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You Are Here:   Home  >>   Fitness and Bodywork   >>  When is the most effective time after weight training to take protein?

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Chris Carmichael Fitness Q&A

May 29, 2008

fitness question
chris carmichael health and fitness
(StockDisc)
When is the most effective time after weight training to take protein?

— Alexander
Waterloo, Ontario



fitness answer

Recent studies suggest that protein ingested prior to weight training sessions is the most effective for promoting strength gains and muscle recovery. It takes time for your body to digest protein, and by eating about 20 grams of protein in the 20 minutes before you begin strength training, the amino acids will be available for use by the time you finish your workout.

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Now, it's important to make the distinction that the protein you're eating before training is not the fuel you're burning during your workout. Carbohydrates are the primary fuel burned during strength training, so your pre-workout nutrition should include a carbohydrate-rich food in the hour before training. You can combine these two recommendations and have one snack with both carbs and protein about 20-30 minutes before your workout.

After training, a carbohydrate-rich recovery drink that includes a little protein is a good way to accelerate the replenishment of carbohydrate stores in your muscles. Within an hour or so, a full meal that contains a more significant source of protein, like chicken, fish, tofu, or whey protein is a good idea for both optimizing muscle recovery and building lean muscle mass.



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Chris Carmichael
Founder, CEO, and president of Carmichael Training Systems, Chris Carmichael is the personal coach to seven-time Tour de France winner Lance Armstrong. In 2004 he was awareded the USA Cycling Lifetime Achievement Award and was inducted into the U.S. Bicycling Hall of Fame in May 2003. He's been honored as the United States Olympic Committee's Coach of the Year and athletes under his tutelage have won 33 Olympic, World Championships, and Pan American Games. He is the author of the New York Times Bestseller "Chris Carmichael's Food For Fitness: Eat Right to Train Right" and "The Ultimate Ride," and co-author of "The Lance Armstrong Performance Program," with Lance Armstrong. Carmichael coaches a host of elite athletes including Discovery Channel rider and four-time Olympian George Hincapie and World Record Swimmer Ed Moses.
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