Fueling for Recovery: What to Eat After a Hard Workout or Long Run
You don’t get faster from the workout — you get faster from how well you recover after it.
That’s not just a catchy phrase — it’s the truth. Recovery is where the adaptations happen. You can nail every workout on your schedule, but if you're skipping the recovery window, you're leaving gains on the table.
⏰ Why Timing Still Matters
After a hard run, your body is primed to refuel — but that window doesn’t last forever.
29% performance drop when carbs are delayed 3 hours after exercise — Díaz-Lara et al., 2024
50% less glycogen stored when carbs are delayed 2 hours — Ivy et al., 1988
✅ Refuel within 30–60 minutes after training for best results.
💪 What Should Be in a Recovery Snack?
Post-run recovery should include all three:
✅ Carbohydrates to replace glycogen
✅ Protein to rebuild and repair muscle
✅ Fluids + electrolytes to rehydrate
📊 General Guidelines by Body Weight
Body Weight | Carbs | Protein | Fluids |
---|---|---|---|
100 lb | 30–45 g | 15–20 g | 24–32 oz |
130 lb | 45–60 g | 20–25 g | 32–42 oz |
160 lb | 60–75 g | 25–30 g | 42–48 oz |
Adapted from the ISSN Position Stand on Nutrient Timing.
🍽️ Easy Post-Run Fuel Ideas
Chocolate milk + banana
Turkey sandwich + fresh fruit
Smoothie (milk + fruit + protein powder)
Greek yogurt + granola
PB&J + sports drink
Oatmeal + nuts + berries
❌ Recovery Mistakes to Avoid
Only drinking water — No sodium = poor fluid retention
Skipping carbs — Low glycogen = lingering fatigue
Only protein — Misses energy replacement
Waiting too long to eat — Slower muscle repair and more soreness
💡 Coach’s Tip
Protein without carbs is like patching a tire but forgetting the air — it might look fixed, but you're not going anywhere.
🐻 Bears Track Club Tip:
Chocolate milk checks all 3 boxes — carbs, protein, and hydration.
Want something you can print or share? Grab the 1-page recovery reference sheet here:
📚 References
Keep showing up, fueling up, and having fun — we’ve got big goals ahead.
– Coach Luke