Blank said:
@ MrRuckus - Terrible advice. Cortisol starts to be released in your body as quickly as 30 minutes after you start working out. Not replenishing your body with the proper macro nutrients allows the Cortisol to begin to break down your muscle tissue for energy. Muscle is always the first thing to go when the body is depleted of nutrients. It's bulky and consumes a lot of calories, bad for survivability according to your body. A post workout meal is a must.
I'm the only one who actually answered the question as asked instead of spewing out typical regurgitated crap based on similar questions... and it wasn't even advice.
0 is enough. I even said "recommended,no."
And don't start with the biology babble or we'll get into arguments that it's better to spike insulin PRE-workout to deal with cortisol. Or that pre-workout protein shakes are more important period.
And people got by just fine for decades without whey shakes and planned insulin spikes, so how much is needed immediately post workout? Zero. Better to have some? Sure. "Enough" like the question asked? Zero.
Go be young and illiterate elsewhere.
"Muscle is always the first thing to go when the body is depleted of nutrients."
Not even true and the idea of "first thing" is laughable as if your body only uses one thing at a time. I'm pretty sure that if i didn't eat at all this weekend i'd lose more fat than muscle, by the way. Your body doesn't shed muscle just like that. We'd have withered away to nothing long ago if that were the case. The fact that you said "always" makes this statement even stupider.
You guys are so completely anal about your little rules.
If I eat 5000 calories a day with a bunch of protein that little shake postworkout isn't a big issue, especially since I actually read the question and he specifically said he isn't a bodybuilder so let's stop treating everyone who lifts as if they're 260 lbs of pure muscle and they're treating to squeeze out every ounce.
Why did you even bring up "depleted." Do you not eat food the rest of the day before and after your workout? At what point does someone become depleted of nutrients? That steak i had for breakfast is still digesting when i'm working out several hours later. I'm not "depleted."
@CaptainJ - a pint of milk post workout is not good. For one, it only has about 16 grams of protein and 24 grams of carbs. Casein, the protein found in milk, gels when it hits your stomach. This causes it to digest very slowly which is the opposite of what you want post workout.
Lol. You should actually look up some stuff about the arguments and evidence that there's really no difference.
I just think it's so funny when i see everyone stating this stuff as if it's absolute fact when even the upper echelon nutrition nerds are constantly debating it to the point that i don't even read it anymore and just loosely follow things to how i feel like or see fit for that day. I haven't noticed a lick of difference as long as i eat enough, which is the same thing the OP will see as he's not some huge bodybuilder where it might matter SooOoOOOooooooOoo much. He's probably like 150 lbs where doing any lifting and eating decently will do him just fine, ya anals.