28-Days-to-Lean Meal Plan
With the right plan and the right discipline, you can get seriously shredded in just 28 days.
Read articleWith the right plan and the right discipline, you can get seriously shredded in just 28 days.
Read articleAt age 62, "Big Bill" shares his wisdom to dominate one of the ultimate strength marks.
Read articleFollow these fit women we're crushing on for inspiration, workout ideas, and motivation.
Read article1 of 9
quest
Truth: This is the worst generalization in the history of nutrition that we’ve ever heard. First off, there are thousands of different types of protein at the molecular level. It appears there are two sides to every protein debate: isolate vs. concentrate, quick release vs. sustained release, and whey vs. casein.
The absorption rate is the speed at which protein is digested. Quick-release proteins like whey hit your muscles faster, ideal for post- or intra-workout shakes when your muscles are literally starving. Sustained-release proteins like casein have a much slower absorption rate, hence the recommendation to drink a casein shake at night. So what’s the right answer? Both!
If you’re not going to go out and stock up on multiple types of protein powder, find a good combination of whey and casein with a high P-cal (percentage of calories from protein). No need for fillers.
Sponsored Content
2 of 9
quest
Truth: What drunk told you that? He’s probably on his fifth shot of tequila and should probably worry more about the alcohol’s effect on his kidneys instead of protein’s effect. And if you believed him, then you better be putting that bottle down, too. Unless you’re on renal dialysis or slamming a full two-pound canister of protein powder each day, your kidneys will be fine.
Just to be clear: when you’re digesting a lot of protein, you do need to be drinking a lot of water. But you’re doing that anyway, right?
3 of 9
quest
Truth: You can’t cook the protein out of your powder. There is no smoke point (for those familiar with cooking fats). Think of it in terms of beef. Assuming you don’t roast it down to charcoal carbon, that rare steak has just as much protein as the well-done version. A bloody cut won’t give you any more gains, just a higher chance of E. coli.
If you want to get creative and bake some protein muffins or protein cookies with your powder, they’ll pack as much punch as your protein shakes.
4 of 9
quest
Truth: If you’re not actively using it, your body can break down excess protein into molecular substrates that’ll end up going through glycolysis just like carbohydrates. If you’re not using it, expect it to all end up in the same place. So you will get gains…in your gut.
5 of 9
quest
Truth: Only YOU can get yourself ripped… and it’s a lot harder than drinking a few extra protein shakes each week. There is indeed some truth to soy’s connection with estrogen, but not enough to the point where women will end up with broad shoulders just from a little extra whey.
6 of 9
quest
Truth: Just like… birds don’t need water? If you’re building those slow-twitch muscle fibers, likely at even longer training sessions each day than your buffer buddies, make no mistake about it: your body is starving for the building blocks to rebuild that muscle. Protein is a universal macronutrient surpassed in our bodies only by water itself, and a majority of Americans aren’t consuming enough protein to begin with. So even if you’re not training at all, you could still probably use an extra protein shake each day.
7 of 9
quest
Truth: Most protein powders are a product of dairy (whey, casein, milk isolate), so for some people in particular gas is going to be a bit of an issue. And if the only thing you drank all day was protein shakes then that’s a lot like tipping back a gallon of milk. But assuming you can balance your diet with some carbs, fats, and veggies, then you probably won’t stink out the room half an hour after your shake.
8 of 9
quest
Truth: Do you think we would be here today if our bodies could only use 30 grams of protein per meal? The simple truth is that more protein just takes a longer time to digest and be utilized. Remember the difference between casein and isolates? Digestion of a standard meal is still incomplete after five hours, and amino acids are still being released into your bloodstream and absorbed into your muscles. Chow down!
9 of 9
Truth: Kids need protein. Studies show the habits built up from sugars and fat consumptions are the real dangers for kids. Once children are out of the infancy stage (the first 18 months), they’re rapidly growing and developing new muscle tissue. They actually need more protein at this time because their metabolism is firing faster than it ever will later on in life. Protein dangers are old myths that can’t compare to a modern understanding of nutrition.
Your muscles may thank you for this newly tested mix.
Read articleWhy this T-booster by Inno Supps is head and shoulders above the rest.
Read articleFind out how a quality pre-workout can benefit you more than others.
Read articleNotifications