5 Muscle Building Foods

 March 30, 2017|  Lauren

When it comes to building muscle, you really are what you eat. In order to build muscle, you need to provide the body with essential aminos from protein, as well as some carb to help stimulate hormone production.
Some foods offer up more of what you need than others so by feeding it the wrong foods and you won’t get the results you want. If your goal is bodybuilding, or any form of muscle gain then you need to make sure you’re including these five foods in your daily meals.

#1 – Lean Red Meat

Red meat is critical when it comes to packing on muscle for bodybuilding. In just 100 g you get 28 g of protein per serving, but that’s not all you also get a source of both monounsaturated and saturated fats, which are critical to the production of hormones – most notably muscle building testosterone.
It has been shown that eating a diet high in protein and fat can help preserve lean muscle and burn off more fat, most importantly fat found on the belly! Red meat is also packed with some of the most important vitamins, minerals and nutrients needed for muscle growth and great workouts.
Red meat is also packed with some of the most important vitamins, minerals and nutrients needed for muscle growth and great workouts. Red meat has energizing b-vitamins that help convert the energy from the food we need into something useable by the body. It also has zinc, which plays a key role in testosterone production and iron, critical to oxygen delivery in the blood. But perhaps the best nutrient that can be found naturally in red meat is creatine – which has been shown in numerous research studies to build muscle, increase strength, power and endurance.
Include red meat in your weekly bodybuilding meal prep if your goal is to build muscle. Choose from beef tenderloin or marinated Korean BBQ beef skewers on the Fuel-Up menu, and we’ll deliver it to you wherever you are in Dubai or Abu Dhabi.

#2 – Whole Eggs

Whole Eggs are considered an ideal bodybuilding food and a perfect protein because they provide all the essential amino acids needed to build and repair lean muscles. Eggs also provide a good source of fats including cholesterol and although you might think that’s not a good thing, cholesterol is essential to testosterone production.
Research has also shown that those who eat a lot of eggs – including whole eggs – experienced greater weight loss and sustained more lean mass versus a lower protein diet.
Additionally, whole eggs provide a source of vitamins and minerals including vitamin D, a key vitamin involved in testosterone production, as well as antioxidants, choline, lutein, vitamin A, selenium and iodine.
Eggs are extremely versatile and can easily be worked in with plenty of bodybuilding meals, eat them as an omelette, put them in a protein pancake or boil them whole and chop them up into a salad. You can also find whole egg omelettes made with veggies or roast turkey on the Fuel-Up menu for a bit of variation in your bodybuilding meal prep.

#3 – Potatoes

Most people think they should only focus on is protein when it comes to muscle building but carbs are also essential. Carbs stimulate the release of the anabolic hormones that are needed for growth including insulin. Insulin’s primary job is to lower spikes in blood glucose levels that happen when we eat simple carbs such as white potato.
While most might grab a more popular sweet potato over a white potato, white potatoes can provide more of an anabolic boost. Insulin shuttles carbs and amino acids to your muscles, where they can be used to replenish lost muscle glycogen and fuel protein synthesis (or muscle building).
In addition, a single medium sized potato provides a whopping 70% of your daily value of the antioxidant vitamin C, helping aid muscle recovery when included in your bodybuilding meal prep. Potatoes also deliver 30% of your daily value of energizing Vitamin B6.
Roast white potatoes are one of the Fuel-Up carb sides available on our menu, which can be added to your door-to-door meal prep delivery in Dubai.

#4 – Spinach

Spinach is a great bodybuilding food. It is rich in nitrates, which can help promote the production of nitric oxide or NO. Dietary nitrates are believed to feed into the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway, increasing the amount of NO available in the body. Increases in NO cause greater vasodilatation of blood vessels, which allows for greater nutrient delivery to working muscles. Nitrates have also been found to boost exercise performance, including improved time to exhaustion, reduced oxygen consumption and improved speed. Spinach can supply over 250 mg of nitrate per 100 g serving, which is about half a bag. In addition to nitrates, spinach is also high in the antioxidant vitamin A and vitamin C, as well as providing a source of magnesium, iron and calcium – critical minerals for muscle contraction. You can find sautéed spinach on the Fuel-Up menu as one of our many vegetable sides when you’re creating your own bodybuilding meal prep.

#5 – Whey Protein

This dairy protein is on most muscle-building food lists, for good reason. Whey protein has one of the highest biological values of protein because it provides a high concentration of essential amino acids including the most important – the branched chain amino acids. Whey protein is also high in growth factors involved in the process of muscle building. This is because whey protein is isolated from dairy protein, providing a concentrated powder of aminos and growth factors. Ingestion of whey protein results in a sharp and rapid increase in plasma amino acids, making this protein perfect for post-workout supplementation. Research supports the use of whey protein for increasing muscle mass via increasing protein synthesis, improving recovery following exercise and sustaining immune function during high-volume training periods in athletes. Use whey protein as a convenient source of protein to help meet your daily needs or as part of your pre and post-workout supplementation. Most whey protein powders deliver between 20 to 30 g of protein per scoop depending on the blend and manufacturer. It can also be added to many recipes including oats pudding, or protein bars and bites recipes. Try the Fuel-Up Oats Puddings, Protein Bars or Protein Bites, all made with whey protein, when preparing your bodybuilding meal prep for delivery in Dubai or Abu Dhabi.

References:
Campbell B, Krieder RB, Ziengenfuss T, et al. International Society of Sports Nutrition position stand: protein and exercise. JISSN. 2007. 4(8).
Elliot TA, Cree MG, Sanford AP, Wolfe RR, Tipton KD. Milk ingestion stimulates net muscle protein synthesis following resistance exercise. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2006. 38(4):667-74.
Hoon M.W., Johnson N.A., Chapman P.G., Burke L.M. The effect of nitrate supplementation on exercise performance in healthy individuals: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Int. J. Sport Nutr. Exerc. Metab. 2013. 3:522–532.
Hamalainen E, et al. Diet and serum sex hormones in healthy men. J Steroid Biochem. 1984. 20(1): 459-64.
Jones AM. Nitrate Supplementation and Exercise Performance. Nestle Nutrition Institute.
Weinert DJ. Nutrition and muscle protein synthesis: a descriptive review. J Can Chiro Assoc. 2009. 53(3): 186-93.
Wright C, et al. Effect of a high protein, high egg diet on muscle composition, metabolic health and systemic inflammation in overweight and obese, older adults. FASEB J. 29(1): Supp 270.6


 March 30, 2017 | Lauren
Lauren

About the Author

Lauren Jacobsen is the Director of Nutrition for Kcal Brands and the Head of Fuel Up. Lauren has over 15 years of experience in nutrition and supplementation focused on physique athlete development. Lauren is also a former IFBB competitive figure athlete, and long time contributor to fitness magazines worldwide.

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