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3 Ways to Eat to Gain Muscle


How to Eat to Gain Muscle

 For many of us, gaining muscle may conjure up images of countless hours in the gym, but diet doesn't come to mind. Your body needs calories and nourishment to feed growing muscle mass and to adjust to varying amounts of activity. Before making sudden changes in your lifestyle, though, you may want to consult with a physician, personal trainer, and dietitian.

Method 1 of 3: Learning What to Eat

 

 1.Eat sufficient amounts of protein. The rule of thumb is that you need between 1 and 1.5 times your body weight in grams of protein. For example, if you weigh 150 pounds, you should eat between 150 and 225 grams of protein per day if you want to consistently gain muscle. Full time bodybuilders can eat two to three times their body weight in grams of protein, and sometimes more, but for most of us that would be overkill. If you're overweight, substitute your ideal body weight and calculate in grams. Proteins that are great for building muscle include: 

  • Red meat like beef, pork, lamb, venison, bison, etc.
  • Fish like tuna, salmon, swordfish, bass, trout, mackerel, etc.
  • Poultry breast, from chicken, turkey, duck, etc.
  • Eggs, especially egg whites. The yolk is high in cholesterol, but one or two a day isn't unhealthy.
  • Dairy like milk, cheese, cottage cheese, yogurt, etc.

 

  • 2.Learn the difference between complete and incomplete proteins. In order to build muscle, you need to consume complete proteins found in eggs, meat, fish, cheese, milk and most other animal products. Rule of thumb: If it bleeds or breathes, it's a complete protein. There are lots of non-animal complete proteins available, as well, meaning that you can still build muscle as a vegetarian. Complete vegetarian proteins include:
  • Soy
  • Quinoa
  • Buckwheat
  • Chia
  • Hempseed
  • Beans or legumes with rice

  • 3.Eat foods with a high Protein Digestibility Corrected Amino Acid Score (PDCAAS). This is a measure of how well different proteins are digested by the body, based on the solubility of the amino acids in the protein. Think of PDCAAS as grading the quality of protein, with 1 being the highest score and 0 the lowest. Here's a breakdown common proteins by their rounded PDCAAS score:
  • 1.00: egg white, whey, casein, soy protein
  • 0.9: beef, soybeans
  • 0.7: chickpeas, fruits, black beans, vegetables, other legumes
  • 0.5: cereals and derivatives, peanuts
  • 0.4: whole wheat

    4.Include carbohydrates in your diet. It is important to have carbohydrates so that your body can tap into glycogen (energy) stores within your muscles while you are working out. If you do not eat enough carbohydrates your body will not have energy reserves and will break down your muscles instead! To build muscle, your diet should consist of somewhere between 40% and 60% carbohydrates, or about 1500 calories per day.
  • Carbs get an unfairly bad reputation from dieting guides. Because complex carbs are broken down slowly and have a low-glycemic index (not as much sugar), they are acceptable to eat after a workout, and especially in the morning at breakfast. Try to select carbohydrates low on the Glycemic Index, which are healthier and release their energy more slowly . Good examples are:
  • Brown Basmati Rice
  • Quinoa
  • Rolled Oats
  • Sweet Potato
  • Wholemeal Rye Bread
  • Wholemeal Spaghetti

  • 5.Eat healthy fats. Not all fats are created equal. In fact, there is evidence to suggest that eating healthy fats is actually good for you. You should get about 20% to 35% of your calories from fats. Eat monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats. These are the "good" fats. They include:
    • Olive, peanut, sunflower, canola, and avocado oils.
    • Fish.
    • Nuts.
    • Flaxseed and pumpkin seeds.
    • Soy products such as tofu or soymilk.


    6.Stay away from saturated and trans fats. These are the "bad" fats. Make sure saturated fats make up no more than 10% of your caloric intake, and that trans fats make up no more than 1% of your caloric intake.Bad fats include:
    • Ice cream, candy bars, and packaged snack foods.
    • High-fat cuts of meat.
    • Lard, stick margarine, and vegetable shortening.
    • Fried foods.

    7.Consume plenty of fiber. Remember it is important to include green vegetables in your diet such as spinach or broccoli to ensure that you receive an adequate amount of vitamins. As well, green leafy vegetables are high in fiber which is essential for removing waste from the body.8.Monitor your salt intake. It may be true that excessive consumption of salt can lead to hypertension but you lose tremendous amounts of sodium when you sweat. Also, sodium (a key electrolyte) aids in muscle contraction, which is one reason why it is found in many sports drinks.

    Method 2 of 3: Learning How to Eat

    1.Eat when you're hungry. Sounds obvious right? Many muscle-builders get fooled into thinking muscle-building diets need to be more elaborate and complicated than they really do. Eating what you like, within the parameters mentioned in the previous section, is the key to gaining muscle mass consistently. If you're not eating what you like in a regular pattern, it'll be harder to consistently follow through with your diet. Here's a sample diet to give you a better idea of what someone might eat throughout the day:
    • Breakfast: egg-white omelet with turkey; whole grain toast; banana.
    • Pre-lunch snack: mixed nuts; apple.
    • Lunch: tuna salad with olive oil, onions and capers; sauteed kale.
    • Pre-workout snack: cottage cheese with blueberries.
    • Post-workout snack: protein shake; sauteed spinach.
    • Dinner: orange-soy chicken breast with quinoa; stir-fry with carrots, onions, peas, and peppers.

      2.Create a calorie surplus. For many muscle-builders, it's important to combine an increase in protein with an increase in calories, so all your hard work at the gym won't work against you. You've got to build up enough fuel to burn as a way of building up your muscles, but not eat so many calories that they'll be transferred into fat. There's an ideal surplus of calories that you can find by calculating your maintenance calorie count, and your surplus.
      • Your maintenance calorie count is the number of calories you need to consume in an average day, with an average amount of energy output, to maintain your current body-weight. For most people with a healthy body-weight, this is around 2000 calories.
      • Men should surplus about 250 calories a day (bringing the total to 2250), while women should surplus about 150 calories a day (bringing the total to 2125). Over the course of a given week of muscle-building exercise and proper nutrition, this calorie increase should translate into roughly .25-.5 pounds of muscle gained per week.

      3.Always eat breakfast. Breakfast is probably the most important meal of the day aside from your post-workout meal. Eating breakfast packed with protein, complex carbohydrates, and fiber will get your metabolism going. It will also keep your body from cannibalizing any muscle for energy. Remember the saying: "Eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince, and dinner like a pauper." Because you're not on a diet, however, you don't have to be a pauper at any time.
      • Get protein into your breakfast. Omelets, shakes (or smoothies) and cottage cheese are great sources of protein.
      • Eat complex carbohydrates for breakfast. While simple carbohydrates such as sugar and donuts are broken down easily and cause a spike in your sugar levels, complex carbs (oatmeal, bran, beans, whole grains) are broken down over longer periods of time and don't cause spikes in blood sugar. 4.Eat less food more often. Eat at regular intervals to keep from getting so hungry that you splurge when you do eat. Your body will start to get hungry at the predetermined times you do eat because you've kept a consistent routine.
        • Try eating breakfast, lunch, dinner, post workout, before bed, and slip in two snacks in between. Snacks can include everything from nuts and seeds to sides of veggies or fruit.
        • If you're trying to gain muscle and lose weight, skip the before-bed meal. Eating right before you go to bed will cause the body to convert any not metabolized food into fat instead of energy or muscle. Your body's metabolism shuts down right before bedtime.
        5.Drink plenty of water all throughout the day. Dehydration can mean poor muscle recovery, so make sure you drink lots of water throughout the day. Sip on water throughout your workout. The recommended daily amount of water for men is about 3 liters, and 2.2 liters for women.
        • Get a water filter to filter tap water. Buying a water filter is an economical way of converting your tap water into healthy, great-tasting water. Buy one and see your water consumption grow.
        • Don't wait until you're thirsty to drink. Keep a steady supply of water going into your body, so you won't have to gulp or binge on water when you're dehydrated, which risks upsetting your stomach during workouts.

          Method 3 of 3: Using Supplements Safely

          1. Decide whether or not supplements are right for you. Natural protein and muscle-building supplements are an easy way to gain more protein without having to actually eat it. Whey and soy proteins are common varieties.
            • To start, take whey before and after your workouts. Whey powder is the easiest, safest, and most effective way to start using muscle-building supplements. Available widely, whey powder is available in large quantities and easy to use. You can mix it into a shake that's often available in a variety of flavors, and drink it before and after your workouts.
            • For most people, 1-2 grams of powder taken three times in a day is usually the recommended dose. Read the instructions on the supplement you're experimenting with and tweak the formula accordingly.
          2. Consider creatine. Creatine helps increase pure muscle mass and helps regenerate muscles when not working out. However, it is merely a supplement, and is not necessary to gain muscle mass. Up to 10 grams of creatine, 3-5 grams taken before and after workouts, can help boost adenosine triphosphate (ATP) production, making you stronger during workouts, making it easier to build muscle.
            • If you do take the creatine, be sure to drink plenty of water, because the creatine dehydrates your muscles while regenerating and also imbalances your electrolyte levels.
            • Talk to your doctor about your muscle-building regimen to learn more about whether or not supplements might be right for you, given your history and your health.
          3. Take Vitamin C to aid recovery and stimulate muscle growth. Vitamin C is an antioxidant that helps to neutralize free radical molecules that make work-out recovery a challenge. 500 mg of Vitamin C taken daily will help you maintain a healthy immune system. Gradually, you can build up your Vitamin C intake, to as much as 2000 mg for optimum benefit.
          4. Be especially careful about hydrating. Some doctors say that whey protein is difficult to digest and can strain your liver or kidneys, especially in large amounts. A high protein diet in general can be straining on the kidneys, so it is important to drink a lot of water. This will flush out your system and negate the negative effects of eating a high protein diet.
            Source Article : http://bit.ly/1pzwfpo

           

     

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8 Proven Strategies For Maximum Muscle Gains







Most of the prospective bodybuilders get confused when they encounter numerous conflicting suggestions and ridiculous information related to bodybuilding. This article provides some basic guidelines to the novice fitness enthusiasts who face difficulty in deciding from where to start. The eight tips discussed in this article will give the right direction to the readers in their muscle building pursuit:



1) Exercise with free weights and focus on compound workouts:  The workouts that simultaneously stimulate a number of muscle fiber groups are known as the compound exercises. The examples of compound workouts include bench press, overhead press, barbell row, chin up, deadlift, squat, dip and lunge. The compound movements allow you to substantially increase the resistance stimulating numerous muscle fibers. The free weights enhance the effects of compound movements by involving the supporting synergistic muscles as well.



2) There is no substitute for hard work: The intensity level of the training makes all the difference between moderate muscle building and serious gains in body building. You must exercise at high intensity to the point of muscle failure and stimulate the muscle fibers to the maximum in order to gain muscle mass. Muscle failure is the condition when you can no longer complete your reps in the proper form. If you use moderate training intensity, be prepared to accept moderate results in muscle building.


3) Record your weekly performance in the gym: The muscle building process is nothing but the adaptive response of the body to its external environment. The muscle fibers of the body are strained and stressed during the workout routine and therefore, the body responds by repairing the damage and stimulating the growth of stronger muscle fibers. You can achieve stronger growth and muscle mass by progressively increasing your workout intensity every week. You can either increase the intensity of your weight lifting or simply perform more reps of your exercises to gradually challenge the muscles of your body. The weekly logs of your performance can be very helpful in planning the workout intensity of your fitness program. The recorded progress over time will also improve the motivation level.


4) Avoid Overtraining: As far as muscle building is concerned, overtraining is extremely harmful and can ruin any progress achieved in body building. Most of the guys trying to build muscle mass tend to over exercise under the misconception that more is better or the enthusiasm of spending more time in the gym results on overexertion.
You must understand that if you start overtraining your muscles, you will turn your goal of muscle building into a fragile dream that will vanish more quickly than you can imagine. The muscle building process takes place while you are eating and resting outside the gym against the stimulant received inside the gym.  The muscle building takes place during the recovery process, and you must allow sufficient rest periods between the workouts in order to allow the muscles to grow.


5) Eat More Frequently: The proper nutrition is extremely important in muscle building and many guys neglect their nutritional intake, which apparently becomes more important in light of the damage sustained by the muscles during the workout routine. If you don’t allow proper nutrition to your body how can you expect that your muscles will recover and strengthened as a response to environmental stimulation provided in the gym. You must keep your body in the anabolic state (muscle building state) by taking short meals on every 2 – 3 hours throughout the day taking around 5 – 7 meals each day. There is no need to say that your meal should contain sufficient quantities of complex carbohydrates and high-quality protein.


6) Increase Your Protein Intake: The protein constitutes the building blocks of the body. The proteins are the most significant constituent of nutrition for the people who desire to build strong muscle and gain muscle mass. The protein contains the vital building and repairing codes in almost every single cell of the 30 trillion cells that make your body.  It’s just impossible  to synthesize the cells of lean muscle fibers if your body lacks in sufficient protein. Every prospective bodybuilder must consume sufficient amounts of high-quality  proteins in order to support the muscle building process. Generally, you will need 1 – 1.5 grams of protein for every pound of your body weight. The high-quality  sources of protein include milk, eggs, fish, poultry, beef, cottage cheese and peanut butter.


7) Increase Your Water Intake: sufficient water intake is also extremely important for maximum muscle building. You can realize the importance of water by considering the fact that muscles contain 70 percent water. The research has indicated that if your body suffers 3 -4 percent loss of water, the muscle contraction takes place by 10 -20 percent. Sufficient intake of water not only keeps your muscle fuller and vascular but also improves its strength. In order to support optimal muscle building, you must consume at least 0.6 ounces of water for every pound of your body weight.


8) Be Consistent: your consistency is the key to success. Your knowledge on diet and training is not sufficient; you need to apply your knowledge in the most consistent manner. The people who consistently implement their weight gain program are rewarded with impressive muscle building and massive improvements in muscle mass and strength.
Finally, you need to understand that numerous small steps induce the cumulative effects of muscle building. The single workout on a particular day or the richest diet consumed during any dinner will not lead to any perceptible muscle building. However, these single efforts will have cumulative repercussions in the form of impressive body building success over a period of time. If you can remain consistent in your weight gain program incorporating the above-mentioned suggestions, you will turn your distant dreams into hard reality by getting massive muscle mass and strength.




- See more at: http://www.slimmerfitterstronger.com/blog/2013/07/31/8-proven-strategies-for-maximum-muscle-gains/#comment-221

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