4 Natural Fuel Foods for Your Next Workout
By Amy Paturel
Help or hype?
What foods can you count on to go the extra mile, and which foods fall short? See what recent studies reveal before your next workout.
1. A Spoonful of Honey
Recent research suggests that carb blends (foods containing fructose and
glucose) may be superior to straight glucose for boosting energy during
endurance activities. But before you reach for a sports drink, consider honey:
like sugar, it naturally has equal parts fructose and glucose, but it also
contains a handful of antioxidants and vitamins. Upshot: While not exactly a
“super food,” honey has plenty going for it besides being sweet. The darker the
honey, the more disease-fighting compounds it contains.
2. A Cup of Joe
Studies that demonstrate performance-enhancing benefits of caffeine often
imply that drinking coffee will give you a boost. Not so, according to the
latest research. Scientists put nine endurance runners through five trials
after ingesting either a capsule (caffeine or placebo) or coffee
(decaffeinated, decaffeinated with caffeine added or regular coffee). Only the
caffeine capsule increased endurance. Researchers think that other compounds in
coffee may counteract some of the benefits of caffeine. Upshot: Have your cup
of coffee if you need it to get moving, and your stomach can tolerate it, but
don’t expect it to keep you going through a long workout.
3. A Glass of Chocolate Milk
A small 2006 study (partially funded by the dairy industry) found that
chocolate milk might help tired athletes refuel as well or better than popular
sports drinks. In the study, nine cyclists rode until exhaustion, rested for
four hours, then biked again. During the rest period, they drank either low-fat
chocolate milk, Gatorade (a fluid/electrolyte-replacement drink) or Endurox (a
carbohydrate-replacement drink). The cyclists who refueled with chocolate milk
were able to bike about 50 percent longer during the second bout of exercise
than those who drank Endurox and about as long as those who drank Gatorade.
Upshot: You don’t need a “sports drink” to refuel after a workout. Regular or
chocolate milk—both of which contain a mix of carbohydrate and protein—may work
just as well. Before or during a workout, however, stick with Gatorade or a
similar carb/electrolyte drink.
4. A Bowl of Yogurt
Constant training takes a toll on your immune system, leaving athletes
susceptible to upper respiratory tract infections, but new research suggests
that probiotics—the live active cultures in yogurt—may help keep you healthy. A
2008 study of 20 endurance athletes (published in the British Journal of Sports
Medicine) found that taking daily probiotic capsules enhanced the activity of
the athletes’ immune-boosting T-cells and cut the length of time they
experienced upper respiratory tract infection symptoms by more than half.
Probiotics can also help calm a queasy stomach, which is great for nervous
athletes. Upshot: You’d have to eat vats of yogurt to reach the levels of
probiotics the athletes in these studies consumed. Still, yogurt has a balanced
mix of carbs and protein, so it’s a great post-workout recovery fuel.
Originally published on: August 1, 2008



