Counting carbohydrates - includes list of foods with carbohydrates
Nancy ClarkUndoubtedly, as an athlete, you are well aware you should eat a carbohydrate-rich sports diet to fuel up muscles for training as well as to refuel them after hard workouts. The question often arises, "How many carbohydrates are enogh?" If you're weight-conscious you want to eat adequately to saturate your muscles with glycogen, but don't want to overeat and gain weight. If you're time-conscious you want to be sure to consume your share of carbs without indulging in too many of the fast-but-fatty convenience foods that fill your stomach and leave your muscles unfueled.
The ambiguous advice to eat a 60 to 70% carbohydrate sports diet may leave you clueless as to an appropriate food plan. Most people have inadequate knowledge of what a 60 to 70% carbohydrate diet includes. The simpler dietary advice to count grams of carbohydrates based on body weight prescribes three to four grams of carbohydrates per pound of body weight to provide enough carbohydrates for your daily needs. If you're preparing for, or recovering from, prolonged exhaustive exercise such as training for a marathon or triathlon, four to five grams of carbohydrates per pound is a safer target.
This calculation closely approximates the recommended 60 to 70% carbohydrate target sports diet. For example, a petite 100-pound figure skater who burns about 1,800 to 2,400 calories per day would get about 65% of those calories from carbohydrates by eating three to four grams per pound of her weight. A 150-pound marathon runner who burns about 2,800 to 3,700 calories when running seven to 15 miles a day, would get 65% of these calories from carbs by eating three to four grams of carbohydrates per pound (450 to 600 grams of carbs per day).
With your carbohydrate target and food labels, you can count grams of carbohydrates by reading the nutrition labels on packaged foods. For example, at breakfast, a label-reading athlete who needs 400 grams of carbohydrates per day can get 150 grams under the belt by eating one cup of Grapenuts (92 grams) with 1/4 cup raisins (25 grams), one cup milk (10 grams) plus one cup of orange juice (25 grams). this carbohydrate counting system is particularly educational and helpful to those who fantasize about "carbo-loading" on items such as potato chips. They'll quickly discover they'd be better off eating pretzels which provide 57 grams of carbohydrates per 300-colorie snack, as opposed to only 21 grams gained from chips.
For unlabelled items such as fruits, fresh vegetables or bakery items, a calorie and carbohydrate guidebook, commonly available at bookstores, is helpful. Or, you can find an equivalent packaged food with a label. For example, the label on frozen green beans will tell you the amount of carbs you'd get in the equivalent weight of fresh green beans. A Sara Lee bagel would have a carbohydrate content similar to a bakery bagel.
Remember, to accurately count carbohydrates, you have to measure the amount of the food item that you eat. For example, one serving (one ounce) of cereal may have 20 grams of carbohydrates. But mostrunners eat three or four ounces and get that many more carbohydrates.
The following is a quantity list for basic foods, to help you maintain a healthy carbohydrate count.
Breakfast Cereals Grams CHO Granola, 1 ounce (1/4 cup) 18 Raisin Bran, 1 ounce (1/2 cup) 20 Shredded Wheat, 1 ounce (2/3 cup) 22 Grapenuts, 1 ounce (1/4 cup) 23 Oatmeal, 1 package 30 Fruits Apple, medium 20 Orange, medium 20 Banana, medium 25 Pear, medium 25 Raisins, 15 ounce box (1/4 cup) 25 Apricots, 8 halves dried 30 Vegetables Zucchini, 1/2 cup 4 Broccoli, 1 stalk (1/2 cup) 5 Green beans, 1/2 cup 7 Carrot, medium 10 Peas 1/2 cup 10 Tomato sauce, Ragu, 1/2 cup 10 Winter squash, 1/2 cup 15 Corn, 1/2 cup 18 Bread-Type Foods Rice cake, 1 7 Graham crakers, 2 squares 10 Croissant, 1 Sara Lee 11 Saltines, 6 15 Waffle, 1 Eggo 17 English Muffin, 1 25 Matzo, 1 sheet 28 Panacakes, 2 (4 inch) 30 Pita bread, 8-inch round 44 Bagel, average (3 ounces) 45 Bran Muffin, 1 large 45 Submarine roll, 8 inch 60 Beverages Gatorade, 8 ounces 10 Milk, 2%, 8 ounces 13 Beer, 12-ounce can 13 Milk, chocolate, 8 ounces 25 Orange juice, 8 ounces 25 Apple juice, 8 ounces 30 Apricott nectar, 8 ounces 35 Cranraspberry, 8 ounces 36 Cola, 12-ounce can 38 Grains, Pasta, Starches Ramen noodles, 1/2 package 25 Rice, 1/4 cup dry; 1 cup cooked 35 Spaghetti, 2 ounces dry; 1 cup cooked 40 Lentils, 1 cup cooked 40 Baked beans, 1 cup 50 Baked Potato, 1 large 55 Entrees, Convenience Foods Split pea soup, 1 bowl 35 Big Mac 40 Pizza, cheese, 2 slices 40 Chili, 1 cup 45 Bean Burrito, 1 50 Sweets, Desserts, Snacks Oreo, 1 7 Chocolate chip cookie, 1 small 10 Fig Newton, 1 11 Strawberry jam, 1 tablespoon 13 Honey, 1 tablespoon 15 Maple Syrup, 2 tablespoons 25 Poptart, blueberry 35 Soft-serve ice cream, 1 cup 40 Fruit yogurt, 1 cup 40
Nancy Clark, M.S., R.D. is a nutritional counselor at Boston area's Sports Medicine Brookline, and author of The Athlete's Kitchen and Nancy Clark's Sports Nutrition Guidebook (both available through New England Sports Publications, P. O. Box 252, Boston, MA 02113).
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