What to eat and when
Carbohydrates shouldn’t be shunned. They’re critical for performance as our body will depend on our glucose stores for energy when we’re working out. If you exercise to exhaustion, you’ll be depleting your muscle and liver glycogen which needs to be replaced to prevent exhaustion and any negative impact on your performance. After you’ve finished training, you have a critical window to fully replenish your glycogen stores so aim to eat within 90 mins of ending your exercise. Great sources of complex carbs include whole grain rice, quinoa, sweet potato and oats.
Include protein foods too as these will aid glycogen replenishment. It’s a good idea to have protein at each meal, and remember: are easier to digest! Great sources include oily fish, eggs, white meat, legumes, lentils, pulses, red meat (in moderation). Avoid having red meat, legumes, nuts and seeds within 2 – 4 hours before training as these are difficult to digest.
Often we overlook the deleterious effects of reduced body hydration on exercise performance. Dehydration results in impaired performance and negatively impacts your cardiovascular, metabolic and central nervous system function, which gets greater as dehydration worsens. Load up on water, herbal teas and watery foods such as soups to stay hydrated. Too much salt and coffee can dehydrate you so monitor consumption and increase your levels of hydration accordingly.
Nutrient boost
Beetroot juice is rich in nitrates and studies show it can even improve endurance. It gets to work within a couple of hours so you’re best having some before you train.
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This content was originally published here.