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The post-workout meal

The post-workout meal

By definition, the post-workout meal is whatever an athlete consumes after exercising. The main purpose of this meal is to help with repair and recovery.

The post-workout meal

The purpose of the post-exercise meal is to replenish:

  1. liver and muscle glycogen
  2. muscle protein
  3. fluid and electrolytes

Timing

Out of the 3 goals of the post-workout meal, the most pressing is rehydration. Replenishing fluids and electrolytes lost via sweat should be as quickly as possible after training or competition to prevent detrimental health consequences.

The replenishment of both glycogen and muscle protein happens in the several hours after exercise. For example, the “anabolic window”, i.e. the period of time in which protein turnover is maximised in the muscles after exercise is actually larger than once thought, 24 to 48 hours rather than 30 minutes. Similarly, glycogen is resynthesised over the 24 hours following exercise.

However, both glycogen and muscle protein synthesis are optimal in the few hours after exercise. Moreover, digestion takes a few hours. Finally, many athletes do not have a full day to recover before their next training session or competition. Therefore, the post-workout meal should be consumed soon after exercise, ideally within 2-3 hours.

Composition

Quantity

The size of the meal depends on the size of the athlete, their appetite (which is often suppressed after intense exercise), habits, digestive status, availability, etc.

The ballpark targets to shoot for are:

Other considerations

Alcohol

Alcohol can impair the body’s ability to resynthesise muscle protein (3). In addition, it can hinder glycogen resynthesis mainly due to its association with poor food choices (1, 3). The ideal time to drink alcohol is when it does not interfere with recovery, sleep and subsequent performance. The bad news is that for most athletes this means never!

Food choice

The actual foods you choose for your post-exercise meal are highly individual. Ideally you want to choose foods that your body digests easily to make the nutrients of interest available asap.

Liquid vs solid

Sample meals

Below are some example post-workout meals for an athlete who weighs 70kg and has performed intense exercise. This athlete will require about 70g carbohydrate (1g/kg) and 28g protein (0.4g/kg). If the athlete has lost 1 kg of bodyweight in sweat, they will also require 1.25-1.5 litres of total fluid consumed soon after exercise.

Sample meal 1

2 chicken & bean burritos with salsa, guacamole and salad

2495 kJ, 71.06g carbohydrate, 31.48g protein, 6.17g fat, 10.79g fibre

Sample meal 2

Stir-fry and rice

2418 kJ, 75.26g carbohydrate, 30.37g protein, 15.64g fat, 5.21g fibre

Sample meal 3

Sushi and sashimi

2211 kJ, 71.31g carbohydrate, 28.76g protein, 13.40g fat, 3.29g fibre

Sample meal 4

Tropical protein smoothie

1788 kJ, 70.57g carbohydrate, 30.68g protein, 1.01g fat, 5.83g fibre

Sample meal 5

Spag bol and OJ

2607 kJ, 72.67g carbohydrate, 41.63g protein, 15.80g fat, 7.66g fibre

References

  1. Burke LM, van Loon LJC, Hawley JA. Postexercise muscle glycogen resynthesis in humans. J Appl Physiol. 2016/11/01. 2017;122(5):1055–67.
  2. Bonilla DA, Pérez-Idárraga A, Odriozola-Martínez A, Kreider RB. The 4r’s framework of nutritional strategies for post-exercise recovery: A review with emphasis on new generation of carbohydrates. Vol. 18, International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. MDPI AG; 2021. p. 1–19.
  3. Heaton LE, Davis JK, Rawson ES, Nuccio RP, Witard OC, Stein KW, et al. Selected In-Season Nutritional Strategies to Enhance Recovery for Team Sport Athletes: A Practical Overview. Sport Med. 2017/07/14. 2017;47(11):2201–18.
  4. Kerksick CM, Wilborn CD, Roberts MD, Smith-Ryan A, Kleiner SM, Jäger R, et al. ISSN exercise & sports nutrition review update: research & recommendations. J Int Soc Sport Nutr. 2018/08/03. 2018;15(1):38.
  5. Baker LB. Physiology of sweat gland function: The roles of sweating and sweat composition in human health. Temperature [Internet]. 2019 Jul 3;6(3):211–59. Available from: https://doi.org/10.1080/23328940.2019.1632145
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