Protein per lb body weight?
freerange
Posts: 1,722 Member
How much protein per pound of body weight is recommended for moderate weight lifting? And is that per pound of lean muscle or over all body weight?
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Replies
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I use 1 gram per pound of lean mass.2
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0.8g per pound of bodyweight is often used0
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TresaAswegan wrote: »I use 1 gram per pound of lean mass.
This.0 -
I use 1 gram per body pound and here is my reasoning..
1. That chicken package with the towel under the chicken plus the 15% liquid something all weigh something and I'm NOT putting raw chicken on my scale. I buy a 2.26 lb package really 1.96 lbs of chicken
2. Supplement companies are ruthless six star just got popped for advertising 30 grams when it was truly 24 grams per scoop
3. Its just extra calories over maximum usable so NO BIGGIE better over than under..
4. The Carbs I actually like tend to kill my ability to stop eating them so it kills my daily Caloric goal
5. I'm Complicated and special..
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.8 per pound if you are a reasonable body fat percentage. Otherwise, I would just try to hit the amount of grams = to my goal weight.0
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Michael190lbs wrote: »I use 1 gram per body pound and here is my reasoning..
1. That chicken package with the towel under the chicken plus the 15% liquid something all weigh something and I'm NOT putting raw chicken on my scale. I buy a 2.26 lb package really 1.96 lbs of chicken
2. Supplement companies are ruthless six star just got popped for advertising 30 grams when it was truly 24 grams per scoop
3. Its just extra calories over maximum usable so NO BIGGIE better over than under..
4. The Carbs I actually like tend to kill my ability to stop eating them so it kills my daily Caloric goal
5. I'm Complicated and special..
A thought - set a plate on the scale and zero it out if you want to weigh raw chicken...?4 -
Thanks all.0
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Michael190lbs wrote: »I use 1 gram per body pound and here is my reasoning..
1. That chicken package with the towel under the chicken plus the 15% liquid something all weigh something and I'm NOT putting raw chicken on my scale. I buy a 2.26 lb package really 1.96 lbs of chicken
2. Supplement companies are ruthless six star just got popped for advertising 30 grams when it was truly 24 grams per scoop
3. Its just extra calories over maximum usable so NO BIGGIE better over than under..
4. The Carbs I actually like tend to kill my ability to stop eating them so it kills my daily Caloric goal
5. I'm Complicated and special..
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TresaAswegan wrote: »Michael190lbs wrote: »I use 1 gram per body pound and here is my reasoning..
1. That chicken package with the towel under the chicken plus the 15% liquid something all weigh something and I'm NOT putting raw chicken on my scale. I buy a 2.26 lb package really 1.96 lbs of chicken
2. Supplement companies are ruthless six star just got popped for advertising 30 grams when it was truly 24 grams per scoop
3. Its just extra calories over maximum usable so NO BIGGIE better over than under..
4. The Carbs I actually like tend to kill my ability to stop eating them so it kills my daily Caloric goal
5. I'm Complicated and special..
A thought - set a plate on the scale and zero it out if you want to weigh raw chicken...?
That's what i do. There's no need to put a slab of meat directly onto your scale.0 -
Michael190lbs wrote: »I use 1 gram per body pound and here is my reasoning..
1. That chicken package with the towel under the chicken plus the 15% liquid something all weigh something and I'm NOT putting raw chicken on my scale. I buy a 2.26 lb package really 1.96 lbs of chicken
2. Supplement companies are ruthless six star just got popped for advertising 30 grams when it was truly 24 grams per scoop
3. Its just extra calories over maximum usable so NO BIGGIE better over than under..
4. The Carbs I actually like tend to kill my ability to stop eating them so it kills my daily Caloric goal
5. I'm Complicated and special..
You could weigh your protein powder? I've never used a scoop as a measure...1 -
livingleanlivingclean wrote: »Michael190lbs wrote: »I use 1 gram per body pound and here is my reasoning..
1. That chicken package with the towel under the chicken plus the 15% liquid something all weigh something and I'm NOT putting raw chicken on my scale. I buy a 2.26 lb package really 1.96 lbs of chicken
2. Supplement companies are ruthless six star just got popped for advertising 30 grams when it was truly 24 grams per scoop
3. Its just extra calories over maximum usable so NO BIGGIE better over than under..
4. The Carbs I actually like tend to kill my ability to stop eating them so it kills my daily Caloric goal
5. I'm Complicated and special..
You could weigh your protein powder? I've never used a scoop as a measure...
He's talking about amino spiking (not actual quantity of powder per scoop). Some protein companies were indulging in amino spiking, adding things like glycine, taurine and even creatine to their powders, which resulted in artificially high results when tested for protein content. Six Star was one of them IIRC, along with several others. Here's one article about it: http://www.supplementlabtest.com/articles/what-amino-spiking-your-protein-shake1 -
livingleanlivingclean wrote: »Michael190lbs wrote: »I use 1 gram per body pound and here is my reasoning..
1. That chicken package with the towel under the chicken plus the 15% liquid something all weigh something and I'm NOT putting raw chicken on my scale. I buy a 2.26 lb package really 1.96 lbs of chicken
2. Supplement companies are ruthless six star just got popped for advertising 30 grams when it was truly 24 grams per scoop
3. Its just extra calories over maximum usable so NO BIGGIE better over than under..
4. The Carbs I actually like tend to kill my ability to stop eating them so it kills my daily Caloric goal
5. I'm Complicated and special..
You could weigh your protein powder? I've never used a scoop as a measure...
He's talking about amino spiking (not actual quantity of powder per scoop). Some protein companies were indulging in amino spiking, adding things like glycine, taurine and even creatine to their powders, which resulted in artificially high results when tested for protein content. Six Star was one of them IIRC, along with several others. Here's one article about it: http://www.supplementlabtest.com/articles/what-amino-spiking-your-protein-shake
Ahh! Yes ok... My brain didn't go there.0 -
You can take lb per body weight, but not training hard enough will turn to fat.0
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