholesterol or the risk of heart disease. Newer studies show that eating eggs is associated with an increase in HDL cholesterol.
There was a 9 year study done using 461,000 over a 9 year period, ages 30-79. Results showed that daily egg consumption was associated with an 11 percent reduction in risk of developing CVD as compared to those who never or rarely consumed eggs, as well as an 18 percent lower risk of death from CVD. Daily egg consumers also had a 26 percent lower risk of hemorrhagic stroke and a 12 percent reduced risk of ischemic heart disease.
I don't think this part is true...quick Google searches confirm the yolk has just as much protein as the white...
I was incorrect about it being a more complete protein. With that said, I want the biotin and choline. I have had a TBI and take huperzine a for the cholinesterase inhibitor effect. Myself, I cut carbs to keep from getting fat. I do take in more carbs during the periworkout phase but I generally eat some whole eggs in the morning.The amino acid profile is complete though; this remark was in reference to needing the yolk. You do not need the yolk for the high protein bioavailability of cooked egg white.
Sorry if that was equally misleading.
Ohhhhh, gotcha. Right on.The amino acid profile is complete though; this remark was in reference to needing the yolk. You do not need the yolk for the high protein bioavailability of cooked egg white.
Sorry if that was equally misleading.
1. Look at the original post of this thread and consider if this is relevant to that."Consumption of whole eggs promotes greater stimulation of postexercise muscle protein synthesis than consumption of isonitrogenous amounts of egg whites in young men"
Consumption of whole eggs promotes greater stimulation of postexercise muscle protein synthesis than consumption of isonitrogenous amounts of egg whites in young men - PubMed
<span><b>Background:</b> Protein in the diet is commonly ingested from whole foods that contain various macro- and micronutrients. However, the effect of consuming protein within its natural whole-food matrix on postprandial protein metabolism remains understudied in humans.<b>Objective:</b> We...pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
"After exercise, participants consumed.."
I think this whole argument that egg yolks post workout would be bad is stupid and doesn't make sense
1. Look at the original post of this thread and consider if this is relevant to that."Consumption of whole eggs promotes greater stimulation of postexercise muscle protein synthesis than consumption of isonitrogenous amounts of egg whites in young men"
Consumption of whole eggs promotes greater stimulation of postexercise muscle protein synthesis than consumption of isonitrogenous amounts of egg whites in young men - PubMed
<span><b>Background:</b> Protein in the diet is commonly ingested from whole foods that contain various macro- and micronutrients. However, the effect of consuming protein within its natural whole-food matrix on postprandial protein metabolism remains understudied in humans.<b>Objective:</b> We...pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
"After exercise, participants consumed.."
I think this whole argument that egg yolks post workout would be bad is stupid and doesn't make sense
Might need to change your username to savage after that comment I don't think I could do raw eggs but maybe some egg beaters in my post workout shake.I'm an egg goblin. I put 2 raw eggs in my post workout shake.
I finally ate some raw liver recently tooMight need to change your username to savage after that comment I don't think I could do raw eggs but maybe some egg beaters in my post workout shake.
I'd say yes and no. I kinda hate the concept of rolling 24 hour clock diets. it leads to people slamming huge shakes thinking they are completing their macros. timing matters more than that.The importance of the post workout window has been over blown. Total daily protein amount is what really matters.
That last paper is interesting. Maybe I should make pre and post workout nutrition more important.I'd say yes and no. I kinda hate the concept of rolling 24 hour clock diets. it leads to people slamming huge shakes thinking they are completing their macros. timing matters more than that.
I think there's a study that shows pwo nutrition can attenuate the need for post workout, but there's also lots to suggest you need both.
a safe assumption based on studies says both pre and post workout nutrition matters with 90 minute windows on each side:
Nutrient timing revisited: is there a post-exercise anabolic window?
Nutrient timing is a popular nutritional strategy that involves the consumption of combinations of nutrients--primarily protein and carbohydrate--in and around an exercise session. Some have claimed that this approach can produce dramatic improvements ...www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
I personally like to lift fasted for a few hours in the morning so I always go for solid post workout nutrition. sometimes I lift fed later in the day and I dont do a shake but I'll eat food.
Maybe a mix of both egg whites and whole eggs would be superior then? Like 4 whole eggs and another 20g protein from whites?1. Look at the original post of this thread and consider if this is relevant to that.
2. They gave the 10 college kids each 3 scrambled eggs (18g protein, 17g fat reported), or scrambled egg whites containing an equal 18g protein but 0g fat. They pulled bloods at 3 hours post and 5 hours post and found similar leucine levels, which is great. How does that apply to us? What happens if we eat a more realistic amount, like 5-8 eggs? Will the fats climbing to 30+ grams still not affect gut motility? I mean even just the abstract results note leucine was seen present FASTER in the egg white group, which again is the point of the initial postWO “meal”.
Anyone eating a plate of scrambled egg whites post training is not waiting 5 hours to eat again. They will be eating another meal by that 3 hour mark for sure. So getting those aminos in faster from egg whites is ideal, and then you follow up with a bigger meal in a few hours.
The study is cool; it merits more relevant follow-up in my opinion, but it’s not that applicable to real lifters.
I'd diversify. can you do milk?Maybe a mix of both egg whites and whole eggs would be superior then? Like 4 whole eggs and another 20g protein from whites?
I'm trying to find protein that doesn't have much b12 or folate (didn't know whey was loaded with folate until recently), milk might be ok though since it's mostly casein. But over 20g protein from milk at one shot sounds like a lot...I'd diversify. can you do milk?
raw eggs + milk actually tastes p good
raw eggs + OJ is good too
all protein bars are bad that I've seen. liver king bar is kinda cool but super expensive. you should just make your ownI'm trying to find protein that doesn't have much b12 or folate (didn't know whey was loaded with folate until recently), milk might be ok though since it's mostly casein. But over 20g protein from milk at one shot sounds like a lot...
I don't eat bars at all. Whole food only and have only recently begun using protein shakes again.all protein bars are bad that I've seen. liver king bar is kinda cool but super expensive. you should just make your own
Brad Schoenfeld, author of that 2013 study, has since changed his stance on the importance of this window. Here is a 2018 paper with Alan Aragon with the more recent findings. The window is much larger than originally anticipatedI'd say yes and no. I kinda hate the concept of rolling 24 hour clock diets. it leads to people slamming huge shakes thinking they are completing their macros. timing matters more than that.
I think there's a study that shows pwo nutrition can attenuate the need for post workout, but there's also lots to suggest you need both.
a safe assumption based on studies says both pre and post workout nutrition matters with 90 minute windows on each side:
Nutrient timing revisited: is there a post-exercise anabolic window?
Nutrient timing is a popular nutritional strategy that involves the consumption of combinations of nutrients--primarily protein and carbohydrate--in and around an exercise session. Some have claimed that this approach can produce dramatic improvements ...www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
I personally like to lift fasted for a few hours in the morning so I always go for solid post workout nutrition. sometimes I lift fed later in the day and I dont do a shake but I'll eat food.
sorry I read it wrong. maybe milk + egg + yogurtI don't eat bars at all. Whole food only and have only recently begun using protein shakes again.
over a long period of time neglecting better nutrition timing will be sub optimal. it's common sense. idk why these guys didn't find any difference in their single whey study but I can tell a difference in myself.Brad Schoenfeld, author of that 2013 study, has since changed his stance on the importance of this window. Here is a 2018 paper with Alan Aragon with the more recent findings. The window is much larger than originally anticipated
What's wrong with using whey in the study?over a long period of time neglecting better nutrition timing will be sub optimal. it's common sense. idk why these guys didn't find any difference in their single whey study but I can tell a difference in myself.
their method is questionable really. this study says that they made their subjects not eat for 3 hours to not confound pre and post workout nutrition. if they lifted any time early in the morning they might even be fasted. they could also pollute the data by carb loading the day before. and then finally, it's whey protein powder. can we please stop using whey powder to test this **** lol
I'll consider this study evidence that fasted lifting doesn't make you lose muscle
idk about powder, but pasteurizing doesnt make it better than raw. they might cook the powder more?So is the current belief that egg white powder isn't bioavailable?
My wife has been using Now Foods egg white powder but it only says pasteurized as well... might be worthless?idk about powder, but pasteurizing doesnt make it better than raw. they might cook the powder more?
But now you’re getting very little protein from this, just the nutritional benefits of the yolks really. Again, the egg needs to be cooked decently to reach that high bioavailability in protein.I'm an egg goblin. I put 2 raw eggs in my post workout shake.
Yes if you want to eat cooked eggs post training, I would limit them to the 3 in the study that was found to be overall alright, and add more protein via cooked whites, or whey, or something else low fat. Pea, soy, you get it.Maybe a mix of both egg whites and whole eggs would be superior then? Like 4 whole eggs and another 20g protein from whites?
I though that it is, but I can’t substantiate that. It’s certainly a VERY different end product than pasteurized liquid egg whites.So is the current belief that egg white powder isn't bioavailable?
But now you’re getting very little protein from this, just the nutritional benefits of the yolks really. Again, the egg needs to be cooked decently to reach that high bioavailability in protein.I'm an egg goblin. I put 2 raw eggs in my post workout shake.
Yes if you want to eat cooked eggs post training, I would limit them to the 3 in the study that was found to be overall alright, and add more protein via cooked whites, or whey, or something else low fat. Pea, soy, you get it.Maybe a mix of both egg whites and whole eggs would be superior then? Like 4 whole eggs and another 20g protein from whites?
I though that it is, but I can’t substantiate that. It’s certainly a VERY different end product than pasteurized liquid egg whites.So is the current belief that egg white powder isn't bioavailable?
Thread starter | Similar threads | Forum | Replies | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
Eggs - Cheap vs. Expensive Types | Nutrition / Health | 21 | ||
I love RAW EGGS | Nutrition / Health | 71 | ||
Unanswered Raw eggs? | Nutrition / Health | 15 | ||
EGGS are bad for you - article | Nutrition / Health | 49 | ||
eggs vs egg whites | Nutrition / Health | 47 |