Back9Nutrition; Sports Nutrition designed for Golfers

 

Fruits & Vegetables


Fruits and vegetables are essential for athletes; they provide more vitamins and minerals per serving than any other food!  In addition, they help fight off illness and disease.  Vitamins and minerals are what make metabolism run…without them you cannot digest the food you eat.


Athletes require a greater amount of vitamins and minerals than the average person due to their high training levels.  However, mega-dosing does not help and can actually be dangerous to the body.  Consuming adequate fruits and vegetables in addition to a multi-vitamin provides an athlete adequate vitamin/mineral nutrition.  Remember, too, that energy bars and shakes are fortified with lots of vitamins and minerals.


Try to grab at least one fruit and vegetable at lunch and dinner (more is better!) and fruit for snacks.  You can eat fruit with cheese or peanut butter, mix it in a smoothie, add it to salads, & mix it with yogurt.  You can add vegetables to your diet by putting lettuce/tomato on a sandwich or wrap, adding a salad at dinner, eating them raw with low-fat dip or cheese, and ordering them as a substitute at a restaurant.


Purpose

Provide the body with vitamins, minerals, & fiber

Provide nutrients that aid in metabolism

Provide the body with phytochemicals that fight against disease


2 Types of Vegetables

Starchy: potatoes, sweet potatoes, corn, peas, winter squash

Non-starchy: all of the rest (broccoli, cauliflower, green beans, carrots, peppers, zucchini,

yellow squash, mushrooms, asparagus, snap peas, leafy lettuce, cabbage, etc.)


How much should be in your diet?

3-5 servings of vegetables a day

2-4 servings of fruit a day


Best Choices

Eat fruits & veggies with skin

Get multiple colors in a day...eat the rainbow

Eat more non-starchy vegetables than starchy

Eat half of your plate of veggies at lunch & dinner

Don’t cover them in sauces, butters, creams, or sugar


Serving Size

VegetablesFruits

• 1 cup raw• 1 medium fruit

• 1 cup lettuce• 1/2 banana

• 1/2 cup cooked• 1/2 cup chopped fruit

• 6 oz vegetable juice• 4 oz fruit juice







Amy Goodson, MS, RD, CSSD, LD

Sports Dietitian

amy@back9performance.com



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