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Work out right before a meal
If you’re always hungry after you exercise—regardless of whether you ate beforehand
or how many calories you burned—try to schedule your workouts before one of
your main meals, says Brown. That way, you can refuel with calories you would
have consumed anyway, without having to add extra snacks into your day.
This strategy can work regardless of
whether you’re a morning, noon, or nighttime exerciser. Have a small snack when
you wake up and eat a larger breakfast after your a.m. run; hit the gym at
lunchtime and pick up a sandwich on the way back to the office; or prep your
dinner ahead of time so you can just heat it up when you get home from an
evening barre class.
Thinking about exercise less as a chore and more as something you do because
you enjoy it can help you eat less afterward, according to a 2014 Cornell
University study. Researchers led volunteers on a 1.4—mile walk, telling half
of them that it was for exercise and half that it was a scenic stroll. The
“exercise” group ate 35% more chocolate pudding for dessert than the “scenic”
group. In another experiment, volunteers were given post-walk snacks, and the
“exercisers” ate 124% more calories than those who were told it was just for
fun.
When you do need a snack to recover from a tough sweat session, Brown
recommends a 4:1 ratio of carbohydrates to protein. “This will allow you to
begin to replenish your energy levels and repair muscle damage resulting from
the workout,” she says. For workouts less than an hour, keep your snack to 150
to 200 calories total—an open-faced peanut butter and jelly sandwich, a slice
of turkey and cheese on crackers, or a handful of trail mix, for example. If
you worked out for longer than an hour and aren’t eating a full meal soon, aim
for half a gram of carbohydrates for every pound of body weight. A 140-pound
person, for example, should refuel with 70 grams of carbs and about 18 grams of
protein. (An energy bar or protein shake, plus one of the healthy snacks above,
should fit the bill.)
Low-fat dairy is another great recovery food with plenty of protein to help
tide you over until your next mea., says Jim White, RD, owner of Jim White
Fitness and Nutrition Studios in Virginia Beach. Plus, studies have shown that
refueling with dairy—low-fat chocolate milk, specifically—helps improve subsequent
athletic performances better than traditional sports drinks.
Sometimes, overeating after exercise is more a consequence of routine than
anything else. “When you consistently consume a 500-calorie smoothie after you
finish up at the gym, you start to get into that habit of consuming a smoothie
no matter how long or intense your exercise was,” says Brown. Her solution?
Choose different snacks for different workouts—the shorter the duration, the
fewer calories you need to replenish— and always pay attention to your hunger
cues. “It’s important for weight loss and weight maintenance to get in tune
with your body and learn to eat in response to hunger, versus eating in
response to boredom, stress, or the idea of rewarding yourself for exercising.”
Activity trackers like the Fitbit and Jawbone have become a trendy way to
estimate physical activity expenditure throughout the day. But a 2014 Iowa
State University study found that not all devices are accurate in estimating
calorie burn during workouts. The least accurate device, the Basis Band, had an
error rate of 23.5%. Even the most accurate trackers can still only provide an
estimate of true calorie burn, says Brown, and it’s not smart to base your
refueling strategy entirely on their calculations. “You also want to get in the
habit of eating in response to hunger and stopping in response to comfortable
fullness. This is dictated less by numbers and more by listening to your body.”
It may seem counter intuitive, but eating more throughout the day may be your
ticket to consuming fewer calories overall, especially if you tend to pig out
post-workout. “Incorporating two to three healthy snacks throughout the day
will help regulate hunger between meals, increase energy, and keep metabolism
bumped up,” says White.
You may feel like you burned a million calories during your Spin class, but
research shows that we tend to overestimate our energy expenditure during
exercise—by as much as four-fold, according to a study from the University of
Ottawa. When volunteers were then asked to eat back all the calories they’d
just burned, they tended to consume two to three times more than what they’d
actually expended. One high-tech way to prevent overestimating your calorie
burn: wear a heart-rate monitor. Most of these include a sensor worn around
your chest and a wristwatch, which sync together wirelessly. Still, if your
heart-rate monitor says you burned 600 calories, that’s not automatically an
excuse to scarf down a 600-calorie sundae. “If you are trying to lose weight,
you will need to consume fewer calories than you expend,” Brown says.
- Drink water as soon as you’re
done
Replacing the fluids you lost during a workout should be priority number one,
Matt Fitzgerald, a certified sports nutritionist and author of Diet Cults and
The New Rules of Marathon and Half-Marathon Nutrition. “Having a lot of water
in the belly also reduces appetite—not a lot, but a little,” he says. “Guzzle
water as soon as you walk in the door to quench your thirst and take up space
in your tummy.” Just don’t consume massive quantities. Taking in too much water
(or any fluid) can cause water intoxication due to excessively low levels of
salt in the body.
- Ask yourself if you really need to eat
You’ve probably heard that it’s important to eat something immediately after
your workout to help your muscles recover. But the truth is, you might not need
to, says Brown. Say you’ve just finished up a tough run and you know you’d like
to hit the gym for weight training in the morning. In that case, yes you should
have something to eat. “But if you’re taking a few days off before your next
hard workout, you probably don’t need to worry about refueling quickly,” Brown
explains. If you’re not hungry, then don’t force yourself to eat, she says.
“You’re going to eat those calories eventually, so why not save them for your
next meal when you’re actually hungry?”
For workouts lasting longer than two hours—like a long bike ride or a marathon
training run—sucking down a gel or sipping a sports drink will keep you from
feeling ravenous afterward. “Research has shown that people eat fewer calories
after exercise when they take in carbs during exercise,” says Fitzgerald. “In
fact, their total calorie intake for the 24-hour period that includes the
workout comes out to be slightly lower if they fuel up during it.” (Also
important: You won’t run out of steam halfway through your training session.)
Try to consume 30 to 60 grams of carbs—that’s 120 to 240 calories—every hour
after your first hour. Avoid anything with protein, since it takes longer to
for the stomach to digest.
By Amanda MacMillan
Photo credit:
plussizeprincess.com
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