The Paleo Diet for Athletes (14 page)

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Authors: Loren Cordain,Joe Friel

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A 150-pound athlete training 15 hours a week would need to take in about 135 grams of protein a day (150 x 0.9), according to
Table 4.8
. Assuming 20 percent of that comes from assorted vegetables, fruits, fruit juices, sports bars, and sports drinks consumed
throughout the day, including during the workout, another 108 grams of protein would be needed that day. To get that from animal sources, he could eat:

4 ounces of cod

6 ounces of turkey breast

4 ounces of chicken

Those foods would provide all of the additional protein and contain 44.5 grams of the all-important essential amino acids for our theoretical athlete. The total energy eaten to get these nutrients would be 454 calories. To get the same amount of protein by combining grains and beans, he would have to eat all of the following in one day:

1 cup of tofu

1 cup of kidney beans

6 slices of whole wheat bread

1 cup of navy beans

1½ cups of corn

1 cup of red beans

1 cup of brown rice

2 bagels

2 tablespoons of peanut butter

Our athlete had better like beans and have a huge appetite! The above requires eating an additional 2,300 calories that day—more than five times as much as when eating animal products—just to get 108 grams of protein. Eating grains and legumes to get daily protein is not only very inefficient, but, far worse, the vegetarian athlete will come up short on essential amino acids—even if he or she can stomach all those beans and grains.

STAGE V AND FAT

Just as there are good and bad sources of carbohydrate and protein, there are fats and oils you should pursue in your daily diet and certain others to avoid. The desirables include omega-3 polyunsaturated and monounsaturated types. As described earlier in this chapter, lowering the ratio of omega-6 to omega-3 has positive implications for reducing the likelihood of inflammation, a persistent problem for athletes. Omega-6s, while necessary for health, are more than abundant in our modern diet. This fat is common in vegetable oils such as soybean, peanut, cottonseed, safflower, sunflower, sesame, and corn. Most snack foods and many grain products, including breads and bagels, rely heavily on vegetable oils due to their low cost.

Monounsaturated fats should also be included in the athlete’s diet because of their health benefits, including lowering cholesterol and triglyceride levels, thinning the blood, preventing fatal heartbeat irregularities, and reducing the risk of breast cancer. Remember that health always comes before fitness. Good sources of monounsaturated fat are avocados, nuts, and olive oil.

Avoid the fats found in abundance in whole dairy foods and feedlot-raised animals, especially beef, and trans fat found in many of the foods in our grocery stores—not only snack foods but also many bread products, peanut butter, margarine, and packaged meals. Steer clear of trans fat, referred to as “partially hydrogenated” oil on food labels, whenever possible. Trans fat increases LDL (the “bad” cholesterol associated with heart disease) and also decreases your body’s production of HDL (the “good” cholesterol linked with a low incidence of heart disease). That’s a double whammy best avoided.

PART II
N
UTRITION
101: U
NDERSTANDING
B
ASIC
C
ONCEPTS

CHAPTER 5

F
OOD AS
F
UEL DURING
E
XERCISE

DIETARY ORIGINS

Upon introduction to the Paleo Diet concept, many people assume that there was a single universal diet that all Stone Age people ate. Nothing could be further from the truth. In the 5 million to 7 million years since the evolutionary split between apes and hominins (primates who walk upright on two feet), as many as 20 or more different species of hominins may have existed. Their diets varied by latitude, season, climate, and food availability. But there was one universal characteristic: They all ate minimally processed wild plant and animal foods. In the Introduction, we told you all about the foods they couldn’t have consumed; in
Chapter 8
, we will show you the evidence for the food that they ate. But in the meantime, it’s important to understand how the current Western diet differs from theirs and how these differences may affect exercise performance.

If you contrast the average American diet to hunter-gatherer diets (even at their most extreme deviations), the standard American diet falls outside the hunter-gatherer range for certain crucial nutritional characteristics. By examining the diets of more than 200 hunter-gatherer societies, we have found that the typical Western diet varies from ancestral hunter-gatherer diets in these seven key features:

1. Macronutrient balance

2. Glycemic load

3. Fatty acid balance

4. Potassium/sodium balance

5. Acid/base balance

6. Fiber intake

7. Trace nutrient density

MACRONUTRIENT BALANCE AND GLYCEMIC LOAD

Figure 5.1 compares the macronutrient composition (protein, fat, carbohydrate) of hunter-gatherer and typical US diets. Note that in hunter-gatherer diets, protein is universally elevated at the expense of carbohydrate, while the diets usually contained more fat than what we
get. However, the types of fat they consumed were healthful omega-3 and monounsaturated fats, and certain polyunsaturated and saturated fats. But the important issue here for the athlete is the carbohydrate story. Not only was the carbohydrate content of their diet lower, but the quality of their carbs was worlds apart from what most of us eat.

FIGURE 5.1

Glycemic Index and Glycemic Load

One quality of any carbohydrate food is its glycemic index. The glycemic index, a scale that rates how much certain foods raise blood sugar levels compared with glucose, was developed by Dr. David Jenkins at the University of Toronto in 1981. Sometimes white bread, which has a glycemic index of 100, is used as the reference food rather than glucose. One of the shortcomings of the original glycemic index is that it only compares equal quantities of carbohydrate (usually 50 grams) among foods to evaluate the blood glucose response. It doesn’t take into account the total amount of carbohydrate in a typical serving. This limitation has created quite a bit of confusion. For instance, watermelon has a glycemic index (GI) of 72, while a milk chocolate candy bar tops out with a GI of only 43. Does that mean we should eat candy bars rather than fruit? Of course not! The candy bar is a much more concentrated source of carbohydrate (sugar) than watermelon is. You would have to eat only 3 ounces of the chocolate to get 50 grams of carbohydrate, whereas you would have to eat a half pound of watermelon to get 50 grams of carbs. To overcome this limitation, scientists at Harvard University in 1997 proposed using a new scale called the glycemic load, defined as the GI multiplied by the carbohydrate content in a typical serving. The glycemic load effectively equalized the playing field and made real-world food comparisons possible.

Almost all processed foods made from refined grains and sugars have quite high glycemic loads, whereas virtually all fresh fruits and veggies have very low glycemic loads (see
Table 5.1
). The Web site
www.glycemicindex.com
helps you determine the GI and glycemic load of almost any food.

TABLE 5.1

Comparison of Glycemic Index and Load of Refined and Unrefined Foods (100 g portions)

 

WESTERN REFINED FOODS
Food
Glycemic Index
Glycemic Load
Crisped rice cereal
88
77.3
Jelly beans
80
74.5
Cornflakes
84
72.7
Life Savers
70
67.9
Rice cakes
82
66.9
Table sugar (sucrose)
65
64.9
Shredded wheat cereal
69
57.0
Graham crackers
74
56.8
Grape-Nuts cereal
67
54.3
Cheerios cereal
74
54.2
Rye crisp bread
65
53.4
Vanilla wafers
77
49.7
Corn chips
73
46.3
Mars bar
68
42.2
Shortbread cookies
64
41.9
Granola bar
61
39.3
Angel food cake
67
38.7
Bagel
72
38.4
Doughnut
76
37.8
White bread
70
34.7
Waffles
76
34.2
100% bran cereal
42
32.5
Whole wheat bread
69
31.8
Croissant
67
31.2

 

UNREFINED TRADITIONAL FOODS
Food
Glycemic Index
Glycemic Load
Parsnips
97
19.5
Baked potato
85
18.4
Boiled millet
71
16.8
Boiled broad beans
79
15.5
Boiled couscous
65
15.1
Boiled sweet potato
54
13.1
Boiled brown rice
55
12.6
Banana
53
12.1
Boiled yam
51
11.5
Boiled garbanzo beans
33
9
Pineapple
66
8.2
Grapes
43
7.7
Kiwifruit
52
7.4
Carrots
71
7.2
Boiled beets
64
6.3
Boiled kidney beans
27
6.2
Apple
39
6.0
Boiled lentils
29
5.8
Pear
36
5.4
Watermelon
72
5.2
Orange
43
5.1
Cherries
22
3.7
Peach
28
3.1
Peanuts
14
2.6

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