Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How to Make Meal Plans That Work For Any Diet
Episode Date: May 29, 2019I'm going to make a couple assumptions as to why you're here. Sure, I know you want to learn about meal planning, but I'd wager a cheat meal that you're looking to achieve something very specific. Nam...ely, weight loss or muscle growth or, God willing, a little bit of both If I'm right, this might be the most important meal planning piece you ever hear. I know I know...but seriously. That's not hyperbole. By the end of this podcast, you'll know a lot more than "how to make a meal plan." You'll know how to have the body want eating the foods you love...for the rest of your life. Imagine... No more fad diets. No more forcing down joyless, tasteless meals. No more battling hunger and cravings. No more struggling to lose or gain weight. What if you could confidently soar above all of the mainstream diet hysteria and gimmicks? What if you could use your diet to feel completely in control of your body composition and health? And what if you could do it without having to follow a bunch of restrictive rules or give up everything you actually like to eat? Well, all those things are possible. Easy, even, when you know what you're doing. So have I got your attention? Good. Let's get to work. 4:42 - Is clean eating the key to getting and staying lean? 8:26 - Will you gain weight if you eat certain foods? 12:19- Is low carb dieting the best way to lose fat? 17:04 - Is low calorie dieting the best way to drop pounds quickly? 19:36 - Do you have to eat frequently to speed up your metabolism? 21:43 - How can meal planning save you from dieting? 29:39 - Which foods are good and bad for weight loss and weight gain? 34:52 - How do you create meal plans for losing weight? 41:17- How do you create meal plans for building muscle? 44:55 - Which apps help with meal planning? Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, hello, and welcome to another episode of the Muscleful Life Podcast.
I am Mike Matthews, and this one is all about meal planning.
Now, I am going to make a couple of assumptions as to why you are here listening to me talk.
Sure, I know you want to learn about meal planning, but I would also wager a cheat meal or two that you are looking to achieve something very
specific, namely weight loss or muscle growth or God's willing a little bit of both. And if I'm
right, this might be the most important meal planning piece you have ever listened to. And I
know, I know, but seriously, that is actually not hyperbole because by the end of this podcast, you are going to know a lot more than just how to make a meal plan. You are going
to know how to get the body you want, eating the foods that you love for the rest of your life.
So imagine for a minute, no more fad diets, no more forcing down joyless, tasteless meals,
no more battling hunger and cravings, no more struggling to lose or gain weight.
What if you could confidently soar above all the mainstream diet hysteria and gimmicks?
What if you could use your diet to feel completely in control of your body composition
and health? And what if you could do those things without having to follow a bunch of
restrictive rules or give up all the foods you actually like to eat? Well, I'm here to tell you
that those things are possible and are actually pretty easy, really, once you know what you're doing. So I hope I've got your
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internet. Alrighty, that is enough shameless plugging for now, at. Let's get to the show. All right, so let's start with some myth debunking.
Let's talk about six meal planning myths that need to die.
Because if you have ever had trouble understanding how to create effective meal plans,
you have probably fallen prey to at least one of these myths, if not multiple.
So here's the first one. Clean eating is the key to getting and staying lean. The cult of clean eating has won very wide acceptance these days.
And while it does have its heart in the right place, it really misses the forest for the trees
as far as body composition goes. And specifically,
what most clean eaters do not realize is the nutritional value of the food that you eat has
very little to do with your body composition. Sure, eating plenty of nutritious foods is
important for overall health and longevity, and I definitely do recommend getting at least 80%
of your daily calories from relatively unprocessed nutritious foods. But there are no individual
foods that directly cause weight loss or weight gain. Sugar, for example, is not your enemy,
and healthy fats are not your savior. And the key to understanding these shocking statements is understanding the concept of
energy balance, which is the relationship between the amount of energy you are eating
and the amount of energy you are burning.
And many, many studies over the last century have shown that the very boring physiological
reality is that meaningful weight loss requires eating less energy than you burn
over time and meaningful meaning significant weight gain requires the opposite. It requires
eating significantly more energy than you burn over time. When you eat less energy than you burn,
you are in what's known as a negative energy balance or a calorie deficit, and this results in weight
loss. And when you eat more than you burn, you are in a positive energy balance or a calorie surplus,
and this results in weight gain. So in this way, a calorie is very much a calorie, and calories in
versus calories out very much matters. And in case you're not familiar with the technical
definition of a calorie, it is simply the amount of energy required to heat one kilogram of water, one degree Celsius.
That's all a calorie is. It's just a measurement of energy, or you could say energy potential that
is in food. And there's also the energy that your body burns. And just for the sake of simplicity,
we express both of those energy amounts, the energy in food and the energy we burn
in calories. So that's why we can then say, okay, how many calories am I eating? How much energy
stored in food am I putting into my body, which my body processes and does things with versus how
much energy am I burning through just staying alive, moving around and so forth. And what this means then is if you eat too much of
the cleanest foods in the world, you will gain weight. If you do that often enough, you do that
for long enough. One day, maybe you'll gain a little bit of weight and then you'll probably
just go back to normal. But if you do it enough over time, you will gain weight. And on the flip
side, if you maintain a calorie deficit while following a gas station diet of
the most nutritionally bankrupt crap you can find, you will lose weight if you maintain that
calorie deficit over time. And this, for example, is why Professor Mark Haub was able to lose 27
pounds on a diet of protein shakes, Twinkies, Doritos, Oreos, and little Debbie snacks. He
simply ate fewer crappy calories than his body burned over time. And as the first law of
thermodynamics dictates, this resulted in a reduction in total fat mass. And if you want
to read about that, simply Google Mark Haub, H-A-U-B, weight loss, and you'll find a number of
mainstream news articles on it. Okay, the next myth is if you eat certain foods, you will gain
weight. Now, this one is a natural extension of the previous myth, but it does deserve its own
treatment. If someone tells you that there are weight gain and weight loss foods, do yourself a favor and ignore everything
else they have to say. Do not take any advice from them, at least as regards nutrition and
probably exercise and maybe life as well. No, seriously though, at least nutrition. Do not
take any diet advice, nutrition advice from somebody who thinks that certain foods just
make you gain weight and certain foods just make you lose weight
because foods do not have any special properties that cause you to gain or lose weight. They cannot
clog your hormones. They cannot magically transform into body fat or do anything else to sabotage your
fitness goals. What foods can do, however, is provide calories as well as macronutrients, protein, carbohydrate, and how that energy breaks down into the major
nutrients our body needs to survive, protein, carbohydrate, and fat. Macronutrients is the
technical term for that, or macros as people call them. Calories and macros determine what happens
when you eat the food. It's just the calories and the macros, not the nutrients. And again,
I'm talking about body fat, which means gaining or losing,
and muscle gaining or losing. And we're going to dive into all the details here soon on the
podcast. But for now, here's what you need to know. Certain foods do not make you fat.
Overeating does. Sugar does not make you fat. Overeating does. Carbohydrates do not make you
fat. Overeating does. And even hormones like insulinydrates do not make you fat. Overeating does. And even hormones,
like insulin and cortisol, do not make you fat. Overeating does. Controlling your weight does not
require eating certain foods and avoiding others or combining foods in specific ways or any other
type of quackery. As you will soon learn, all it requires is smart manipulation of calorie and macronutrient
intake. Hey, if you like what I am doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, and if you want to help
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this. All right, moving along to the next myth, which is low-carb dieting is the best way to lose fat.
Now, a couple decades ago, low-fat dieting, low-fat, not low-carb, was all the rage.
Unfortunately, it did not stop us here in the West from just getting fatter and fatter.
And now the mob has turned its ire to a new enemy, the carbohydrate. This is the little bastard that is responsible for
all of our waistline woes, we are told. And if we just banish it forever, we can live long,
lean, healthy lives dreaming about pizza and ice cream. Well, I am delighted to give you some good news. If you
are physically active and you aren't diabetic or pre-diabetic, you have no reason to follow
a low-carb diet unless I guess you just really enjoy it. In fact, it is much more likely that
a high-carb diet is an all-around better choice for you, and especially if you train your muscles regularly.
And yes, that's true even when you want to lose weight. But let's back up for a minute. Let's talk
about why low-carb diet research out there is very misleading. Because I know that there are many
low-carb evangelists that have studies that they offer as irrefutable proof that low-carb dieting
is better for weight loss, among other things. Some people even say it's better for muscle gain.
And it often sounds very scientific and it sounds convincing and understandably wins many new
converts every day. But there is a big gaping hole in the research, and it relates to protein intake. Namely,
every single low-carb weight loss trial I have seen that is used to sell the ideology of low-carb
dieting has a major flaw, and that is that the low-carb diets contain more protein than the low fat, higher carb ones. And yes,
that's one for one without fail. And the reason this presents a serious problem is it means that
we are not looking at a true apples to apples comparison of dieting methodologies. Instead,
we are looking at how a high protein and low carb diet fares against a low-protein and high-fat diet. And yes,
the former wins every time. But is it because of the low-carb component or is it because of
the high-protein? Anti-carbers will of course say it's the magic of low-carb eating, but are they
right? Well, to know that, we would need to look at weight loss trials that kept protein intake
high in both the low and high carb groups. And fortunately, there are quite a few of those
studies out there. There are probably six or seven now, and their findings are summarized well by
the following that I'm going to share with you from a study conducted by
researchers from Harvard University. Quote, reduced calorie diets result in clinically
meaningful weight loss regardless of which macronutrients they emphasize. In other words,
so long as you maintain a calorie deficit, raising or lowering carbohydrate intake does
not significantly impact fat loss. I think it's also worth reviewing a
recent and rather extensive meta-analysis conducted by researchers from several universities
that involved the review of 19 different weight loss trials. And I quote,
trials show weight loss in the short term, irrespective of whether the diet is low
carbohydrate or balanced. There is probably little or no difference in weight loss and changes in cardiovascular risk factors up to two years of
follow-up when overweight and obese adults with or without type 2 diabetes are randomized to
low-carbohydrate diets and isoenergetic balanced weight loss diets. And last but not least,
I should mention that I myself have worked directly with thousands of people helping them lose thousands, tens of thousands, who knows, maybe hundreds of thousands of pounds at this point collectively. And I can tell you with absolute certainty that you can get the body of your dreams eating the carbs that you love. So long as you keep your protein intake high, you are not going to lose fat
faster on a low-carb diet, and you actually are probably going to have more problems than with a
high-carb diet. You're probably going to be generally hungrier. You're probably going to
struggle more with cravings. Your workouts are going to be worse. There are significant downsides
to low-carb dieting in the context of weight loss in particular. Okay, the next myth,
very low-calorie dieting is the best way to drop pounds quickly. And it's true, actually. If you
starve yourself, yes, you are going to lose weight quickly. If that's how we are defining best, then
sure, it is the best way. But if we want to consider the qualitative aspect of the pounds that you're losing,
are you losing muscle?
Are you losing fat?
As well as the qualitative aspect of the experience, is it miserable?
Yes, starvation dieting is always miserable.
Then, no, it is not the best way to drop pounds quickly because while watching the scale go down quickly and feeling your pants
loosen more and more every other day is encouraging, there is a major problem here.
Losing weight quickly is not the goal. Instead, we want to lose fat quickly and not muscle.
That's the key because preserving muscle when you're dieting is the
number one priority. Because if you don't, then it's only a matter of time until you
wind up skinny fat, which is very confusing for people. I understand. I hear from people often
who have a skinny fat body and they have no idea what to do because they've done all this dieting
and they've actually brought their body fat levels down to a normal, but they don't look anything like how they want to look. And the
primary reason for this is they don't have enough muscle. You see the look that most men and women
are after, that athletic, lean, defined look requires a lower body fat percentage, somewhere around 10% for guys, 20% for women,
as well as quite a bit of lean mass, quite a bit more than the average person. For guys,
it's probably somewhere around 35 pounds or so, more than average. And for women,
it's somewhere around 15 pounds, maybe 20, of course, in the right places on their bodies.
And there are several things that you have to do to accomplish that. And we
are going to go over them later in this podcast. But one of the things you must never do is just
starve yourself, is eat a very low calorie diet, a 500 calorie per day diet or an 800 calorie per
day diet to try to drop weight quickly. Because if you eat too little, you will lose muscle. Regardless of
what you do in the gym, it will happen. And the more muscle you lose, the further you are going
to be from your ideal physique, regardless of how much fat you might lose in the process.
Okay, next myth. You have to eat frequently to speed up your metabolism. Now, if you go find some generic fitness magazine or generic fitness blog and poke around, you're probably going to come across some
version of this one. The idea is that by increasing meal frequency, you can stoke the metabolic fire
and accelerate fat loss. And while it's true that breaking down and processing the food that you eat does cause a metabolic
boost or bump, this is known as the thermic effect of food.
That's the technical term.
And it actually can be quite significant.
Research shows that the thermic effect of food accounts for 10 to 20% of our daily energy
expenditure, depending on the macronutrient composition of our diets, because certain macronutrients require more
energy to process than others. For example, protein requires more energy to process than
carbohydrate, which requires more energy to process than dietary fat. So theoretically,
then the idea is if you ate frequently enough, you could harness the thermic effect of food and
keep your metabolism revved up all day, right? And it
sounds plausible, but research shows it does not play out like that. For example, a study conducted
by the scientists at the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research involved the
analysis of scores of studies with a variety of eating patterns ranging from one to 17 meals per
day. And what the researchers found
is that there was no difference in the 24-hour energy expenditure between low and high frequency
eating. What they found instead is that small meals cause small fleeting increases in metabolic
rate and larger meals result in larger, longer lasting boosts. And that it all just balances out in terms of total energy expenditure by the end of the day.
So the bottom line here is there is no metabolic advantage to eating three, six or nine meals per day.
And you should do what fits your preferences and schedule.
Okay, so those are the myths that I wanted to debunk.
And let's now start talking about meal planning. And let's start with how meal planning can save you from quote-unquote
dieting. Because fad diets all have one thing in common. They have this assertion that theirs
is the one true way. The paleo hordes say that you must follow the calls of your ancient cave-dwelling ancestors, and the anti-carb crusaders insist that you subject yourself to trial by ketogenic dieting, and the quacks out there swear by cleanses and detoxes and biohacking and other nonsense. And unfortunately, this can result in your squandering months and
even years of time wandering in this swamp, defecting from one school of dieting to another
with not much to show for it in the end in terms of what you see in the mirror and what you've got
in the gym. On you'll go, though, certain that the
one true diet is out there somewhere, patiently waiting for your arrival. Or the next new fad is
going to be the one. The scientists have finally cracked the code. And I have good news and bad
news regarding this. Let's start with the bad. The bad is there is no one true diet.
There never will be. There are no real shortcuts to losing fat and building muscle. The secret
they're not telling you about dieting is that it's pretty boring. Actually, it lacks the sizzle
that's needed to sell pills, powders, PDFs, and the rest. But there's good news too. And it is this. It is that
the truth is very simple and it's very workable. It works for everyone. It works every time.
It's like the quote that is often attributed to Thomas Edison, but I don't think we know who said
it. It is that opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work.
Yeah, dieting is like that.
The suckers want glitz and they want glamour.
But the real opportunity to build the body of your dreams is frayed denim and a rust-bitten toolkit.
Now, here's how it breaks down in terms of importance.
The most important aspect is the energy balance that we spoke about, then macronutrient balance,
which is how the calories break down into protein, carbs, and fats.
And then we have food choices, and then we have nutrient timing.
So nutrient timing when you eat is the least important.
Food choices is not as important as macronutrients and energy balance.
So let's look at each of these layers in detail. So let's start with energy balance. We've already touched on this, but it bears
repeating because it alone dictates weight gain and weight loss more than anything else. So as
you know, energy balance is the relationship between the energy contained in the food that
you eat and the energy that you burn through living. And for meaningful weight loss to occur, there must be an imbalance in
this equation. In other words, the output must exceed the input. The calorie deficit must be
there for weight loss to occur. And if you want to gain weight, there must be a calorie surplus,
must be an energy surplus. And no, this isn't just theory. It is, at this point, an immutable, indisputable scientific
fact. This is why every single controlled weight loss study conducted in the last 100 years,
including countless meta-analyses and systematic reviews, have concluded that meaningful weight
loss requires energy expenditure to exceed energy intake. This is also why bodybuilders
dating back just as far from Sandow to Reeves and all the way up the line have been using and
continue to use this knowledge to systematically and routinely reduce and increase their body fat
levels. And this is also why new brands of calorie denying come and go every year, failing to gain acceptance in the weight loss literature. Just like gravity, death and taxes, you cannot escape energy balance, the next part of effective meal planning is how those calories
break down into macronutrients.
And just to give a proper definition, a macronutrient is any of the nutritional components of the
diet that are required in relatively large amounts to survive.
And they are protein, carbohydrate, fat, as well as minerals, which are also often called
macro minerals like calcium, zinc, iron, fat, as well as minerals, which are also often called macro
minerals like calcium, zinc, iron, magnesium, and phosphorus. Now, when we look at food intake
solely through the lens of energy balance and weight change, a calorie is a calorie. If you
eat too many calories for long enough, you will gain weight. If you eat fewer calories than you're
burning, if you restrict your calories for long enough, you will lose weight, period.
There is more to consider though, because as I mentioned earlier, we do not want to
manipulate our weight so much as our body composition and particularly our body fat
percentage.
In other words, we want to lose fat and not muscle.
And when we are lean bulking, we want to gain as much muscle as possible and as little fat
as possible.
And when those are the goals, we have to gain as much muscle as possible and as little fat as possible. And when those are
the goals, we have to consider more than just calories. Because if we eat too little protein,
we will forever struggle to gain and preserve muscle. If we eat too little carbohydrate,
we are going to make it harder to gain muscle and strength and to make progress in our workouts.
And if we eat too much fat, we're going to have to dramatically reduce protein or
carb intake to compensate. Now, if we get our macronutrient balance right, though, everything
comes together. Then we can gain muscle and lose fat with ease. We will have high energy workouts.
We won't have any major issues with hunger cravings. It really makes a
huge difference. It makes the experience of getting and staying fit much more enjoyable and much
easier. Really, it really is the closest thing you can find to dietary magic. All right, so now
let's move on to the next tier on our little pyramid here, which is food choices. And this is the tier that
is worshipped by most mainstream diet experts as the be-all and end-all of dieting. The quantitative
stuff that we just talked about is not very popular. People don't want to bother planning
or tracking numbers or paying attention to calories or macros. They'd rather
just follow simple rules about what they can and can't eat. And there are many marketers out there
who are very anxious to oblige them and sell them all kinds of things they do not need. And
as we've discussed earlier in the clean eating myth, eating nutritious foods is important. Yes,
definitely. You want to be healthy. You want to have high energy levels. You want to live a long
disease-free life. Then you're going to want to eat a lot of nutritious foods. It matters.
But as far as losing fat and gaining muscle goes, the nutritional aspect of eating forever lives in the shadows of energy and macronutrient balance.
Because the truth is you can be the cleanest eater in the world and still just be weak and
skinny fat. And as Professor Haub showed us earlier, and as the if it fits your macros,
IIFYM crowd won't stop babbling about, you can build muscle and lose
fat eating more or less whatever you want. That said, it is true that certain foods make it easier
or harder to lose and gain weight due to their volume, calorie density, and macronutrient
breakdown. So let's talk about that. Let's talk about foods that are good and bad for weight loss and weight gain. So generally speaking, foods that are good for weight loss are those that are
relatively low in calories, but high in volume, which makes them very filling. So examples of
these types of foods are lean meats, whole grains, many different fruits and vegetables, and low-fat
dairy products. These types of foods also
provide an abundance of micronutrients, which is especially important when your calories are
restricted. Because if you eat too much junk food on a calorie-restricted diet, you can develop
micronutrient deficiencies, vitamin and mineral deficiencies that can just make your life less
enjoyable. Now, foods that are conducive to weight
gain are the opposite. These are foods that are high in calories and low in volume and satiety,
which refers to how filling a food is. So these foods include obvious things like caloric
beverages, candy, and other sugar-laden goodies, but quite a few quote-unquote healthy foods fall
into this category as well, like oils, bacon, butter, low-fiber fruits, and whole-fat dairy
products. So think of it this way. You can only afford so many calories every day, whether you
are dieting to lose fat or dieting to gain muscle or just trying to maintain your current weight and body composition.
And you got to watch how you spend these calories. So when you're dieting for fat loss, you want to
spend the majority of your calories on foods that allow you to hit your daily macronutrient
and micronutrient needs without overdrafting your energy balance account. I know I'm getting a little carried away
with the financial metaphor, but bear with me. When you're dieting for muscle growth, on the
other hand, you have quite a few more calories to spend every day, and that makes it easy to hit
both your macronutrient and micronutrient targets with some calories to spare, which then you can
spend on whatever you want. Now, don't mistake this part
of the podcast as me railing against healthy foods. I am not a fan of the people trying to prove
that you can eat junk and get shredded. Long-term health matters more than getting super lean while
eating boxes of Pop-Tarts every week. Now, I mentioned this earlier, but a good rule of thumb
is if you get the majority, say 80% or more of your calories from relatively unprocessed nutrient dense foods, you can fill
the remaining 20 or less percent with your favorite dietary sins and be perfectly healthy,
muscular, and lean. All right, moving on to the final and least important tier,
lean. All right, moving on to the final and least important tier, and that is nutrient timing.
Generally speaking, when you eat your food does not really matter. So long as you are managing your energy and macronutrient balances properly, meal timing and meal frequency are not going to
help or hinder your results to any significant degree. The only reason why I'm hedging there is there is some research that
shows that eating some protein every few hours, which for most people comes out to like five
times a day, is probably better for long-term muscle gain than eating larger amounts of protein
more infrequently. So let's say eating maybe only two servings of protein per day with a number of
hours in between them. So more frequent protein
feedings is probably better for long-term muscle gain, but even that is not a major effect. And
what that means then is you can eat three meals a day or seven meals a day. You can eat a huge
breakfast or you could just skip it if you don't like breakfast and you could start eating at lunch.
That's the easiest way to do intermittent fasting is basically skip breakfast. You can eat carbs in the morning, in the afternoon, in the evening, whenever you want. But if you are into lifting weights and you are trying to gain muscle and strength as quickly as possible, I do recommend eating several servings of protein per day, not just one or two. There may not be a big difference between three and five, but I would say three would be the minimum and you can increase it to as many as you'd like.
But practically speaking, it's like three to six servings a day is how most people like to break
it down. I should also mention that there's a fair amount of evidence that eating protein
after workouts can help you build muscle and strength over a longer period of time. And also,
if you have not eaten protein within the two hours
or so preceding your workout, it's probably a good idea to have some protein before. So you have
some protein before, at least within a couple hours of training, and then some protein within,
let's say an hour or so of finishing a workout. And that is one of those things that also makes
a slight difference over time. But as a natural weightlifter, we really need all the help we can get.
So if we can get a slight advantage by eating protein more frequently throughout the day
and having some protein before and after we train, then we should do that.
Creatine is similar, a supplement like creatine.
By itself, it's not a game changer, but it does help you gain muscle and strength faster.
And so throw it in.
It's not a game changer, but it does help you gain muscle and strength faster.
And so throw it in.
Because while the effects of each individual strategy may not be that impressive, the cumulative effects can be fairly significant.
All right.
So now let's talk about how to create meal plans for losing weight, because you now have
the basic theory under your belt.
It's time to put some rubber on the road. And I want to start with weight loss because that is on more people's minds than weight
gain. So as you know, the key to losing fat is maintaining a calorie deficit over time. So the
first step is working out how many calories you should be eating. And that first means that you
need to work out approximately how many
calories you are burning every day. Now, I did recently record a podcast on this. So if you want
to dive into the details of how to determine this, then listen to that podcast. If you want to just
go straight to a calculator that'll just do the math for you, make it nice and easy, Google Legion
Athletics diet meal plans, and you'll find an article that
this podcast is based on. And in that article, there is a calculator that just does the math
for you. And the resulting number from the calculator is a fairly accurate measurement
of the total amount of energy your body is burning every day. And this is generally known as your
total daily energy expenditure or TDEE. And what that means is if you ate that amount of calories every day,
your weight would more or less remain the same.
Sure, it would fluctuate slightly up and down over time,
but more or less the average would remain the same.
And that means then to reduce your weight,
you're gonna have to eat less than that number.
How much less though?
Well, I recommend a moderately aggressive calorie deficit of about 20%,
maybe as high as 25%. Anything larger than that can cause unwanted side effects associated with
starvation dieting. So what this means then is you want to set your daily calorie intake to
somewhere around 75 to 80% of your total daily energy expenditure. And for example, my total daily energy expenditure
hovers around 3000 calories. So when I want to lose weight, I set my intake to about 2300
calories. That's usually where I start. Sometimes a little bit higher, sometimes it's 2500. So
let's just say it's in the range of 2300 to 2500. Once you have your calories worked out,
the next thing is your macronutrients.
It's time to turn those calories
into protein, carbs, and fat targets.
And here's an easy way to do it.
I want you to eat one to 1.2 grams
of protein per pound of body weight per day.
And if you are very overweight,
so if you're a guy over, let's say 25% body fat or a woman
over 35% body fat, modify that to 40% of your daily calories.
I want 40% of your daily calories to come from protein.
And to calculate that, all you do is multiply your total daily calories that you have to
eat by 0.4 and then divide that by four.
That number is your target for protein. And you can just round
it up or down so it's easy. If it's 173, you don't have to go for 173, just go for 170. And the
reason why that works is there are about four calories in a gram of protein. Okay, next, I want
you to eat about 0.3 grams of fat per pound of body weight per day.
And again, if you are very overweight, you can simply modify that to about 25% of your daily calories should be coming from dietary fat.
To calculate that, simply multiply your total daily calorie target by 0.25 and then divide it by 9.
That resulting number will be your fat target for
the day in grams. And the reason why that works is a gram of fat has about nine calories. And then
get the rest of your calories from carbs. And to do that, you simply multiply your protein target
in grams by four, and then you multiply your fat target in grams by nine, add those numbers together.
So those are the total calories coming from protein and fat, and you subtract that from your
total calorie daily target, which then leaves you with however many calories are left over for carbs.
And then you divide that number by four, and that will give you your daily carbohydrate
target in grams. And the reason that works is there are also about four calories in a gram of
carbohydrate. Okay, so let's see how this plays out for me. So I weigh 200 pounds. Let's say I
was cutting and I was starting at 2,500 calories. So I would eat 200 grams of protein per day,
one gram per pound of body weight. That's 800 calories, 200 times
four. And I would be eating about 50 grams of fat per day, 0.25 times 200. And that comes out to
450 calories, 50 times nine. Then I would add those two together to represent the total calories,
the total daily calories that are gonna be coming from both protein and fat. So that's 1,250 calories. And I would subtract that from my total daily target of 2,500 for
1,250 calories. And then I would divide by four to determine how many carbs, how many grams of carbs
those calories represent, which is 312, but we'll go to 310. Or maybe I would just go to 300 to make it easy. And that's it. Now,
once you have your numbers, it is time to turn those numbers into a meal plan that you will
actually enjoy. And to do that, you can start by just making a list of foods that you would like
to eat every day, and then head over to Calorie King to learn their macronutrient profiles. And many people like to use Excel for this,
listing the foods and their protein, carb, fat,
and calorie numbers in side-by-side columns.
And then you just need to start piecing together meals
using those foods until you're happy with the setup
and until you're within, let's say, 50 calories
of your daily intake target if you're cutting and 100 if you're lean, let's say 50 calories of your daily intake target, if you're cutting
and a hundred, if you're lean bulking or maintaining.
And if you want to see some examples of these types of meal plans, again, just Google Legion
Athletics meal plans or diet meal plans.
You'll find an article that this podcast is based on and it has some examples of meal
plans.
is based on, and it has some examples of meal plans. So once you've made your plan, you now just stick to it every day. And then if along the way you get tired of certain foods or meals,
you simply replace those foods or meals with other things that you would like to eat that
fit your numbers. It really is that simple. Okay, now let's talk about creating meal plans for
building muscle. Because when you want to lose fat, we know that
you need to eat less than your TDEE over time. You need to be eating less energy than you're
burning over time. When you want to maximize muscle growth, however, you want to eat a bit
more. Now, I don't want to go into all the reasons why that is here, but if you want to learn more
about that, search for Legion Athletics clean bulking, and you'll find an article that I wrote
called like how to successfully clean bulk in six steps or something like that. I think there's also
a podcast actually that I recorded on the same topic. So if you'd rather listen to me explaining
it, then search my podcast feed for clean bulking. But for the purposes of this podcast, all you need
to know really is that when you want to maximize muscle growth and strength gain, you should be eating about 10% more than your TDEE over time, than your total daily energy expenditure over time. So you want to take that number that you've calculated, hopefully just using the calculator that I've referred you to, and you want to add 10% to that and just eat that
number every day. That's the easiest way to go about it. Now, if you are an intermediate or
advanced weightlifter who wants to gain as little fat as possible, and you're not going to be
gaining much muscle, then you might want to get a little bit more granular with your daily intake.
For example, you may want to
cycle your calories, which I've written about. If you Google muscle for life, calorie cycling,
or if you search my podcast feed, you'll find an episode on calorie cycling. But for most people,
for people who have, let's say, less than two or three years of heavy, proper weightlifting
under their belts, this is the easiest way to do it. And the
macronutrient breakdown for lean bulking like this is a little bit different. I recommend around one
gram of protein per pound of body weight per day. You could go as low as 0.8 grams per pound of
body weight per day if you really don't like eating protein, but one gram is easy, I think.
And then set your fat intake at 0.3 grams of fat per pound of body weight per day.
That is plenty for the purposes of maintaining health and performance. And then just get the
rest of your calories from carbs. And you do that in the same way, you calculate that in the same
way as in the weight loss scenario. So you take your total grams of protein, multiply them by
four, your total grams of fat, multiply them by nine, add those numbers together, subtract the sum from your total calorie
target, your daily target, which is going to be your TDEE plus 10%. And that number now is the
amount of calories that you should be eating in carbohydrate every day. To turn that into grams,
you divide it by four and voila. So for me,
for example, all right, 200 pounds, 200 grams of protein per day, 800 calories, 60 grams of fat, 0.3 times 200, which is 540 calories. Add those up. That is 1,340 calories from protein and fat,
calories from protein and fat, which means now that I have 1,960 calories for carbs every day, right? That's 3,300 minus 1,340. And then to turn that 1,960 number into grams, we divide by four,
four, 490, 490 grams of carbs per day. And yes, that is a lot of carbs. And yes,
carbs per day. And yes, that is a lot of carbs. And yes, that means that I would have some great workouts. All right. So that's it for putting your numbers together for lean bulking. So then you
just take those numbers again, turn them into meal plans and just follow the plans. All right.
So before we wrap up, let's just quickly talk about apps, because if creating food menus and
hitting different nutritional targets every day sounds
daunting, don't worry. It is a little bit awkward, a little bit clunky at first, but it's pretty
simple once you get into the groove and once you get a little bit of practice. And there are a few
apps that can help. One that is very, very popular is MyFitnessPal. It's a free app for iOS, Android, and I think they also have a web app too,
that easily allows you to track your calorie and macro intake. Just make sure that you do
set your own custom calorie and macronutrient goals. Do not go with their default recommendations.
There's also an app called Paprika, P-A-P-R-I-K-A, that helps you organize your recipes,
helps you make meal plans and create
grocery lists. That's pretty useful. There's another one called Pepper Plate, which is
similar to Paprika. It's a little bit less slick and user-friendly, but it is free. And then there's
also an app called My Macros Plus, which is a simple food tracking app made specifically for
us fitness folk. And as you can guess, it allows you to plan and track your
macros. Alrighty, let's wrap up. The bottom line with all of this is you do not necessarily have
to plan or track your food intake to lose fat or build muscle or maintain your body weight and body
composition. But if you want guaranteed results and you want them as quickly as possible, then
meal planning is the way to go
because a good meal plan takes all the guesswork out of dieting and it ensures you don't over or
under eat. And it also ensures that your diet meets both your macro and micronutritional needs.
So no matter what type of diet you are following, meal planning can work for you.
And all the information I've just shared with you in this podcast is really all you need to get results.
Hey there, it is Mike again.
I hope you enjoyed this episode and found it interesting and helpful.
And if you did and don't mind doing me a favor and want to help me make this the most popular health and fitness podcast
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Lastly, if you didn't like something about the show, then definitely shoot me an email at
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everything myself and I'm always looking for constructive
feedback. So please do reach out. All right, that's it. Thanks again for listening to this
episode and I hope to hear from you soon. And lastly, this episode is brought to you by me.
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