| Top 5 Recovery Snacks | |
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May 24, 2012 |
Top 5 Recovery Snacks
By Chris Rosenbloom, PhD, RD, CSSD
Recovery is a hot topic for swimmers and for good reason. A long pool and/or land workout burns muscle fuel and causes muscle protein breakdown. Eating a recovery snack within an hour of a workout speeds needed carbs and amino acids (the building blocks of protein that make up the protein-rich foods you eat) to replenish muscle glycogen and repair and build muscle tissue. Do you need to buy expensive protein shakes? No, because the same amino acids found in shakes can be found in food for less money and more taste. Here are recovery snacks that provide some carbohydrate and about 20 grams of high quality protein…the amount that most researchers agree is the optimal protein dose for recovery.
1. 2
cups of low-fat chocolate milk provides two important sources of
protein: whey and casein. Chocolate milk may truly be
nature’s recovery beverage because in addition to high
quality protein it contains the natural sugar lactose that
stimulates insulin, a hormone that helps feed the amino acids into
the muscle. Milk also contains as much calcium and 10 cups of
spinach to keep your bones strong.
2.
1 cup low-fat cottage cheese with peaches, pears, or
pineapple…or any fruit you like. Cottage cheese is rich the
amino acid leucine which is thought to be the trigger for muscle
protein synthesis. Although cottage cheese doesn’t taste
salty, it has a higher sodium content than other dairy foods and
this might be a good thing if you are a salty sweater (if you see
white, salty streaks on your clothing or cap after it dries, you
are probably a salty sweater.)
3.
3-ounces
of turkey breast on a wheat bagel. Meat and fish provide about 7
grams of protein per ounce, so a 3-ounce portion gets to the needed
20 grams of protein. A three-ounce portion of meat is about the
size of a deck of playing cards or a computer mouse.
4.
4
Tablespoons peanut butter and strawberry jam on wheat bread. This
is an especially good recovery snack for those who are trying to
gain weight. Peanut butter is higher in fat than other protein
foods so means higher calories, but not to worry, the fat is the
heart-healthy kind of fat.
5.
7-ounces
of Greek yogurt with granola or fruit. Greek yogurt is higher in
protein than regular yogurt and has a thicker consistency. Because
it tastes a bit more like sour cream, sweeten it up with fruit or
granola to add the carbs. Greek yogurt also makes a great topping
for baked potatoes or cheese nachos as a substitute for higher-fat,
lower-protein sour cream.
To get the
most out of your training, practice good recovery by eating within
the hour after exercise. You will be strong and ready to go for the
next workout, which is most likely tomorrow!
Chris Rosenbloom is the sports dietitian for Georgia State
University Athletic Department and is the editor of the American
Dietetic Association’s Sports Nutrition Manual, 5th edition,
2012.











