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eating in the evening

  • 06-02-2009 12:13pm
    #1
    Closed Accounts Posts: 39


    Hi,

    Just wondering, I tend to eat little throughout the day, like muesli, soup, fruit , yogurt - about 600 cals max- up to 6 pm but then eat about 800 cals after. I go to they gym for an hour or more four times a week and I'm not trying to lose weight or anything, but was just wondering if its ok to eat most of my calories late in the evening?

    Thanks


Comments

  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,461 ✭✭✭Queen-Mise


    Your really not supposed too. When you eat late in the evening the body doesn't have a chance to digest it before you go to bed. I dont' think you are supposed to eat after about 7 in the evening.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,131 ✭✭✭RentDayBlues


    Studies have shown that eating in the evening doesn't cause you to put on weight if you are calorie counting and exercising. Obviously its not good to go to bed on a full stomach either so if you're going to bed at 10, eating at 9 probably wont be a good idea.

    It is actually better to eat after exercise as your body will burn more calories and you wont feel sluggish while exercising.

    I am on a 1400 calories per day diet and my breakdown would be:

    Breakfast, 8:30 AM - 400 calories
    Lunch, 1:00 PM - 300 - 400 calories
    Afternoon Snack, 4:30 PM - 100 calories
    Gym between 6 - 7:30 (depending on night)
    Dinner, 8:00 - 8:30 PM - 500 calories

    This has worked really well for me; lost 30 plus pounds. I see a dietitian and she feels this is an ideal pattern and sees no issue in eating that late in the evening.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 39 liz51


    Yeah my diet would be

    7.30am- breakfast- 300cals
    1.00pm- lunch-300cals
    then gym at 5.30
    8.00pm- dinner- about 700 cals
    and a snack (i know i shouldnt but i dont really have time to eat much during the day so i always feel its ok to eat when i get a chance to sit down)

    I'd heard that it just sits in your stomach if you eat after 8pm, but if your going to the gym, your muscles recovering should burn it off, is that right?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,131 ✭✭✭RentDayBlues


    This seems to be a good breakdown:

    When you first wake up, you are likely to be low on energy. It works like this: If, the night before, you ate dinner at 7 p.m. and then nothing else until breakfast at 7 a.m., you would have gone 12 hours without added fuel. Your body may have burned around 1,100 calories during this period. Most of the fuel used would have come from your stored fat and glycogen (carbs).



    But you have a limited supply of carbs because they are stored only in small amounts in your liver and muscles. Even though the body has plenty of fat stored, for fat to be “burned”, or metabolized, carbs need to be present. Often, the liver’s carb stores are nearly depleted by the morning, so many people may wake up in the morning in a state of energy deficit, where there are not enough carbs to provide energy and to help utilize fat.. So they need breakfast to infuse more energy into their body.



    If you skip breakfast and do a tough workout, you launch a depleted body into even greater depletion. Say you burn 500 calories during the workout. By the time you eat later that morning, you may have dipped into an energy deficit of 1,600 calories (that is, 1,100 calories burned while you sleep, plus 500 from the workout). Now your body is famished for fuel. However, you may not feel hungry in this state (known as “ketosis”) because your body has shifted to starvation mode to preserve its resources. Diminished hunger is one of the side effects. But a lack of stomach rumblings doesn’t mean your body doesn’t need fuel—it does. In fact, at some point it will demand more fuel—you’ll likely binge and go into a huge energy surplus to compensate. This ends up being a roller-coaster calorie ride for your body.


    In another scenario, if you overeat and are inactive, you can find yourself in a state of energy surplus. So let’s say you eat a big lunch at 1 p.m. (cheeseburger, fries, shake) and take in around 1,200 calories. Then you sit at your desk and burn about 500 calories until it’s time for dinner at 6. In this case, you may enter the meal in a energy surplus of 700 calories (1,200 calories from lunch, minus the 500 you burned sitting at your desk). If for dinner, you ate another big meal of 1,000 calories (fettuccini alfredo, a soda and dessert ), you could end up with a larger surplus of around 1,700 calories. If you remain sedentary for the rest of the evening, not much of that will be burned off. Then the next morning if you wake up to a big breakfast, your body stays in positive energy balance. This is a recipe for weight gain.


    Pre-Workout Snacks
    Don’t enter a workout hungry. If you start exercising in an energy deficit, your body is likely to preserve fat and perform poorly. If you tend to bonk out midway through a hard session, low energy may be the culprit. Quick absorbing carbs with a high glycemic index will give you fast fuel. So before a tough workout, have a sports drink, juice, fruit, bread or pasta to take in some calories. Depending on the intensity and type of activity you are doing, you may be less likely to have an upset stomach if you avoid high-fiber foods at this time. Or if you have them, wait an hour or two to digest before you start your workout. If you need to grab a snack minutes before a workout, chew thoroughly and go for a quick-digesting, high-carb food. But, if you are merely going on a moderate-paced walk for 45 minutes, you probably don’t need extra food unless you’re heading out first thing in the morning. But if you are going to do two spin classes, an 8-mile run or something equally vigorous, fuel up beforehand.

    During a Workout
    Again, what and how much you need depends upon what you are doing. If the workout is intense and lasts from 60 to 90 minutes or longer, you probably need extra fuel. A sports drink or energy gel is the easiest absorbing solution, although bread, juice, fruit or an energy bar work too.

    The Post-Exercise Energy Window
    If you went on an easy walk for an hour, you don’t need to eat extra. But if you had a high-intensity workout lasting 60 to 90 minutes or longer, then it’s crucial to eat afterwards. Within the first 45 minutes post-exercise, there is a “metabolic window.” This means that enzymes that replenish muscle carbs are at their highest levels. Plus, insulin, which rebuilds protein stores, is at peak levels. So eating a carb-and-protein mix (peanut butter sandwich, yogurt with fruit, bagel with cream cheese, or a handful of nuts) at this point will maintain muscle, replenish glycogen stores and reduce the amount of fat your body stores. Even a sport drink or a piece fruit are a good idea if you don’t have something more complex available. (These calories are needed to recover, so they are less likely to be stored as excess fat.)



    The problem is, it may be an hour or more before you get a chance to eat, especially if you’re at the gym and need to grab a shower before a long journey home. Missing the metabolic window is bad news: If you delay refueling, you slow carb replenishment by 50 percent and protein repair by 80 percent, according to John Ivy, an exercise physiologist at the University of Texas and the author of Nutrient Timing. And that means that you may be sluggish and fatigued during tomorrow’s workout.
    Sometimes an immediate side effect of a tough workout is that you are not hungry. But, you still need some calories. So drink juice or a sports drink at the very least. If you experiment with different food options, you should be able to find something that sits well with your stomach and improves your performance.


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