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Foundation Diet

Printable Food List /Extended Foodlist / BodyFat Worksheet / Foundation Diet Worksheet

Determining your nutritional needs.

For this page, you can assess your nutritional needs based on your weight and activity levels. This calculations serves only as a starting point. You must assess how you feel and perform and then make adjustments. In general, you will be interested in setting up a basic strategy of eating based on sound nutrition. Then, you will make small changes in your general eating to support times of preparation for exercise, times of activity and  times of recovery and repair. Each of these times will involve minor adjustments in your base nutritional program. As such, it is important to first establish a sound foundation. That is what this page is about.

 Important Notes about this section:

  • This section should be used to set up a base eating plan. Use this area and then stay in the general guide that you have established. Use the Assessment tool to guide you as to where to make adjustments.
  • The quantities listed here are in general agreement among studies and professionals involved in athletic training. I've used quantities as recommended in "Food for Fitness" by Chris Carmichael. (See  Sources page)
  • I've divided the quantities into easy serving/block values that have nice visual references. See the guides that accompany these areas.

     You will be planning based on activity level and weight. 

Step 1 - Find out where you are .

There is no way to know how well your plan is working unless you know where you are now. I recommend keeping a log based on the assessment that you will carry out periodically. Keep notes on how you feel during the week and at different parts of the day. Keep in mind that it takes about two weeks to adapt to a new scheme that your body will perceive as "normal". Importantly, we can make body measurements now and at two week intervals to have specifics. As I have mentioned elsewhere, overall body weight is a poor indicator. You will want to evaluate your bodyfat levels in conjunction with your weight. You will find a worksheet here to help you.

BodyFat Worksheet

Other online link:   HealthCentral.com

Step 2 - Determine your Protein Intake.

As discussed, your protein needs are based on weight and activity level. In general, the recommendations vary around a range of values of around  1.2-1.7 grams/kg-bodyweight/day. I've consolidated this information based on type of activity and training volume.

Note: I've adopted the "block method" of food measurement as established by Dr. Barry Sears of "Enter The Zone". (See Sources) I do this because food quantities fall naturally into block values. This makes it visually easy to evaluate portions throughout the day. You need not use the block method, however, if you choose to do so, I've provided both values.

Examples of Block Measurements

  • 1 block = 1 oz cheese (size of your thumb)
  • 1 block = 1 oz lean meat (typical size of a sandwich slice)
  • 3 blocks = 3 oz lean meat (Size that fits in the palm of your hand)
  • 1 block = 2 egg whites or 1 egg

Establish your goals and activity level:

  • Level 0 : Athlete Transition Period - Regular Daily Exercise to maintain basic fitness, low-medium intensity.
  • Level 1 :  Athlete Training Period - 8 hrs or less per week - Basic skills and Aerobic fitness.
  • Level 2 : Athlete Building Period - 8-12 hrs per week of High intensity drills, power and speed.
  • Level 3 : Athlete High Competition Period - More than 12 hrs per week of Training with High Level Competition

Daily Protein Intake by Grams and by Servings  and Blocks

1 Serving ~ 25-30 grams      and   1 Block ~ 7 grams

Bodyweight (lbs) Level 0 Level 1 Level 2 Level 3
110

65-80 grams

2 - 3 servings

9 - 10 blocks

55-65 grams

2 servings

8 - 9 blocks

65-80 grams

2 - 3 servings

9 - 10 blocks

90-100 grams

3 - 3.5 servings

13 - 14 blocks

120

75-85 grams

2.5 - 3 servings

11 - 12 blocks

60-75 grams

2 - 2.5 servings

9 - 11 blocks

75-85 grams

2.5 - 3 servings

11 - 12 blocks

95-110 grams

3 - 3.5 servings

14 - 16 blocks

135

80-95 grams

2.5 - 3 servings

11 - 14 blocks

65-80 grams

2 - 3 servings

9 - 10 blocks

80-95 grams

2.5 - 3 servings

11 - 14 blocks

110-120 grams

3.5 - 4 servings

16 - 17 blocks

150

90-105 grams

3 - 3.5 servings

13 - 15 blocks

75-90 grams

2.5 - 3 servings

11 - 13 blocks

90-105 grams

3 - 3.5 servings

13 - 15 blocks

120-135 grams

4 - 4.5 servings

17 - 19 blocks

165

100-115 grams

3.5 - 4 servings

14 - 16 blocks

80-100 grams

2.5 - 3.5 servings

11 - 14 blocks

100-115 grams

3.5 - 4 servings

14 - 16 blocks

130-150 grams

4.5 - 5 servings

19 - 21 blocks

180

110-125 grams

3.5 - 4 servings

16 - 18 blocks

90-100 grams

3 - 3.5 servings

13 - 14 blocks

110-125 grams

3.5 - 4 servings

16 - 18 blocks

140-160 grams

4.5 - 5.5 servings

20 - 23 blocks

195

120-140 grams

4 - 4.5 servings

17 - 20 blocks

100-120 grams

3.5 - 4 servings

14 - 17 blocks

120-140 grams

4 - 4.5 servings

17 - 20 blocks

155-175 grams

5 - 6 servings

22 - 25 blocks

Protein Factor: Adjustments for Activity Type:

The listings given above are for general all-around activity emphasizing speed and strength. For Strength Dominant, Weightlifting, Power Sports, Gymnastics, multiply Protein values by 1.2

Step 2: Add Carbohydrates to your Day Plan:

     Here you will examine your plate and visually balance your meal. Be careful here to watch portion sizes as some carbohydrate sources are very dense!

Note: I've established a serving as that amount of carbohydrate food that provides 50 grams of carbohydrate. As with the protein, I've selected this based on easily identifiable quantities.

Examples of Serving Measurements

  • 1 cup of complex carbohydrate (pasta, beans, rice, starchy vegetable)
  • 2 cups low sugar cereal
  • 2 medium non-sugary fruit (Apple, pear, orange)
  • 2 cups fruit (cherries, blueberries, tropical fruits)
  • 2 slices whole grain bread
Daily Carbohydrate Intake by Grams and by Serving (1 Serving = 50 grams)
Bodyweight (lbs) Level 0 Level 1 Level 2 Level 3
110

220-275 grams

4 - 5 servings

275 - 330 grams

5 - 7 servings

330 - 385 grams

7 - 8 servings

440 - 500 grams

9 - 10 servings

120

240 -300 grams

5 - 6 servings

300 - 360 grams

6 - 7 servings

360 - 420 grams

7 - 8 servings

480 -540 grams

10 - 11 servings

135

270 - 340 grams

5 - 7 servings

340 - 400 grams

7 - 8 servings

400 - 475 grams

8 - 9 servings

540 - 610 grams

11 - 12 servings

150

300 - 375 grams

6 - 7 servings

375 - 450 grams

7 - 9 servings

450 - 525 grams

9 - 10 servings

600 - 675 grams

4 - 4.5 servings

165

330 -410 grams

7 - 8 servings

410 - 500 grams

8 - 10 servings

500 - 575 grams

10 - 11 servings

660 -740 grams

13 - 15 servings

180

360 - 450 grams

7 - 9 servings

450 - 540 grams

9 - 11 servings

540 - 630 grams

11 - 13 servings

720 - 810 grams

14 - 16 servings

195

390 - 485 grams

8 - 10 servings

490 - 585 grams

10 - 12 servings

585 - 680 grams

12 - 14 servings

780 - 875 grams

16 - 17 servings

  • Add your prescribed protein portion to your plate.

  • Add an equal amount, in relative size, of starchy carbohydrate. This could be in the form of fruits, starchy vegetables with sauces and gravies, etc.

  • Fill the remaining part of your plate with low-starch, high fiber vegetables.

Step 3: Add Quality Fats:

The addition of fats at each meal is of great benefit as discussed. In addition, they will aid in satiety and assist in absorbing fat-soluble vitamins and other nutrients. The ways to add fats are wide and variant.  For example:

  • Sprinkle 1 oz of raw nuts, seeds or a mix on your meal.
  • Make a vinaigrette of 1 Tbsp of healthy fat (canola, olive, flax, borage seed, etc.) and flavored vinegar. Add herbs and spices to taste.
  • Make your protein a high quality steamed cold-water oily fish such as tuna, salmon, etc.

Note: The Quantities here will be very similar from season to season with the exception of the transition season. Shoot for about 20% of calories from fat. Measuring can get tedious, so I choose to add a serving of quality fats at each meal. AT about 9-10 grams per serving, this will work to be about:

Level 0:  50-60 grams of fat per day.

Levels 1-3: 60-80 grams of fat per day

 Watch the fat content of your food!!!

If you are chowing down on hamburger, you are already getting way too much BAD fat. Stop it and replace with quality food. Then add the right fats.

Step 5: Assessment

Now it is important to evaluate. You will evaluate based on measurements and general feeling over sequential 2-week periods.

  • If you are losing weight and Lean Body Mass -  Increase your Activity Level Factor
  • If you are gaining weight and Lean Body Mass -  Reduce your Activity Level Factor
  • If you are gaining weight with unchanging or losing Lean Body Mass -  Reduce Carbohydrates by 50 grams and Fat by 10 grams
  • If you are losing weight with unchanging or losing Lean Body Mass -  Increase Carbohydrates by 50 grams and Fat by 10 grams.

Re-assess after two weeks and continue to make incremental adjustments.

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