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Refueling
In the middle of burning 2000 calories it seems to be a good idea to
eat a few calories along the way. Does it matter much what one eats? Does it make a difference if it's during rather than after a ride? I would think simple sugars like fruit and even candy would be OK while your riding but maybe not as good after you are done. While more complex carbs like trail mix and pasta (who carries pasta salad? I've seen some!) seem better after the ride. But does it make a big difference in general for 2-3 hours 30-50 miles? |
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#2
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Refueling
"Jorg Lueke" wrote in message
ups.com... In the middle of burning 2000 calories it seems to be a good idea to eat a few calories along the way. Yes. Does it matter much what one eats? Yes. Does it make a difference if it's during rather than after a ride? Yes. I would think simple sugars like fruit and even candy would be OK while you're riding Yes, depending on the length of the ride. (who carries pasta salad? I've seen some!) Usually a rice salad, either French or Chinese style, for a long ride. But does it make a big difference in general for 2-3 hours 30-50 miles? Depends on a lot of things. If you're riding 50 miles in two hours, I'd think you'd need more refueling than if you're riding 30 in three. -- Warm Regards, Claire Petersky http://www.bicyclemeditations.org/ See the books I've set free at: http://bookcrossing.com/referral/Cpetersky |
#3
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Refueling
"Jorg Lueke" wrote in message ups.com... In the middle of burning 2000 calories it seems to be a good idea to eat a few calories along the way. Does it matter much what one eats? Does it make a difference if it's during rather than after a ride? I would think simple sugars like fruit and even candy would be OK while your riding but maybe not as good after you are done. While more complex carbs like trail mix and pasta (who carries pasta salad? I've seen some!) seem better after the ride. But does it make a big difference in general for 2-3 hours 30-50 miles? I thought protein would be the choice during the ride for your muscle use. |
#4
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Refueling
On May 28, 3:33 pm, "nash" wrote:
"Jorg Lueke" wrote in message ups.com... In the middle of burning 2000 calories it seems to be a good idea to eat a few calories along the way. Does it matter much what one eats? Does it make a difference if it's during rather than after a ride? I would think simple sugars like fruit and even candy would be OK while your riding but maybe not as good after you are done. While more complex carbs like trail mix and pasta (who carries pasta salad? I've seen some!) seem better after the ride. But does it make a big difference in general for 2-3 hours 30-50 miles? I thought protein would be the choice during the ride for your muscle use. Muscles are rebuilt as you rest. So I'd think you'd want more of those during your rest or light activity days but not around or duing the actual rides. This site, in my opinion, does a decent job of listing the basic options for most common types of rides http://www.cptips.com/sixrides.htm |
#5
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Refueling
"Claire Petersky" wrote in message ink.net... "Jorg Lueke" wrote in message ups.com... In the middle of burning 2000 calories it seems to be a good idea to eat a few calories along the way. Yes. Does it matter much what one eats? Yes. Does it make a difference if it's during rather than after a ride? Yes. I would think simple sugars like fruit and even candy would be OK while you're riding Yes, depending on the length of the ride. (who carries pasta salad? I've seen some!) Usually a rice salad, either French or Chinese style, for a long ride. But does it make a big difference in general for 2-3 hours 30-50 miles? Depends on a lot of things. If you're riding 50 miles in two hours, I'd think you'd need more refueling than if you're riding 30 in three. Claire with the Slavic last name never tires of advising us what we should eat and drink, but I require more details. Please Claire with the Slavic last name, tell us what you nibble on when you ride your trusty bicycle. Spare us nothing. Your domesticity is always a delight for all of us male slobs to ponder here on RBM. Regards, Ed Dolan the Great - Minnesota aka Saint Edward the Great - Order of the Perpetual Sorrows - Minnesota |
#6
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Refueling
On May 28, 4:02 pm, Jorg Lueke wrote:
On May 28, 3:33 pm, "nash" wrote: "Jorg Lueke" wrote in message oups.com... In the middle of burning 2000 calories it seems to be a good idea to eat a few calories along the way. Does it matter much what one eats? Does it make a difference if it's during rather than after a ride? I would think simple sugars like fruit and even candy would be OK while your riding but maybe not as good after you are done. While more complex carbs like trail mix and pasta (who carries pasta salad? I've seen some!) seem better after the ride. But does it make a big difference in general for 2-3 hours 30-50 miles? I thought protein would be the choice during the ride for your muscle use. Muscles are rebuilt as you rest. So I'd think you'd want more of those during your rest or light activity days but not around or duing the actual rides. This site, in my opinion, does a decent job of listing the basic options for most common types of rides http://www.cptips.com/sixrides.htm I suppose I should have just read the faq :P http://draco.nac.uci.edu/rbfaq/FAQ/9.20.html |
#7
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Refueling
"Jorg Lueke" wrote in message ups.com... On May 28, 3:33 pm, "nash" wrote: "Jorg Lueke" wrote in message ups.com... In the middle of burning 2000 calories it seems to be a good idea to eat a few calories along the way. Does it matter much what one eats? Does it make a difference if it's during rather than after a ride? I would think simple sugars like fruit and even candy would be OK while your riding but maybe not as good after you are done. While more complex carbs like trail mix and pasta (who carries pasta salad? I've seen some!) seem better after the ride. But does it make a big difference in general for 2-3 hours 30-50 miles? I thought protein would be the choice during the ride for your muscle use. Muscles are rebuilt as you rest. So I'd think you'd want more of those during your rest or light activity days but not around or duing the actual rides. This site, in my opinion, does a decent job of listing the basic options for most common types of rides http://www.cptips.com/sixrides.htm Well, even chicken is only 15% protein so it would not hurt to have it assimilated for when you stop the ride. Our company nurse said to eat protein during work and carbohydrates to help you sleep which seems to be the reverse but maybe both are good. |
#8
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Refueling
In article KRW6i.236508$aG1.174023@pd7urf3no,
"nash" writes: "Jorg Lueke" wrote in message ups.com... On May 28, 3:33 pm, "nash" wrote: "Jorg Lueke" wrote in message ups.com... In the middle of burning 2000 calories it seems to be a good idea to eat a few calories along the way. Does it matter much what one eats? Does it make a difference if it's during rather than after a ride? I would think simple sugars like fruit and even candy would be OK while your riding but maybe not as good after you are done. While more complex carbs like trail mix and pasta (who carries pasta salad? I've seen some!) seem better after the ride. But does it make a big difference in general for 2-3 hours 30-50 miles? I thought protein would be the choice during the ride for your muscle use. Muscles are rebuilt as you rest. So I'd think you'd want more of those during your rest or light activity days but not around or duing the actual rides. This site, in my opinion, does a decent job of listing the basic options for most common types of rides http://www.cptips.com/sixrides.htm Well, even chicken is only 15% protein so it would not hurt to have it assimilated for when you stop the ride. Our company nurse said to eat protein during work and carbohydrates to help you sleep which seems to be the reverse but maybe both are good. I think for a non-racing rider a certain balance of simple and complex carbs, plus some protein is good. I believe having some protein helps buffer the rate at which the carbs are metabolized. And protein-y foods satisfy, and keep the hunger pangs at bay for longer periods, so one can think more clearly. Peanut butter & jam sandwiches on whole-grain bread have all that. Protein in the peanut butter, simple carbs in the jam, complex carbs in the whole-grain bread. Also, PBJ sandwiches are portable, they last for a while out of the fridge, and they don't disintegrate in your hands while you're eating them. I think the main thing is to avoid eating too much oily/fatty/greasy/rich stuff while exercising. PBJ sandwiches - good. Oyster, anchovie & double cheese pizza - not so good. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca |
#9
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Refueling
On May 29, 7:41 pm, (Tom Keats) wrote:
In article KRW6i.236508$aG1.174023@pd7urf3no, "nash" writes: "Jorg Lueke" wrote in message oups.com... On May 28, 3:33 pm, "nash" wrote: "Jorg Lueke" wrote in message groups.com... In the middle of burning 2000 calories it seems to be a good idea to eat a few calories along the way. Does it matter much what one eats? Does it make a difference if it's during rather than after a ride? I would think simple sugars like fruit and even candy would be OK while your riding but maybe not as good after you are done. While more complex carbs like trail mix and pasta (who carries pasta salad? I've seen some!) seem better after the ride. But does it make a big difference in general for 2-3 hours 30-50 miles? I thought protein would be the choice during the ride for your muscle use. Muscles are rebuilt as you rest. So I'd think you'd want more of those during your rest or light activity days but not around or duing the actual rides. This site, in my opinion, does a decent job of listing the basic options for most common types of rides http://www.cptips.com/sixrides.htm Well, even chicken is only 15% protein so it would not hurt to have it assimilated for when you stop the ride. Our company nurse said to eat protein during work and carbohydrates to help you sleep which seems to be the reverse but maybe both are good. I think for a non-racing rider a certain balance of simple and complex carbs, plus some protein is good. I believe having some protein helps buffer the rate at which the carbs are metabolized. And protein-y foods satisfy, and keep the hunger pangs at bay for longer periods, so one can think more clearly. Peanut butter & jam sandwiches on whole-grain bread have all that. Protein in the peanut butter, simple carbs in the jam, complex carbs in the whole-grain bread. Also, PBJ sandwiches are portable, they last for a while out of the fridge, and they don't disintegrate in your hands while you're eating them. I think the main thing is to avoid eating too much oily/fatty/greasy/rich stuff while exercising. PBJ sandwiches - good. Oyster, anchovie & double cheese pizza - not so good. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca Thanks Tom. I dfinitely agree on the fatty stuff. I try to avoid fat in general as it slows you down regardless of whether your biking or working. |
#10
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Refueling
Jorg Lueke wrote:
:: On May 29, 7:41 pm, (Tom Keats) wrote: ::: In article KRW6i.236508$aG1.174023@pd7urf3no, ::: "nash" writes: ::: ::: ::: ::: ::: :::: "Jorg Lueke" wrote in message :::: ups.com... ::::: On May 28, 3:33 pm, "nash" wrote: :::::: "Jorg Lueke" wrote in message ::: :::::: ups.com... ::: ::::::: In the middle of burning 2000 calories it seems to be a good ::::::: idea to eat a few calories along the way. Does it matter much ::::::: what one eats? Does it make a difference if it's during rather ::::::: than after a ride? I would think simple sugars like fruit and ::::::: even candy would be OK while your riding but maybe not as good ::::::: after you are done. While more complex carbs like trail mix ::::::: and pasta (who carries pasta salad? I've seen some!) seem ::::::: better after the ride. But does it make a big difference in ::::::: general for 2-3 hours 30-50 miles? ::: :::::: I thought protein would be the choice during the ride for your :::::: muscle use. ::: ::::: Muscles are rebuilt as you rest. So I'd think you'd want more of ::::: those during your rest or light activity days but not around or ::::: duing the actual rides. This site, in my opinion, does a decent ::::: job of listing the basic options for most common types of rides ::: ::::: http://www.cptips.com/sixrides.htm ::: :::: Well, even chicken is only 15% protein so it would not hurt to :::: have it assimilated for when you stop the ride. Our company nurse :::: said to eat protein during work and carbohydrates to help you :::: sleep which seems to be the reverse but maybe both are good. ::: ::: I think for a non-racing rider a certain balance of ::: simple and complex carbs, plus some protein is good. ::: I believe having some protein helps buffer the rate ::: at which the carbs are metabolized. And protein-y ::: foods satisfy, and keep the hunger pangs at bay for ::: longer periods, so one can think more clearly. ::: ::: Peanut butter & jam sandwiches on whole-grain bread ::: have all that. Protein in the peanut butter, simple ::: carbs in the jam, complex carbs in the whole-grain ::: bread. Also, PBJ sandwiches are portable, they last ::: for a while out of the fridge, and they don't ::: disintegrate in your hands while you're eating them. ::: ::: I think the main thing is to avoid eating too much ::: oily/fatty/greasy/rich stuff while exercising. ::: PBJ sandwiches - good. ::: Oyster, anchovie & double cheese pizza - not so good. ::: ::: cheers, ::: Tom ::: ::: -- ::: Nothing is safe from me. ::: Above address is just a spam midden. ::: I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca :: :: Thanks Tom. I dfinitely agree on the fatty stuff. I try to avoid :: fat in general as it slows you down regardless of whether your :: biking or working. Complex carbs? Come on, guys...carbs are carbs....whole grain bread is as good a carb as simple carbs....also, PB is more fat than anything else (by weight and by % calories). http://www.jif.com/products/details.asp?prodID=325 I don't see why fat would slow one down in a ride...the problem is, it might not help you climb hills very fast.... |
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