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How much protein intake on non training days ?

OCTAPUS

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Any suggestions in how much protein intake on non training days ?
What about when I am taking a resting period of one week ?

Octapus
 
Same. Positive nitrogen retention is a constant requirement.
 
Like they said the same.I don't think you need to take a shake(if it's whey) on your day off instead get all your protein from real food
 
Dido...same daily.
 
Originally posted by MeanCuts
Like they said the same.I don't think you need to take a shake(if it's whey) on your day off instead get all your protein from real food

you still want to get in your shakes as well as real food, training day or not.
 
Bump

In fact.. when I take a week off from training.. my intake is the same.
 
Muscle Gelz Transdermals
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i even bump my intake up 30-40 grams on nontraining days.
 
Originally posted by gr81
you still want to get in your shakes as well as real food, training day or not.

Some do the shakes, some dont. :)
 
I don't see a reason to take a whey protein shake on days off.Can someone give me a reason besides convenience.
 
Originally posted by MeanCuts
I don't see a reason to take a whey protein shake on days off.Can someone give me a reason besides convenience.

Other than convenience, no. But if you take a shake during training days, you either should on nontraining days, or you should UP your regular food protein intake.

I am still laughing at that rookie comment. It was commical, as it was inherently and oxymoron. Very funny.
 
Even on days off.. you want a positive nitrogen balance. Fueling your body is not just for training days. It's even for the short breaks you take from training.

I know you've heard this before, but you don't grow in the gym.. you grow when you are resting.

So on your non-training days, you still want to supply your body with some kind of protein.

And real food is the obvious good choice but you really don't want your entire requirements coming from 12 chicken breasts or steaks. Whey is almost too good but gives your body that positive nitrogen balance it will need.

My nutritional intake and supplement schedule doesn't change at all on a training or non-training day. I supplement and eat just as much on a Thursday (day off) as I do on a Monday.

Convenience is one thing.. but keeping properly fueled, training or not, is your daily goal.
 
yeah that was a good read, I found a couple of things interesting:

this:

Most bodybuilders and strength athletes already consume more than enough protein (an understatement if there ever was one), so the importance of BV to these athletes who are already consuming copious amounts of protein has been overplayed. Even though whey has a higher BV than chicken breast, fish or milk protein, if the total quantity of protein you consume is sufficient, then it is not likely that substituting whey for food proteins will result in any additional muscle growth. Whether you choose a whole protein food or a protein supplement isn???t as important as some would like you to believe. For the purposes of developing muscle, the only guidelines for protein that you must follow are: (1) consume a source of complete protein with every meal, (2) eat at frequent intervals approximately three hours apart (about six times per day) and (3) consume a minimum of .8 grams to 1 gram per pound of body weight.

and this:

This recent fascination with various rates of protein absorption could be compared to the interest in the glycemic index. The glycemic index is a scale that measures the rate at which the body converts various carbohydrate foods into blood glucose. The higher the glycemic index, the faster the food is converted to glucose and the larger the insulin response. Therefore it is said that high glycemic foods should be avoided in favor of low glycemic index foods. The error in relying solely on the glycemic index as your only criteria for choosing carbohydrates is that the index is based on consuming a carbohydrate food by itself in a fasted state. When carbohydrates are consumed in mixed meals that contain protein and a little fat, the glycemic index loses its significance because the protein and fat slow the absorption of the carbohydrate. That???s why the glycemic index is really much ado about nothing and the same could probably be said for the casein and whey argument. It's just the latest in a long string of new angles that supplement companies use to promote their protein: free-form vs peptides, concentrate vs isolate, ion exchange vs microfiltration, soy vs whey, casein and whey mix vs pure whey and so on. Every year, you can count on some new twist on the protein story to appear. Certainly there are going to be advances in nutrition science, but all too often these "new discoveries" amount to nothing more than marketing hype.
 
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