The Paleo Athlete
The Paleo Athlete
The Paleo Athlete
Program
New York Times best-selling authors of It Starts with Food
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Table of Contents
012 My Story
015 Chapter 1: The Basics
016 Introduction
019 This Book Is for You if You...
021 Paleo...with Benefits
023 Whats Paleo?
027 Why Do It?
032 Foods to Avoid
033 A Primer on Energy Systems
035 Chapter 2: The Macros
036 P, F & C
040 Carbology 101
043 Not All Carbs Are Created Equal
045 Stop the (Low Carb) Insanity
047 Chapter 3: Rubber, Meet Road
048 Become an Energy-Using Chameleon
050 Signs Youre Burning Through Fat Like a Mofo
051 What to Put in Your Mouth
053 Protein
056 Carbs
059 Fats
061 Macro Summary
062 Pre-, Intra- & PostWorkout Nutrition Intro
064 PreWorkout Nutrition
067 IntraWorkout Nutrition
068 PostWorkout Nutrition
072 Summary
073 Strength & Power Athletes
076 High-Intensity Athletes
079 Endurance Athletes
082 Youre an Experiment. N = 1.
083 Chapter 4: File Under Other
084 Equipping Your Kitchen
087 Cooking Tips
090 Hydration
093 Supplements, Safe Starches & Sugar...Oh My!
099 Carb Cycling, Carb Backloading &
Intermittent Fasting
103 Put Your Game Face On
109 How to Handle the Haters
112 Go Forth & Prosper...Its Not Just
About the Food
122 FAQs
129 Troubleshooting
133 Chapter 5: Food Time
134 PreWorkout Meal Ideas
136 PostWorkout Meal Ideas
Breakfast
137 Breakfast Sausage Scotch Eggs
140 Hearty Spinach Beef Frittata
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143 Paleo Carnitas Egg Muffins
146 Eggs n Brussels Sprouts
149 Spanish-Style Sweet Potato Tortilla
Carb-Dense Side Dishes
152 Wills Yam Fries
155 Sweet Potato Applesauce Mash
157 Apple Cranberry Sweet Potato Bake
160 Blueberry Sweet Potato Mash
162 Potato Rsti
165 Kale n Tatties
168 Neep & Carrot Mash
171 Perfectly Roasted Butternut Squash
173 Butternut Squash & Pear Mash
175 Zucchini Fritters
178 Coconut Milk Mango Sticky Rice
180 30 Paleo Post-Workout Carb Recipes
Meaty Goodness
183 Crispy Italian Chicken Thighs
185 Paleo Chicken Nuggets
188 Paleo Thanksgiving Leftovers Sandwich
192 Slow Cooker Chicken
194 Slow Cooker Mocha-Rubbed Pot Roast
197 Paleo Mediterranean Meatza Pie
200 Chai Tea Braised Beef Short Ribs
203 Hard Cider Braised Brats
205 Simple Shrimp Ceviche
Drinks & Other Good Things
208 Pumpkin Pie Recovery Shake
210 Homemade Gingerbread Spice Mix
212 Gingerbread Spiced Coffee
214 Chocolate Orange Naked Bars
217 Simple Paleo Tortillas
219 Appendix: Cooking Conversions
222 References
225 Books & Resources
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My Story
In seventh grade, my friends nicknamed me Seafii.
Thats short for sea elephant. (True story.) I think you can guess how graceful and lithe I was.
Growing up, despite being active in youth sportssoccer mostlyI was always a bit chunky and awkward. I liked junk
food and candy on a pretty regular basis. Fast-forward to high school. In senior year, I stopped playing sports, got a job
bagging groceries and then decorating cakes, and gained 25 pounds.
By the time freshman year of college rolled around, I made a pact with myself to get active again and regain some
fitness. I joined a gym, started doing lots of bodybuilding lifts and committed to eating healthier (which, by my
understanding meant switching out regular pasta for whole wheat and drinking soy milk). It worked. I lost weight but
would always feel bloated and horrible after eating. I was also still addicted to anything sweet.
In my early 20s, I found mountain biking and started a nearly decade-long love affair with anything pedal powered. I
became a vegetarian and ate a lot more soy in my quest to lose more weight, even mixing in pseudoWeight Watchers
and counting points (express train to Crazy Town!). This slimmed me down another 10 pounds, but at the same time I
started feeling sick and having some frightening abdominal / digestive problems. Dont worry, Ill spare you the details.
Bikes became my passion. I raced anything and everything: insanely steep downhill courses all over the West, lung-
busting cyclocross races and absolute soul-crushing solo endurance mountain bike courses for upwards of 12 hours at a
time. I was a little masochistic.
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Through this, I maintained my healthy diet
while being plagued by symptoms like fainting
spells, bloating and acne-riddled skin.
In late 2009, my dear friend Allison started
talking about some diet called Paleo. I
distinctly remember thinking 1) she was nuts
and 2) there was no way I could continue to
race bikes and eat that way. Yet, always one
for an experiment, I decided to try it. On
January 10, 2010, after letting myself indulge
over the holidays, I cleaned out my pantry,
emptied my fridge and went Paleo.
I kept racing, performed well and progressed
to Xterra triathlons. Ironically, despite my sea
elephant nickname, it turned out swimming
wasnt exactly my favorite thing ever, so I let it
go. From there, always interested in finding a
new challenge, I started doing CrossFit and
weightlifting. Another passion was born.
Most of my physical complaints went away once I committed to removing grains and gluten for good in 2011. (I was
more of a Paleo dabblist until that point.) My fainting ceased, the acne disappeared and I no longer had a food baby
after eating. My energy was boundless, muscle mass increased and I continued to achieve more athletically than I ever
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thought possible. Ive raced almost 100 miles on my mountain bike in a day; competed on a team at the CrossFit Games
Regionals; and recently back-squatted 130 kg, all while eating gluten-, legume- and dairy-free.
My years of athletics, holistic nutrition certification and experience running Stupid Easy Paleo combine into the best,
competition-proven Paleo advice for you here in this ebook. Its my hope that you find my lighthearted approach and
information a useful aid to getting you started as a clean-eating athlete. Its time to kick some ass and set some PRs!
Steph
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CHAPTER 1
The Basics
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Beyond eating enough food to support
your athletic endeavors, getting adequate
protein, refueling post-workout and other
best practices, what you may be missing is
that certain foods can contribute to
systemic inflammation. You could be
making inflammation worse with the food
youre eating.
SECTION 1
Introduction
Tired of being confused about nutrition and performance?
Me too.
Its impossible to go online and get a straight answer about how to eat for performance without putting a bunch of junk
in your body. Over the past four years, Ive scoured countless resources, read dozens of scientific papers and done more
than a few different nutrition experiments on myself in the quest to become a more effective athlete. You see, Im not
special or uniquely talented. Im actually quite average when it comes to sports, but luckily persistence and an ability to
learn most things quickly have played into my favor.
When I learned about Paleo in 2009, I knew it could be a way for me to maximize my performance as a bike racer.
Nutrition was the one arrow missing from my quiver.
Unless youre going to dole out big bucks for a nutrition coach, youre probably relying on the Internet or books for
information and, while that can be effective, its a huge time waster. Be prepared to wade through dozens of low-quality
sites, message boards and online mags only to wind up more confused than when you started.
By the end of this book, youll be clearer on how to approach fueling for your sport and the nuances that go into it.
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You wouldnt put cheap gas in a race car, would you?
In case youre wondering if this is a trick question, its not. And the answers no. To make the analogy clearer, if you want
to start performing better as an athlete you have to stop putting crap in your gas tank. (Of course your amazing human
body is much more complex than a car. Lets not kid ourselves.) You may be reading this right now because youve
noticed that your compadres in the gym are kicking your ass despite how hard you feel like youre training. If youve
started to suspect that what youve been putting in your pie hole could be holding you back (or could help you fly),
youre right.
I created The Paleo Athlete because Ive received dozens of inquiries and counseled loads of people about how to eat
real food (read: Paleo) as an athlete through my website, my Facebook page and email. I decided the need was great
enough to warrant writing a book, so I sat down and compiled the best scientific information and my experience into one
place for you.
Its okay. Im a science nerd.
I get the science, and twelve years as a high school chemistry and biology teacher means Im good at helping people
understand technical information. Im not going to overwhelm you with pointless details but will provide you with
resources for further investigation, if youre so inclined to geek out and take it further once youre done here. Names like
Robb Wolf, Dallas and Melissa Hartwig, Dr. Loren Cordain, Chris Kresser and Mark Sisson may or may not be familiar to
you, but theyre great at breaking down the science-y stuff into digestible bites.
My role here is to convey the science in a way you can put into practice.
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Heres the rub.
Nutrition is a hotly debated topic, even when people are tossing around scholarly journal articles as evidence. Want to
start an Internet flame war? Go on the website of someone with an opposing nutritional viewpoint and just start asking
questions. (Ever ask a staunch Paleo about vegans or a vegan about Paleo-eaters!?) Arguments erupt, and things can get
very ugly.
The one thing you, the athlete, need to do is to keep an open mind and test things out. Think the idea of cutting out
grains is ludicrous? Pick a time during the off-season, and test it for 30 days. Think you cant survive without pounding
whey protein every day? Try it out. (More to come on that in the Supplements, Safe Starches & Sugar, Oh My! section.)
If you finish reading this and think theres no way the concepts could benefit your performance, email me and well chat.
Really. Chances are, though, something will resonate.
Next, its time to figure out if Im talking to you or not
Im willing to bet you I am.
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SECTION 2
This Book Is for You if You:
Take your sport seriously.
Care about your performance.
Spend more than five hours a week involved in your sport (including things like warm-up time and active recovery).
Have sacrificed other things to accommodate your training.
Are tired of feeling like youre training a ton, but your performance isnt great.
Are experienced in your sport, but youve not tried to clean up your nutrition yet.
Have tried to eat cleaner, but you feel lost.
Compete in your sport or you want to start.
Have realized you cant out-train your crappy diet.
Do any of these describe you? Okay, good. Im confident youll find something in this ebook thatll help you. Are you
willing to troubleshoot for improved performance? Even better. Youll get much more out of this resource if you can
apply the lessons within it to your situation, keep what works and tweak what needs adjusting.
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If youre a much more experienced athlete or youve been doing Paleo for a while and you want me to help you get to
the CrossFit Games, this ebook probably isnt for you. (Athletes at the elite level often have very precise needs that must
be dialed in by one-on-one support from a dedicated nutrition coach.) Im not saying you wont learn something, but
keep in mind the ideal reader of this book is less experienced than you.
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SECTION 3
Paleo...with Benets
Heres the part where I dangle the carrot in front of you.
Before we get into all the details, youre probably wondering what the heck Paleos going to do for you, and that makes
sense. Humans, it turns out, really love positive feedback.
Something works, and youre compelled to keep doing it. When youre able to see or feel the results of your efforts
lets be honestyou feel fan-freakin-tastic. You stay motivated and on target. Paleo as a lifestyle is the same. Stick with it
long enough and youll feel so good that you want to keep going.
What will you experience from going Paleo?
Positive side effects include:
Steady energy
Mental clarity and acuity
Increased muscle mass
Increased strength
Better immune response
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Better athletic performance
Fat loss
Better gut health
Improved mood
Better hair, skin and nails
Decreased inflammation
Faster recovery
Improved sleep
Ive linked to more than 30 articlesmany primary sources and scholarly journals, some blog articles with links to primary
sourcesso you can follow them further if youd like.
The thing you need to think about is this: Its possible to find a scholarly journal article to support any claim. At the end
of the day, whats going to be more convincing, a paper or how your own body feels?
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SECTION 4
Whats Paleo?
Paleo is the nickname for The Paleolithic Diet. The founder of the movement, Dr. Loren Cordain, published the book
The Paleo Diet in 2002 which spurred the popularity of this way of eating. The premise is that there are certain food
groups that our hunter-gatherer ancestors would have thrived on before the dawn of the agricultural revolution, and
these foods form the basis of the original Paleo diet recommendations. These food sources are higher protein than a
typical Western diet with moderate fat intake and non-starchy carbs from fruit and veggies.
Some people are skeptical of the anthropological basis and attempt to debunk Paleo. They cite things like the shorter
lifespan of Paleolithic man and fact that the food available to modern humans hardly resembles that of our ancestors as
reasons why its not a legitimate way to eat.
Thats why folks like me have started using physiology as the lens to understand how this stuff really works on humans
that are alive, oh, now.
You see, theres a physiological (how the body works) underpinning that really informs the recommendations of a Paleo
way of eating. We know certain foods are inflammatory in nature. We know how sugar affects the pancreas. We know the
health of our gut lining is essential for properly functioning immunity. Were starting to understand the role of systemic
inflammation in metabolic disorders.
Its SCIENCE.
Not to say that Paleos perfectthe scientific community is constantly learning new things to shape and inform our
knowledge of how foods affect the body. Sometimes things change. Recommendations are finessed. New ways of
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looking at things pop up. Think of this book as pragmaticsteeped in the practicalrather than dogmatic. Because you
know what, the dogmatic Paleo folks say you cant eat vinegar or even add salt to your food. While thats great if you
hate sour food or have high blood pressure, its just too restrictive to make it stick long term. Which brings me to
Labels.
Why do we love them so? They put everything in tidy little groups so we can go about our days knowing how to navigate
this thing we call life. We know vegetables are nutritious, caffeine is a stimulant and exercise makes us sweat. You
know its not that cut-and-dried though. What if you have an autoimmune condition so you avoid nightshades? What if
youre so sensitive to caffeine that even a square of dark chocolate can keep you up at night? What if you walk for
exercise and dont want to really sweat?
Sometimes we get so bogged down in labels that we end up pointlessly arguing with each other.
You might say, I eat a diet high in protein with lots of veggiesand a little bit of fruit, and healthy fats like seeds, nuts
and animal fat. I make sure to eat starchy carbs after I train, and Ive tested clarified butter in my diet...it definitely
doesnt bother me, though milk does. And oh! Sometimes I rotate in white rice as a post-workout carb source. I say, I
eat Paleo plus some safe starches. Thats a whole lot easier.
What I see happening a lot lately, especially on my blog and social media, is too much arguing.
This isnt Paleo, because it has a teaspoon of honey in it.
Youre not Paleo, because you ate tapioca.
Shes not Paleo, because she uses ghee.
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Being practical and finding ways to eat that optimize your health and performance but dont make you insane are the
way to make something stick long term. The key is that your context matters.
Who you aregoals, lifestyle, needs, wants, current state of healthMATTERS and will make it easier to figure out how
to make Paleo work for you. So somebody might protest when you say that you eat Paleo + butter, or Paleo + the
occasional white rice. SO WHAT?! Theres no Paleo jail. You havent failed at anything, and at the end of the day, only
you know how your body feels when you eat certain foods.
If youre just staring out with Paleo, its highly recommended that you eat strictly for at least 30 days to see how your
body reacts to removing potentially problematic foods and to give your gut a chance to heal. You may think you feel
normal eating your current diet, but thats because you have no other frame of reference. I used to be bloated after
every meal, but I thought I felt fine. For good 30-day protocols, I recommend reading The Paleo Solution by Robb Wolf
or It Starts with Food by Dallas and Melissa Hartwig.
A general Paleo framework is one that, compared with the traditional Western diet, is:
Higher in protein
Relatively low in carbohydrate
Moderate to high in healthy fat intake
Dense in micronutrients from vegetables and (some) fruit
More balanced between Omega-3 and Omega-6 fatty acids
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For athletes, taking care to eat enough carbohydrate is of utmost importance. (More on that later.) Call it Paleo 2.0 or
Paleo + carbs or whatever you need to do to rectify that youre still following a Paleo template but damn it, know your
context and whats right for your level of activity. And if some website says that if you eat salt and youre not an
endurance athlete youre not Paleo, disregard it and move on.
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SECTION 5
Why Do It?
If you want to be a higher-performing athlete, the type of food you eat has an impact on your athletic output and on
your recovery. Yeah, no kidding, Steph. Eating Cheetos and ice cream and Coke day in and day out isnt exactly a recipe
for health and wellnessand certainly not high performance. Youre not stupid. You get that.
But its more complicated than just junk food versus health food.
If youre eating whole-wheat bagels and quinoa pasta and drinking soy milk, arent you doing better than junk food?
Arent those healthier options? No. No theyre not. Heres why.
From a physiological (how the body works) perspective, certain foods and their components cause less-than-ideal effects
on the body, for some people more than others.
For example, grainsparticularly those that contain the protein called glutenmess with integrity of the gut lining.
Whats the gut lining like when its healthy? Its only supposed to let digested nutrients pass through and be absorbed
through the cells into the bloodstream. Think of it like a selective screening system. Stuff that doesnt belong in your
bloodstream is kept out while the good stuff is let in. By the way, at this point, until nutrients are absorbed, theyre still
technically outside your body. Crazy, right?
Imagine gluten like someone poking microscopic holes in your small intestine, allowing things like proteins and bacteria
to get into the bloodstream that shouldnt normally be there. Sounds pretty grossbecause it is. The body ramps up its
immune response to fight off these invaders, which causes chronic, system-wide inflammation.
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The old adage, Your immune system is found in your gut, is also based on this idea. If you get sick a lot, one possibility
is that your gut lining isnt as healthy as it could be.
Go ahead, you may be saying, and pry the bagel from my cold, dead hand.
If you eat bread and grains and dairy and legumes and lots of refined sugar and you feel fine, I know what thats like. I
mean, I was bloated after nearly every meal, had completely whacked-out blood sugar (once, I passed out at work) and
had weird acne on just one side of my back. But yeah, I felt fine too. You see, I was so used to feeling like crap that my
mind rationalized it as normal.
My challenge to you is to remove these notoriously troublesome foods for 30 days to see if it makes a difference. If you
honestly dont look, feel or perform any better, you have a free invitation to email me and say, I told you so. Ill be
having my bagel for breakfast tomorrow. I wont be offended. Perhaps youre one of the lucky folks for whom these
problematic foods have no effect. Whats more insidious, though, is that you could be silently affected by these foods
and not know it until youre in a heap of trouble.
You see, certain foods cause inflammation in the body. And its not the good kind (yes, some inflammation is good).
Two major types of inflammation occur naturally in the body: acutelocal irritation such as when you cut your skin, train
your muscles very hard or are fighting off the flu; and chronic systemicas Mark Sisson
1
puts it, a constant low-level
feature of your physiology thats always on and always engaged. As you can guess, acute inflammation is necessary, but
its the chronic systemic type thats known to cause long-term problems.
When you train, youre likely to incur acute inflammation as part of the normal process of building capacity and getting
stronger, provided its counterbalanced by adequate recovery (read more on that here). Subjecting yourself to multiple
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hard training sessions in a rowfor days, weeks and months on endcoupled with poor nutrition, life stress and
inadequate sleep is a recipe for chronic systemic inflammation that goes beyond just sore muscles.
How is diet involved in all this? Beyond eating enough food to support your athletic endeavors, getting adequate
protein, refueling post-workout and other best practices, what you may be missing is that certain foods can contribute to
systemic inflammation. You could be making inflammation worse with the food youre eating. Lets look briefly at the
culprits.
Both refined and whole grains are particularly problematic because they contain proteins such as gluten and prolamins
that wreak havoc when they cross the gut barrier into the bloodstream. The second is dairy (in some individuals more
than others
2
), which tends to be most dubious with unfermented products like milk.
Another consideration is the all-too-common imbalance of Omega-6 to Omega-3 fatty acids in the typical Western diet,
made worse by the liberal use of Omega-6rich, pro-inflammatory seed oils found in processed and fast foods. Last but
certainly not least is sugar
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, which isnt just capable of whacking out your insulin levels. Its also inflammatory.
A Paleo way of eating removes these inammatory foods.
Nice, right? By eating a diet rich in protein and vegetables, plenty of healthy fats and some fruit, you should be less
inflamed (especially important for athletes, who are introducing inflammation via training), have more stable blood sugar
and give yourself the opportunity for better gut health and recovery from training.
Am I saying you have to be 100% perfect all the time? You can never indulge or have a treat? For some people
especially if youve got a gluten intolerance or sensitivity to dairythe indulgence in that food isnt worth the shit feeling
they get. For some folks, the every once in a while treat quickly becomes nightly pints of ice cream or bottles of wine.
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Then their training starts to suffer because they feel like junk or they cant recover as quickly or...you get the picture. My
point: You have to know yourself.
One more thing...
If youve been spending your dietary time looking up from the base of the USDA food pyramid, you cannot possibly
expect to apply the principles of Paleo to your training immediately without a period of transition. Converting from a
sugar-burner to a fat-burner will take a short period of time, but youve got to stick to it for the change to really take
effect. If you do Paleo for a week, then go back to a diet stuffed with grainswhole or refinedand high-carb foods,
then go back to Paleo, youll have a heck of a time teaching your body to rely on your fat stores for energy while youre
at rest or during longer endurance exercise.
A common mistake is to flip-flop between short periods of Paleo and high-carb diets (or worseyo-yoing between
eating fairly well and the junk food Olympics) and then get frustrated and claim, Paleo doesnt work for me. Youve got
to give your body a chance to switch over.
How long will it take? Usually a few weeks, which sounds like a long time, but in the long run itll be worth it. Some folks
convert over to a fat-burning Paleo machine without noticing much. Others will suffer a short bout of whats affectionately
been termed Carb Flu: low energy, fatigue and mental fogginess. If you stick to the Paleo plan, itll eventually pass.
If you think youre suffering from Carb Flu, stay the course. Dont give up! Give your metabolic systems a chance to
switch over to burning fat as fuel and soon enough youll start to enjoy the more stable energy that Paleo peeps rave
about.
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And trust me, youll want some of what weve got because it feels fantastic.
One (big) thing: If youre not Paleo now and you want to switch over, dont plan to do it in the middle of your
competitive season or right before a big event. If youre an athlete consuming a traditional Western high-carb diet, going
cold turkey right before a race leaves your body grasping for some usable form of energy. If that form is tons of carbs
and you suddenly hold out, expect a revolt. One of the symptoms of Carb Flu is that training quality and output tend to
bomb. Pick a time in the off-season, between big events or during a deload period, to introduce new changes in your
diet. If you arent as peppy, are feeling less energetic or sluggish, trust that these symptoms will pass as long as youre
fueling properly.
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SECTION 6
Foods to Avoid
What about the foods that arent Paleo (because many are typically avoided for good reasons)? Nobody decided to just
make up some Paleo rules to make your life miserable or thought itd be fun to tell people not to eat bread anymore. For
more detail, I recommend reading The Paleo Solution or It Starts with Food.
Avoid... because...
grains they have anti-nutrients.
they are inflammatory.
theyre carb-rich but nutrient-poor.
legumes
(beans)
they have anti-nutrients.
they are inflammatory.
theyre carb-rich but nutrient-poor.
gluten its inflammatory and damages the gut lining.
dairy its inflammatory.
its good at making baby things get bigger. Unless youre trying to mass gain, you
probably dont need it.
rened sugars its inflammatory.
it causes swings in blood sugar.
it can be addictive.
alcohol see refined sugars.
processed foods theyre crammed with chemicals, preservatives, extra sodium and are nutrient-poor.
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SECTION 7
A Primer on Energy Systems
Different types of exercise will put demands on different energy systems of the body. As an athlete, knowing how to best
fuel your body and how to time your nutrition can have massive implications on the quality of your training and your
recovery. Which type of athlete are you? What sort of energy system does your sport rely on?
The chart below contains examples for the three main energy systems of the body: phosphogen, glycolytic and aerobic.
Your training may cross over between different systems. Example: Youre a distance runner who incorporates sprints in
your training weekly. Find the category that describes your training most of the time.
Phosphogen Glycolytic Oxidative (Aerobic)
What it is ATP (adenosine triphosphate)
and CP (creatine phosphate)
broken down
Glycogen (stored glucose)
broken down
Stored glucose is used to
generate larger amounts of
ATP
Description Very short bursts of energy in
limited quantities, short efforts
lasting just seconds
Slightly longer efforts
characterized by feeling very
out of breath, anaerobic in
nature
Long efforts, breathing is
more controlled, being able to
go long distances at that pace
Time domain Up to 10 seconds Up to about 2 min 10+ min
Example sports Short sprints, weightlifting,
powerlifting
Longer sprints like 400 m,
high-intensity workouts,
CrossFit, field sports like
football
Long-distance running,
triathlons and cycling events,
rowing a 10K
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Theres some overlap here. If youre an Olympic weightlifter, you may spend most of your training relying on the
phosphogen system, though sometimes you may do some metabolic conditioning, which relies on the glycolytic system.
The graph below demonstrates how the energy systems overlap based on time domain.
Okay, coolscience. But what does it mean for you?
What you put in your mouth to fuel yourself before and afterand possibly duringa workout matters. If you want to
start performing better, not only is the quality of your nutrition important, but the breakdown of macronutrients you eat
and when you eat them is, too. Waithold it. Macro-what? I thought you might want to know more about that. Keep
reading.
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CHAPTER 2
The Macros
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Lean people start to gain body fat,
especi al l y around the abdomen.
Performance goes down. And all the
while nobody can figure it out. Were
eating really clean Paleo, they say.
Whats going on?
SECTION 1
P, F & C
Todays lesson is brought to you by the letters P, F and C.
Science nerds love to use letters and acronyms to make ourselves sound elusively smart, but this ones pretty easy. If we
examine the foods we eat, we see that the nutrients they contain could be put into three major categories: proteins, fats
and carbohydrates. If you remember basic biology, youll recall these are three of the four macromolecules that make up
living things. The fourth categorynucleic acids, like DNAarent used by our bodies as fuel though theyre in
everything we consume. Lets look into each one, shall we?
Proteins are three-dimensional structures formed by linked chains of amino acids. Virtually all foods we eateven plant
mattercontain protein, though the relative quantity varies. For athletes, its essential to include adequate protein,
ideally at each meal, because of its role in the recovery and muscle rebuilding processes.
Dense protein sources for a Paleo way of eating come from animals: muscle meat, organ meat, fish, shellfish and eggs. If
youre an athlete who chooses to supplement with whey protein, check out the section on supplements for some food
for thought. Animal protein provides vitamin B12, an essential nutrient that folks like vegetarians and vegans are
commonly deficient in. One significant way proteins differ from fats and carbs is that theyre generally not used for
energy.
Fats come in several structural types, with fatty acids being the basic building blocks. Not all fats are created equal, and
in recent years much has been debunked about what we once thought was healthy regarding saturated fats
5
. One
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thing is clear: Fats are energy-packed juggernauts, containing more than double the calories per gram compared with
protein and carbohydrates.
Fat chemistry can get a bit confusing so Ill try to break it down into some simple terms. The names of fatty acids tell us a
lot about their structures.
First, fats are either saturated or unsaturated, depending on the types of bonds found in the long fatty acid tails. If the
long tails only have single bonds, theyre called saturated because each tail has the highest density of hydrogen atoms
possible. Saturated fatty acid chains are straight and pack together nicely, like a pile of Pick-Up Sticks, which makes them
solid at room temperature (like animal fats: butter, lard, duck fat and tallow).
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If the tails have at least one double bond in the mix, theyre called unsaturated. These tails are kinked and cant get as
close together, so theyre generally liquid at room temperature (like plant oils: olive, macadamia nut, walnut, sesame
seed, cottonseed and soybean).
Now we add a prefix to it to show how many double-bond kinks there are: mono for one and poly for many.
Monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA moo-fah) and polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA poo-fah) are the two main
categories, and its these MUFA and PUFA we want to limit or avoid because the chains are unstable and oxidize easily.
Breakdown of these fats, encouraged by heat (cooking!) or exposure to light, air and moisture, is bad because they can
spawn tissue-damaging free radicals.
Whys this relevant?
Some fats are better to eat than others. Generally, its wise to limit MUFA and avoid most PUFAespecially those derived
from cheap, industrialized seed oils like cottonseed, canola, corn, sunflower seed and soybean. Of notable exception are
the Omega-3 fatty acids but even then, care should be taken in storage to minimize oxidation. Thats why high-quality,
Omega-3rich fish oil capsules are sold in dark bottles, and sometimes dark capsules. Its to keep them from oxidizing.
Store them in the refrigerator, or better yet, freezer for best shelf life. Of course, dont be a maniac and cook with fish oil.
The typical Western diet can have upwards of a 30:1 ratio of Omega-6 to Omega-3 (both PUFA), and this is pro-
inflammatory. The ideal ratio is closer to 2:1
6
. The solution? Minimize PUFA intake, especially from industrial seed oils,
eat Omega-3rich foods like oily fish and dont crack out on nuts and seeds.
Even MUFA-rich olive oil is best avoided in hot cookingagain because heat can accelerate oxidationand instead
used cold for dressing or drizzling over food once its been cooked. To really geek out on oils, MUFA and PUFA, The
Definitive Guide to Oils is waiting for you.
38
I havent mentioned the elephant in the room. The big, saturated fat elephant.
Doesnt saturated fat cause heart disease?! If we should limit PUFA and MUFA, and SFA (saturated fatty acids) clog our
arteries, should we just go low fat?
NO.
You can thank a poorly correlated study by Ancel Keys
7
for much of societys aversion to eating fat. Though the studys
been thoroughly discredited now, it sparked a worldwide industry for low-fat, fake-fat foods thats been ruinous to health.
We turned away from the healthy saturated fats of our ancestors and started putting buttery low-fat spread on our
morning toast and obsessively counting fat grams, all the while watching blood markers of disease not get any better,
and constantly feeling hungry.
Im convinced the generation of folks who came of age in the 1980s dont know what its like to feel full because theyve
been brainwashed into eating low-fat, processed food.
One last thing: What about coconut oil? Its a beautiful thing. Hailing from the plant worldwhich mostly yields PUFA-
rich oilsthis Paleo favorite is 92% saturated fat and has a relatively high smoke point which makes it ideal for cooking.
Next, its on to carbs.
39
SECTION 2
Carbology 101
Nutritionally speaking, carbohydrates are (generally) faster burning sources of energy compared with fats. If fats are like a
pile of burning tires, carbs would be like a pool of gasoline thats just had a lit match flicked onto it. The carbs we eat
come in many forms: from single link pieces like glucose and fructose, to long chains made up of links, like starch. If
youve been poking around and trying to learn a bit more about nutrition on your own, you may be afflicted by a
common condition.
Its called Carb Confusion. Luckily, theres a cure. Read on.
When it comes to nutrition for athletes, the macronutrient getting most of the attention these days is the carbohydrate.
You wont find much debate about protein. Athletes need it more than the sedentary general population. Even fats,
which we need to maintain fat-burning status at rest, feel satiated and have good body composition, are less
controversial. But man, the arguments on the Interwebz that youll see about carbs
Has everyone gone carb crazy?!
Until what seems like recent history, it was pretty much accepted fact that if you were training for a marathon, youd eat
lots of carbohydrates, and then the few days before your race, youd stuff yourself with even more carbs. Pre-race pasta
parties (say that five times fast) wereand still arede rigueur. Youre weird if you dont turn up with some toast in hand
on the morning of the race. Carbs = energy = good performance, right? Since youve been told you need a boatload of
carbs to train and compete, how the heck can you possibly be a Paleo athlete?
Good question. Youre here to learn how.
40
In 2005, Dr. Loren Cordain and Joe Friel published The Paleo Diet for Athletes, outlining how to apply a Paleo template
to the demands of aerobic-based sport. Remember the chart from a few pages back? Aerobic, oxidative-dominant sports
(a.k.a. long, slow distance training, or LSD) were the focus, as shown by this quote from their promo materials, At every
level of competition, The Paleo Diet for Athletes can maximize performance in a range of endurance sports.
Thats perfectly fine. In fact, if youre an endurance athleteI was when I picked up The Paleo Diet for Athletes in 2009
Im very happy youre here to learn some of the newer perspectives that have come about in the almost nine years since
the book was published.
Dont be fooled into thinking Im a Kool-Aidsippin CrossFitter out to discredit or bash endurance sports, because Im
not. I know the exhilaration of finishing a half marathon, the deepest parts of your mind you go to when racing your bike
for hours on end and the inner strength it takes to finish a triathlon. I just migrated away from endurance sports, but I
know all about what it takes to do them. Plus, who am I to judge someone elses exercise methods? So long as your ass
is up and off the couch, thats a win in my book. With that being said, it didnt take long for people to start applying the
concepts in The Paleo Diet for Athletes to OTHER types of sports.
For some people, the wheels started falling off.
Lean people start to gain body fat, especially around the abdomen. Performance goes down. And nobody can figure it
out. Were eating really clean Paleo, they say. Whats going on?
A Paleo diet, even with the best of intentions, can be misapplied. The CrossFit community (its worth saying here that this
ebook is in no way associated with or endorsed by CrossFit HQ) started adopting Paleo thanks in part to Robb Wolf
being on the nutrition certification staff. That relationship didnt last forever
8
.
41
The mark of Paleo was made, though. Walk into any CrossFit gym today and chances are good that Paleo is known and
practiced by at least some of the clients. (Perhaps thats why youre here.) What many high-intensity athletesnot limited
to but including CrossFittersdo wrong is not eating enough carbs to support their efforts in the glycolytic realm of
training. This places an added stressor on the body which can shift cortisol, a stress hormone, in the wrong direction over
time
9
.
When cortisol increases, glucose is freed from body tissues and enters the bloodstream. Insulin rises in response. When
this is chronic and low-grade, over time it can lead to insulin resistance (the body cannot hear your insulin signal very
well)and systemic inflammation, which causes an increase in cytokines, protein signals theorized to be a factor in
obesity
10
.
Not to add insult to injury, but cortisol also tells the body to store fat around your belly. Not sexy.
Suffice it to say, the following is known:
Minimize cortisol caused by chronic factors. This isnt just a dietary thing, either. If a lioness is chasing you, you bet
your ass cortisols going to go up naturally. If its jacked up from not eating enough carbs, thats bad and avoidable.
Eat enough carbs to support physical activity and the demands of your sport.
Exercise is known to increase insulin sensitivity because glucose is used. When you consume glucose in an insulin-
sensitive state after exercise, its shuttled into cells for storagewhere it freaking belongs. Timing matters.
Insulin sensitivity is good.
Insulin resistance is bad.
42
SECTION 3
Not All Carbs Are Created Equal
Its time to be a bit biased. If youre an athlete, you shouldnt look at all carbs in the same way.
Simple sugars, like glucose, are termed monosaccharides (mono = one, sacchar = sugar). Theyre the smallest and digest
the fastest. Next come double sugars like sucrosethe disaccharides (di = two)and finally the polysaccharides, like
starch (poly = many), which digest the slowest.
Carb Type Chemical Compound Found in...
simple sugar
(monosaccharide)
glucose
galactose
fructose
fruit
simple sugar
(disaccharide)
sucrose (glucose + fructose)
lactose (glucose + galactose)
table sugar, honey, dairy products
complex carbohydrate
(polysaccharide)
starch (glucose + glucose + glucose) sweet potato, rice, tapioca, starchy veg
The types of carbs you eat are used by the body in different ways. Glucose is the main source of fuel for the
mitochondria, the energy factories of your cells, to convert to ATP.
It can also be used in the glycolytic energy pathwayalso called lactic acid fermentationand is the only sugar your
brain can use for energy.
43
How the heck can you survive if youre not slamming carbs 24-7, then?
A cool but very inefficient process called gluconeogenesis in the liver makes glucose from protein or fat
11
. Check out the
reference for more info. Another example is fructose, the sugar in fruit, which is preferentially broken down by the liver
12
.
To that end, fruit isnt as good at replacing muscle glycogen after exercise. Its not bad. Its just not as good. Yes, thats
quite relative, but so are many things related to nutrition and training.
Youve probably heard, Sugar is sugar is sugar. What gives?
Sugars, in the most general sense, all raise insulin levels, but its been shown that different sugars arent metabolized by
the body in the same way. A 2009 study in the Journal of Clinical Investigation
13
concluded that the consumption of
glucose-sweetened drinkscompared with those sweetened with fructoseresulted in less fat deposited around the
abdomens of the subjects (visceral fat), and better liver function. Both groups gained about the same amount of weight,
but the fructose group was also more insulin insensitive. (Remember we concluded insulin resistance is bad?)
Are you saying to never eat fructose ever again?
Not at all. My point is that not all sugar is treated the same by the body. So whats an athlete to do? Remember, if youre
trying to optimize performance, sticking to starch post-workoutits broken down into glucose and stored by the body
as glycogenis the way to most directly replenish spent glycogen, especially for high-intensity and endurance athletes.
44
SECTION 4
Stop the (Low Carb) Insanity
Gotta love Susan Powter for giving us that catchphrase.
Earlier, I mentioned that for some people, a really low-carb approach to Paleo means the wheels start falling off the
wagon. I was on that wagon, too. For a short while, I got extremely lean. I never had my body fat hydrostatically tested
but Id estimate I was 13% or below, was very vascular and lost most of my breast tissue. I was generally happy with how
I looked, but my performance in the gym started to suffer so I hired a nutrition coach to check things over for me.
On most days I was averaging 50 grams of carbs or less. Ouch. It was no wonder my performance wasnt great, hitting
five days of CrossFit a week with my glycogen tank empty.
Turns out, it went back to my triathlon days too, and I often wonder if Id have done better in racing and training had I
not been so carb-depleted.
Its time to draw a line in the sand.
You need to make a choice, and its a big one.
Are you a casual athlete who cares more about aesthetics and being lean?
Or do you value performance goals over body composition?
45
In the long term, you may not be able to have both. If youre going to eat for performance, you may not have the
absolute leanest body fat percentageand if youre eating a healthy macronutrient balance, you shouldnt get fat. If you
care about being really low carb and youre hitting hard workouts all the time, you may not perform as well as you could.
Not to mention, you may be amping up cortisol with this practice over the longer term and start to accumulate body fat,
particularly around the midsection, and put additional pressure on your adrenals.
Click here to watch the video. Password: paleoperformance123
46
CHAPTER 3
Rubber,
Meet Road
47
The rest of the time you can rely on your fat
stores for energy and reach the ultimate in
metabolic nirvana: being fat-adapted and
making changes to your metabolism at the
genetic level.
SECTION 1
Become an Energy-Using Chameleon
Lets quickly recap:
Protein is an essential macronutrient for growth, repair and recovery. Its not generally used for energy.
Fat is a dense source of energy. Saturated fat is good. Some PUFA are okay though youll want to limit them.
Carbs are an energy source. Athletes need to ensure carbs are replenished after exercise. The best source of carbs is
starchy veggies, followed by safe starches and glucose. Fructose is less ideal because it preferentially replaces liver
glycogen and we want to replace muscle glycogen first.
Ideally, youll burn stored glycogen to fuel your training and then the rest of the time, when youre going about your
daily business, slip back into fat-burning mode. That means that topping up glycogen stores after exercise is imperative,
and so is keeping things in relative low-carb mode compared with the traditional Western diet which puts grains at the
base of the food pyramid.
The rest of the time you can rely on your fat stores for energy and reach the ultimate in metabolic nirvana: being fat-
adapted and making changes to your metabolism at the genetic level
14
.
Being fat-adapted is the Holy Grail.
Our fat stores are far more extensivemeasured in pounds even in lean peoplethan our glycogen stores, which are
generally 500 grams or less
15
at any time. If youre sugar-adapted (no bueno!), youll very quickly use up your glycogen
stores during exercise and then...your tank is empty.
48
Youre unable to start using your fat stores. You bonk. Competition over.
(This is related to the metabolic transition termed Carb Flu, which you may experience when first going Paleo because
your body has to reprogram itself to burn fat and not sugar.)
49
SECTION 2
Signs Youre Burning Through Fat Like a Mofo
Here are the signs youre fat-adapted (hooray!):
Three hours after eating youre not tearing someones head off. See hangry.
You dont have intense cravings for carbs.
You enjoy mental clarity and steady energy throughout the day.
You can exercise while fasted or semi-fasted without feeling like youre going to die.
You burn the fat you eat for energy instead of packing it on your waistline.
As an endurance athlete, you burn your fat stores to get you through your training session or event, sparing stored
glycogen for more intense moments.
You burn glucose, but youre not dependent on it.
Ultimately, metabolic flexibility means better performance and feeling better. Being fat-adaptedthe way nature
intendedmeans youre more metabolically stable and youve exited the roller coaster ride that is being sugar-adapted.
50
SECTION 3
What to Put in Your Mouth
Lets start examining how to put all this science into practice because the reality is, if it just sits here on the page its not
going to do you a lick of good. Throughout this chapter, were going to dive into macronutrient ratios and how to get
your living space and training situation on board with your new life as a Paleo athlete.
Note that while nutrition is the most important, so many other factors play into your success as an athlete. If youre
sleeping five hours a night and blaming poor performance on cutting bread out of your diet, you frankly need to pull
back and reevaluate.
When you research this stuff, youll find differences of opinion, and the confusion often results in paralysis by analysis.
You get so confused that you dont follow any of it.
Start with a baseline for macronutrients and then give it at least two weeks to track any changes. You need to pay
attention. Hows training? How do you feel before, during and after a session? Whats your mood and energy level like
throughout the day? Do you look forward to training or do you dread it? Make notes in your training log or spreadsheet.
If you dont have a training log, get one and start writing in it. The same macronutrient recommendations that work for a
125-pound female triathlete will likely not work the same way for a 225-pound male football player.
51
What about food quality?
Glad you asked. Food quality does matter. Youre trying to optimize your potential as both an athlete and a human, so
the food you put in your mouth could quite possibly affect your quality of life now and in years to come. Its an
investment. Now, dont go max out your credit card buying freezers full of grass-fed meat if you cant keep the electricity
on.
If budgets a concern, decide what you can compromise on and what you can splurge on. If you cant afford grass-fed /
pastured / organic meats, go for leaner cuts and trim or drain the fat when possible.
For produce, a look at the Dirty Dozen List from the Environmental Working Group for an idea of what to avoid if organic
is out of your budget. For fats, avoid industrial seed oils and dont cook with plant oilsexcept coconut or palm kernel
oilsat high temperatures.
52
SECTION 4
Protein
Lets get something straight: Adequate dietary protein is non-negotiable. As an athlete, you need to eat more protein for
growth and repair of muscle and other tissues than a sedentary person.
Its a highly satiating macronutrient, is thermogenic (takes energy to
digest) and, when consumed in higher quantities, it can actually cause
you to consume less carbohydrate and fat (the overconsumption of
which are more typical and can cause weight gain). So what to eat?
Meat is your friend.
Animal sources of proteinmuscle meat, organ meat, eggs and fish
are the most dense and complete and should be a staple at each meal.
Yes, you can get protein from virtually any food, but the differences are
substantial. Im not rallying against vegetarianism, but when you look
at how much food youd need to consume to match the protein levels
found in meat, its daunting. To get the same amount of protein in 100
grams of chicken breast, youd need to eat 7.5 cups of broccoli.
One common concern about eating a high-protein diet is the
possibility of developing kidney problems. Simply put, the fear is
unfounded and in normal, healthy individuals, a higher-protein diet
doesnt cause kidney stress or damage
16,17
.
53
Protein Per 100 Grams:
Chicken breast, 21; kidney beans, 9;
Brazil nuts, 14; broccoli, 2.8
Daily Protein Per Pound of Bodyweight Daily Protein Per Pound of Bodyweight
Minimum recommendation* 0.8 gram
Maximum recommendation* 1.25 grams
Bodyweight in pounds x 0.8 = minimum grams of protein per day Bodyweight in pounds x 0.8 = minimum grams of protein per day
Bodyweight in pounds x 1.25 = maximum grams of protein per day Bodyweight in pounds x 1.25 = maximum grams of protein per day
*Remember, these are general recommendations and you will need to adjust based on how big and active you are. The
following table lists some suggestions for Paleo-friendly protein sources.
54
55
Protein Sources Protein Sources
Whole Protein Whole Protein
Ruminants Game
Beef
Lamb
Boar
Bison / Buffalo
Elk
Exotic game (kangaroo, antelope)
Venison
Poultry
Boar
Bison / Buffalo
Elk
Exotic game (kangaroo, antelope)
Venison
Chicken
Duck
Eggs
Turkey
Boar
Bison / Buffalo
Elk
Exotic game (kangaroo, antelope)
Venison
Chicken
Duck
Eggs
Turkey
Fish & Shellfish
Chicken
Duck
Eggs
Turkey
Non-oily fish (like trout)
Oily fish (like sardines)
Clams, mussels, shrimp...
Other
Non-oily fish (like trout)
Oily fish (like sardines)
Clams, mussels, shrimp...
Deli meat (look for clean options)
Jerky
Non-oily fish (like trout)
Oily fish (like sardines)
Clams, mussels, shrimp...
Deli meat (look for clean options)
Jerky
Pork
Supplements
(not recommended over whole protein sources)
Supplements
(not recommended over whole protein sources)
Branched chain amino acids
Egg white protein
Whey protein
Other protein isolates
SECTION 5
Carbs
If you skipped over Carbology 101, Ill give you the quick and dirty rundown. You need carbs as an athlete. Starchy, carb-
dense veggies are best, safe starches are a decent option if you get bored, and fruit is best left as an occasional and not
your default choice. Well get more into timing of these macronutrients later, but lets just say that carbs are tough to pin
down for one single, all-encompassing answer. Even green veggies have carbohydrates so its actually really challenging
to eat zero carbs.
Suffice it to say, youll get carbs at virtually each meal, but the timing of your big carb refeed is going to matter. For
athletes considering carb cycling or carb backloading, that discussion is coming up shortly. In the post-workout refeed,
plan to take down 50100 grams of carbs.
Daily Carbohydrate Per Pound of Bodyweight Daily Carbohydrate Per Pound of Bodyweight
Minimum recommendation* 1 gram
Maximum recommendation* 2 grams
Bodyweight in pounds x 1 = minimum grams of carbs per day Bodyweight in pounds x 1 = minimum grams of carbs per day
Bodyweight in pounds x 2 = maximum grams of carbs per day Bodyweight in pounds x 2 = maximum grams of carbs per day
*Remember, these are general recommendations and you will need to adjust based on how big and active you are. The
following tables list some suggestions for Paleo-friendly carb sources.
56
Carb Sources Carb Sources Carb Sources
Produce Produce Produce
Veggies Carb-Dense Veggies Fruit
Artichoke
Asparagus
Bell peppers
Broccoli
Brussels sprouts
Cabbage
Cauliflower
Celery
Cucumber
Eggplant
Garlic
Greens
Jicama
Leeks
Lettuce
Mushrooms
Onion
Snap peas
Tomato
Zucchini
Beets
Butternut squash
Carrots
Plantain
Rutabaga
Sweet potato
Turnip
Taro
White potato
Winter squash
Yam
Yuca
Apples
Bananas
Berries
Cherries
Citrus
Dates
Figs
Grapes
Kiwi
Mango
Melons
Pears
Pineapple
Stone fruit (peaches, plums)
57
Carb Sources Carb Sources Carb Sources
Safe Starches Safe Starches Safe Starches
Arrowroot flour
Tapioca flour
Tapioca pearls
White rice
Arrowroot flour
Tapioca flour
Tapioca pearls
White rice
Arrowroot flour
Tapioca flour
Tapioca pearls
White rice
Other Other Other
Coconut water
Dextrose powder
Coconut water
Dextrose powder
Coconut water
Dextrose powder
58
SECTION 6
Fats
Important as a fuel source when the bodys at rest, healthy fats are a feature of Paleo. Theyll help you feel full (promote
satiety) and make food more satisfying. Remember, Paleos not a low-fat diet, and there are plenty of tasty fats to add
into your daily nutrition plan.
Keep in mind that saturated animal fats and plant oils with a high concentration of saturated fatty acids, like coconut oil,
are the best options for high-temperature cooking because theyre less prone to oxidation.
Is eating fat going to make you fat?
Unless youre slamming back huge amounts of carbohydrateas in, basing your diet around refined carbs like bread and
pastayour default energy source will be the fat you eat rather than the excess carbohydrate found in a traditional
Western diet.
Daily Fat Per Pound of Bodyweight Daily Fat Per Pound of Bodyweight
Minimum recommendation* 1 gram
Maximum recommendation* 2 grams
Bodyweight in pounds x 1 = minimum grams of fat per day Bodyweight in pounds x 1 = minimum grams of fat per day
Bodyweight in pounds x 2 = maximum grams of fat per day Bodyweight in pounds x 2 = maximum grams of fat per day
59
*Remember, these are general recommendations and you will need to adjust based on how big and active you are. The
following table lists some suggestions for Paleo-friendly fat sources.
Put another way, eating fat in the context of a lower-carb Paleo approach means youll be burning the fat you eat instead
of burning through sugar while at rest, and storing fat as adipose (fat) tissue. Technically, its possible to overeat fat and
have that stored as adipose tissue, but its somewhat difficult to do because fats so satiating.
Fat Sources Fat Sources
Animal Fats Plant Fats
Bacon
Butter (grass-fed)
Chicken fat (schmaltz)
Clarified butter
Duck fat
Egg yolks
Ghee
Goose fat
Lard
Tallow
Fish oil (not for cooking)
Almonds / almond butter
Avocado
Brazil nuts
Cashews / cashew butter
Coconut butter / flakes / milk / oil
Hazelnuts
Macadamia nuts / butter
Olive oil
Olives
Pecans
Pine nuts
Pistachios
Sesame seeds / tahini
Sunflower seeds / sunbutter
Walnuts
60
SECTION 7
Macro Summary
Protein, carbs and fats fuel your training and athletic performances along with your other daily energy requirements. Use
these general recommendations to get started planning your daily macronutrient requirements. Well look into the timing
more in depth in the next section.
Remember, your individual quantities will vary upon the intensity and duration of your training, your body size and your
specific goals.
61
General Daily Macronutrient Recommendation Summary General Daily Macronutrient Recommendation Summary General Daily Macronutrient Recommendation Summary General Daily Macronutrient Recommendation Summary General Daily Macronutrient Recommendation Summary General Daily Macronutrient Recommendation Summary
Protein Grams Protein Grams Carbohydrate Grams Carbohydrate Grams Fat Grams Fat Grams
Minimum
(per pound
bodyweight)
0.8 Minimum
(per pound
bodyweight)
1.0 Minimum
(per pound
bodyweight)
1.0
Maximum
(per pound
bodyweight)
1.25 Maximum
(per pound
bodyweight)
2.0 Maximum
(per pound
bodyweight)
2.0
SECTION 8
Pre-, Intra- & PostWorkout Nutrition Intro
Now that you know how much protein, carbs and fat to eat per day, lets consider timing. Its truly of the essence. Youre
not just eating Paleo to have overall health; youre after performance. You want to be faster, go farther and be stronger.
Macronutrient timing matters.
Weve already decided that cheap gas isnt going to help your high-performance vehicle. You need premium fuel. But
what good is premium fuel if you let the tank run empty in the middle of the Monaco Grand Prix? Oh sure, we put the
best fuel mix in, but we forgot to fill it up when it mattered.
The nuances of when to fuel are just as important as what to fuel with so you can 1) get through your training or your
event and 2) make sure youre properly topped off for the next session. For our purposes, lets define these terms:
Eventually, were going to break these zones down by sportbecause youre not going to stop during a four-minute
Fran to eatbut for now well address some general considerations.
62
PreWorkout (PreWO) ! The time 1575 minutes
before the workout.
IntraWorkout (IWO) ! The time during your workout.
PostWorkout (PostWO) ! The time 1530 minutes
If you Google sports nutrition, youll get countless recommendations. It gets downright confusing and contradictory.
Ive done my best to pull together recommendations from many Paleo experts; their endorsements are based in science
and are heavily peppered with real-world implementation. My personal experiences of more than a decade in
competitive sport also come into play. Someday, scientific discoveries may contradict these guidelines, but until then,
these are our best practices.
63
SECTION 9
PreWorkout Nutrition
Whether you eat anything PreWO is highly variable and will depend on the time of day you train and whether fasted
training works for you.
Early Morning Training
Do you work out first thing in the morning? Getting up two or three hours before training to eat, thereby sacrificing
sleep, is just plain dumb. That may be blunt, but trading hours of sleep for a belly full of food doesnt make good sense.
Fasted trainingnot eating anything before your morning sessionworks well for many athletes because they can avoid
that heavy feeling in their gut from eating a full meal (or worse, throwing up from going hard on a full stomach).
I used to go on long morning training rides, and knowing Id be up a mountain for several hours made the idea of fasted
training less attractive. Id often grab hard-boiled eggs and some nuts, avocado or roasted sweet potato to keep hunger
at bay. If youre big, eat more than me.
Why does fasted training work? If youre fat-adapted, you can tap into your reserves for energy. Some athletesmyself
includedreport not feeling quite as strong on heavy lifts while fasted. But for high-intensity, short workouts where
glycogen is the fuel, and longer endurance workouts, it works.
Ultimately, youll need to test how your body reacts to fasted training to see if its a good option for you. Very important:
If you want to rely on glycogen stores and you dont eat any carbs PreWO, you need to refuel the day before. Dont let
yourself run on empty.
64
What if you have time before your morning workout to eat? A small amount of easy-to-digest protein, like eggs, plus
some fat (coconut milk in your coffee or better yet, Bulletproof
Coffee by blending
your gingerbread spiced brewed coffee with grass-
fed butter and MCT or coconut oil.
For espresso, stir in a pinch of spice mix per shot.
If you really want to be fancy, serve with a dollop of
whipped coconut or heavy cream.
DRINKS & OTHER GOOD THINGS
Chocolate Orange Naked Bars
If youre into Lrabars, youll
probably love this chocolaty
version. Why the name Naked
Bars? In the UK, theres a date-
based bar called N"kd with a
similar flavor. I decided to recreate
the bars so I could make them
cost effective.
214
Ingredients
1-1/2 cups nuts (I used 1 cup almonds + 1/2 cup macadamia)
20 Medjool dates (the big, fat, squishy ones)
1/3 cup cocoa powder
Zest of one large orange
1 Tablespoon orange juice
Pinch of sea salt
Directions
1. Line an 8x8" baking dish with plastic wrap or wax paper.
2. Pulse down the nuts in a food processor until they become small, crumbly bits. Dont let it go too long or it will
become nut butterer, not that theres anything wrong with that but it wont help this recipe. Some pieces may be a
bit bigger and some might be tiny. Thats okay. Move the nuts to a large bowl.
3. Pit the dates and put them in the food processor. Pulse about five times until they are slightly broken down.
215
Change It Up
Add 2 teaspoons of gingerbread spice mix.
If youre not a fan of orange, you can omit the juice
and zest.
Make into balls instead of cutting them into bars.
4. Add the cocoa powder, orange zest, orange juice and sea salt to the food processor.
5. Process until a huge chocolaty ball forms.
6. With clean hands, add the chocolaty dates to the nuts and knead to combine. Youll have to knead pretty well but
keep at it.
7. Once all the nuts are blended in, youll take the lump of deliciousness and put it in the baking dish. Press the mixture
into the dish until its packed down and smooth.
8. Freeze for 20 minutes until firm.
9. Turn out the mixture onto a cutting board and chop into pieces as big or small as youd like. I usually make 12 bars
from one dish.
10. I individually wrap them in plastic wrap. They can be frozen for a couple months if packed to withstand freezer burn.
If not, store in the fridge for up to a week.
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DRINKS & OTHER GOOD THINGS
Simple Paleo Tortillas
Would you believe me if I told
you this is the #1 most popular
recipe of all time on my blog
(more than 165,000 views as of
publication)? Its true. If youre
looking for a really easy Paleo
version of a flour tortillaor a
French crepelook no further.
These are foolproof and are
much more flexible than other
Paleo tortillas Ive ever tried.
These hold up to folding or
rolling and can be used in
sweet or savory applications.
Its easy to make a double or
triple batch in advance and
save them for upcoming meals.
They freeze and thaw perfectly.
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Ingredients
2 eggs
1 Tablespoon water
1 teaspoon melted ghee
1/4 cup arrowroot powder
1 teaspoon coconut flour
1/8 teaspoon baking soda
Pinch of salt
Directions
1. Crack the eggs into a medium bowl, and whisk in the water and melted ghee.
2. Add the dry ingredients and beat well to combine.
3. In a small 8 skillet over medium-low heat, pour in about 1/3 of the batter, and immediately roll it around to evenly
coat the bottom. The sides will start to pull up and then its time to flip it over. Cook for about 1 minute on each side.
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Change It Up
Add 1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract for sweet
applications.
APPENDIX
Cooking Conversions
Having spent a good chunk to time in the UK, I know how frustrating it can be to have to convert between units of
measurement. (Why the US hasnt embraced how the rest of the world measures is beyond meIm a science nerd so
Im all for metric!) The following pages will help you get your convert on between units of mass / weight, volume and
temperature.
MASS / WEIGHT MASS / WEIGHT MASS / WEIGHT
2.2 pounds 35 ounces 1 kilogram
1 pound 16 ounces 454 grams
3/4 pound 12 ounces 340 grams
2/3 pound 10.5 ounces 305 grams
1/2 pound 8 ounces 227 grams
1/3 pound 6 ounces 150 grams
1/4 pound 4 ounces 114 grams
1 ounce 28 grams
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VOLUME VOLUME VOLUME
1 gallon 16 cups 3.8 liters
1/2 gallon 8 cups 1.9 liters
1 quart 4 cups 0.95 liters
1 pint 2 cups 460 milliliters
1/2 pint 1 cup 240 milliliters
3/4 cup 180 milliliters
1/2 cup 120 milliliters
1/3 cup 80 milliliters
1/4 cup 60 milliliters
2 Tablespoons 1 fluid ounce 30 milliliters
1 Tablespoon 3 teaspoons 15 milliliters
1 teaspoon 5 milliliters
1 Tablespoon fresh herbs 1 teaspoon dried herbs
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TEMPERATURE* TEMPERATURE* TEMPERATURE*
Fahrenheit Celsius British Gas Mark
500F 260C 10
475F 245C 9
450F 230C 8
425F 220C 7
400F 200C 6
375F 190C 5
350F 175C 4
325F 165C 3
300F 150C 2
275F 135C 1
250F 120C 1/2
225F 110C 1/4
200F 95C 0
*Need a cooking temperature not on the list? If you divide degrees Fahrenheit in half, youll get an approximate
temperature for Celsius. Oh, and if theres no temperature listed in a recipe, 350F is a good bet.
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REFERENCES
1. http://www.marksdailyapple.com/the-relationship-between-exercise-and-inflammation-and-what-it-means-for-your-
workouts/
2. http://www.marksdailyapple.com/dairy-intolerance/
3. http://robbwolf.com/2012/03/09/paleo-diet-inflammation-metformin/
4. http://library.crossfit.com/free/pdf/CFJ-trial.pdf
5. http://chriskresser.com/the-diet-heart-myth-cholesterol-and-saturated-fat-are-not-the-enemy
6. http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/71/1/179S.full?ijkey=5c7af875f3dc71a303f7df78c52145e8b7c31643
7. http://www.marksdailyapple.com/saturated-fat-healthy/
8. http://robbwolf.com/2009/11/24/the-black-box-summit-or-how-i-got-fired-from-the-crossfit-nutrition-certification
9. http://www.marksdailyapple.com/how-stress-can-make-you-fat/
10.http://chriskresser.com/how-inflammation-makes-you-fat-and-diabetic-and-vice-versa
11. http://www.marksdailyapple.com/how-much-glucose-does-your-brain-really-need/
12. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20086073
13. http://www.jci.org/articles/view/37385
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14. http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/77/2/313.short
15. http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1748-1716.1970.tb04764.x/abstract
16. http://robbwolf.com/2011/05/19/clearing-up-kidney-confusion-introduction/
17. http://robbwolf.com/2011/06/16/clearing-up-kidney-confusion-part-deux/
18. http://khsaa.org/sportsmedicine/heat/exerciseandfluidreplacement.pdf
19. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18715125
20. Effect of ingestion of medium-chain triacylglycerols on moderate- and high-intensity exercise in recreational
athletes. Journal of nutritional science and vitaminology, April 2009, vol./is. 55/2(120-5), 1881-7742.
21. http://umm.edu/health/medical/altmed/supplement/docosahexaenoic-acid-dha
22. Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology (2006, April 4). Anti-inflammatory Effects Of Omega 3
Fatty Acid In Fish Oil Linked To Lowering Of Prostaglandin.
23. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/7286246
24. http://lpi.oregonstate.edu/infocenter/minerals/magnesium/
25. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10506126
26. http://www.jssm.org/vol2/n4/1/v2n4-1pdf.pdf
27. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3200169/?tool=pubmed
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28. http://ajcn.nutrition.org/content/85/4/981.full
29. http://chc.ucsf.edu/sew/PDFs/Cox%20FructoseFAOXEE%20EJCN%202011.pdf
30. http://www.health.harvard.edu/newsletters/Harvard_Health_Letter/2012/May/blue-light-has-a-dark-side/
31. http://archpsyc.jamanetwork.com/article.aspx?articleid=210137
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BOOKS & RESOURCES
For a complete list of recommended books and products, visit The Paleo Athlete Resources page on my website.
Click here to access the Resources page.
Click here to download or print select charts.
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Click here to watch the trailer for The Paleo Athlete!
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