SpaNutrition
52 AsiaSpa July/August 2017
Writer Elle Kwan
The Good Snack
A well-chosen pre- and post-workout light bite helps you go the distance
FIT WOMAN/THINKSTOCK
If you were to catch Piloxing
teacher and personal fitness instructor
Sandra Chung-Wood mid-dash to her next
workout, you’d likely find in her bag boiled
eggs and a sweet potato. “I have them in my
bag every day believe it or not,” she says.
These nutritious snacks are her pre- and
post-workout standbys.
Because for anyone who works out
regularly, every meal is the most important
meal of the day. And planning what to eat
before and after exercise is essential.
If you want to get the most from any
exercise, prepping like the pros will help
you go the distance. For Chung-Wood, who
teaches high-intensity workouts that burn
up to 1,200 calories over an hour session,
maintaining good protein and carbs intake
is a must. “You shouldn’t overeat before
class,” she says, “because you’ll actually
feel sluggish as you sweat.”
But don’t under eat either. Since carbs
provide the energy that fuels effective
exercise, set yourself up for a good workout
with some rice crackers, toast or a granola
bar up to three hours but within 30 minutes
of your session, or you could risk feeling
tired or weak. Chung-Wood, gears up with
homemade almond milk, and slow energy
release oatmeal sprinkled with chia and
hemp seeds for protein.
In rigorous exercise like this, the body
can burn through the fuel from an earlier
snack and begin to use energy stored in the
muscles. How you replenish afterwards is
important because your body uses protein to
rebuild the muscle tissue used. Even if you
don’t feel like eating, you should within 45
to 60 minutes after a workout.
“Repair, rehydrate and refuel – those
‘3R’s’ are very important,” says Chung-
Wood, who often chooses protein-loaded
omelettes with wholegrain toast, and
coconut water with fresh-pressed apple,
beetroot and carrot juice spiked with
healing ginger after her last class.
We hear a lot about protein, because
it is so essential in repairing the body after
strain. Current guidelines recommend that
men require 56 grams of protein daily and
for healthy women, 46 grams. But we need
more than just protein to fully serve the
body.
“ B y r e p l a c i n g a d e q u a t e p r o t e i n ,
carbohydrates, fluid and electrolytes, the
body will recover better,” says Susan Chung,
a Hong Kong-based PhD and registered
dietician. Protein and carbs taken together
can supercharge your body’s repair. To get
more precise, Chung advises replenishing
- another R for the list – your body with
20 grams of protein and 1–1.5 grams of
carbohydrates per kilogram of body weight
after outdoor endurance training, preferably
within 30 minutes of finishing. As a guide
look to include 3:1 carbs to protein. Sweet
potatoes with chicken or salmon, tuna with
pasta or quinoa, and Greek yoghurt with
oatmeal or fruit all combine good doses of
both. A protein shake and banana, some
hummus and pita bread or toast with nut
butter are good quick-fix solutions, and
lighter if it’s late and you are concerned a
big meal will impact sleep.
Replacing fluids lost through sweat also
helps the body repair. Weight loss seen
immediately after a workout session is
most often attributed to sweat and Chung
recommends replacing 150 per cent
worth of any weight loss with fluid and
electrolytes. Do this by weighing yourself
before your session and again afterwards.
So, Chung says, if you were 50kg before
exercise and 49kg after exercise, you
should replenish with 1.5 litres of fluid and
electrolytes – do this within two hours of
finishing to maximise bodily repair.
Around January this year, Benjamin
Tang, a fitness trainer, and Fitness Best
Asia’s 2017 ‘Group Exercise Leader of