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Olive oil. One quarter cup has 1000 calories of testosterone-boosting monounsaturated fat. Won't fill you up, either.
Olive oil. One quarter cup has 1000 calories of testosterone-boosting monounsaturated fat. Won't fill you up, either.
Gross is in the eye of the beholder. You can just add it to food, shakes, salads...
yes! make your own gainers . . most of those on the market are full of shitty nutrient-poor ingredients. And over priced
I usually get the blender out in the morning, load up with oats, whey, raw eggs, banana, frozen berries, cinamin, spirulina, creatine, low-fat milk, a shot of EVOO . . pour that into a 1L thermos to take to work.
This should be about ~2,000cals. I have breakfast at 0530, so I would have 250mls at 0800, 1030 and the last 500mls at say 1530.
dear lord that is gross.
op, isogainer from nutraboolics is ok. but 1000-2000 calories is a lot to get from a weight gainer in lieu of food. making your own is a much better choice. most, MOST weight gainers are whey concentrate and maltodextrin. this is cheap crap, some add in healthy fats, mct's also cheap. they taste alright though, but you can make a food based one that its good for you. oats, fats (olive and/or coconut oil), pb and protein will be healthy and better than anything out there. the only issue is taste and consistency.
Olive oil. One quarter cup has 1000 calories of testosterone-boosting monounsaturated fat. Won't fill you up, either.
dear lord that is gross.![]()
How much of each do YOU use to make yours?
Anyone know any good weight gain supplements that is high in calories ie 1000 to 2000 calories per serving?
Thanks
complete wast of money ingesting 2,000 calories in one shake unless you weigh 300 lbs of rock solid muscle. the body can only utilize so many calories and nutrients in one meal. to gain weight you only need to increase the daily caloric intake 500 cals over maintenance levels. slower weight gain will result in a greater increase in LBM and less fat and will also have less of an impact on sports performance. rapid weight gain does not have a favorable effect on the competitive athlete.
500kcals above maintenance is what one would take in to gain aproximately 1lb per week..
Optimum Nutrition makes a good weight gainer....mixes real well. Can't remember what its called though.
BUILT.....good idea with the olive oil. i've supplemented with it before, but always just to add some extra fats while dieting (during low carb days). Never thought of it as a weight gainer. awsome idea really. i'm gonna try that as i'm trying to get to 250 this off season. thank you!
this arbitary number is utter horseshit. What if you're maintence cals are 1700 vs someone whose maintence cals are 3500?
Working in percentages of maintence is the smart way to do it, using increments of 5-10%
this arbitary number is utter horseshit. What if you're maintence cals are 1700 vs someone whose maintence cals are 3500?
Working in percentages of maintence is the smart way to do it, using increments of 5-10%
actually it is exercise science. but you can call it horse shit too i guess.
if your Estimated Daily Energy Expenditure (maintenance calories in laymans terms) is 1700kcals e/d then you would need to take in an extra 500kcals each day in order to increase your weight by 1lb. If your edee is 3500kcals e/d then you would still need to take in an extra 500kcals each day to increase weight by aproximately 1lb.
3500kcals in a lb.
500*7=3500kcals
so by taking in an extra 3500kcals per week above what your body is using, you would increase your weight by 1lb per week.
It does not matter if your edee is 1000kcals each day. or 5000kcals each day. if you are using x amount of kcals to maintain body weight. you would need to take in an extra amount to add x amount of weight.
most people say "maintenance" cals are x amount, are just tossing out a guess. there is an actual science to determine closely how many calories your body uses each day. most people do not know how to figure this out.
the type of weight you put on will be determined by where your calories are comming from.
the same can be used to loose weight as well. if your body uses 3500kcals each day, then you would need to decrease you calorie intake by 500kcals each do in order to loose 1lb a week.
yes, there are lots of other variables that will/can factor into how much weight a person will put on. but this is the starting point if one is to effectively learn how to increase/decrease/maintain weight systematically.
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a calorie is a unit of energy.
your body uses three sources of energy. carbohydrates, fats, & proteins. in this order.
the level of intensity one exercises will determine the souce your body will use energy from.
protein, fats, & carbs per gram equal different caloric amounts.
the type of weight you loose/gain will be dependant on the type of exercise you are doing & the type of macro nutrient intake your calories are comming from.
the body does not store protein as fat. it can use the skeleton from an amino acid to be converted as glycogen, but it does not readily store protein as energy.
this is not saying the body can not convert protein into a source of energy. it just would only do so as a last resort, if all stores of glycogen & fats had been used.
I would like to read the actual paper that guy wrote, his ideas are flawed, and don't seem to be based off of any real data.
weight lost/gained is determines by amount of macro nutrient intake, as well as level of intensity of exercise.
3500kcals will equal different amounts of protein/carbohydrates/fats. but 3500kcals is a measure of energy used/stored.
Finding out how much energy your body is using on a daily basis is a complex process. and a majority of people who state their "maintenance" calorie intake are just stating this blindly if they have not included their basal metabolic rate, thermic effect of feeding, programed physical activity, & habitual physical activity.
I seriously doubt very many people have a copy of the most recent "mets" recently released by the american college of sports & medicine. there is no way you can come to an acurate estimation of how many calories you are using on a daily basis if you dont know how many mets the activity you are doing uses.
and the calculation has to be done for each activity.
saying there are 600kcals in a lb of muscle is like saying muscle is made up of just one substance & nothing else.
again, the amount/type of weight lost/gained will be dependant upon nutrient intake, as well as type of exercise done.
the author of that paper obviously has no understanding of basic exercise science, otherwise he would not of made such ridiculous statements in the article written.
if you have the actual paper written, please link me to it, i'd like to read it and point out the flaws with actual data and calculations.
It's okay if you do not agree with me. Im sound in the data based equations which I have learned. I can agree that we disagree though.![]()
If im gay how many extra cals do I need?
If im gay how many extra cals do I need?