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The Top 5 Crossfit Diet and Nutrition Books PDF Print E-mail
Written by Keith   
Saturday, 12 July 2008 08:21

The Top 5 Crossfit Diet and Nutrition Books

Your relationship with food is the most important determinant of your longterm well-being. The first thing that you should think about when you want to make a change in your life is your diet. Nutrition is the foundation of the development of an athlete and of humans in general.

Hierarchy

When you start to think about what you eat there are some basic questions that you need answered. Here is a guide to the most recommended diet and nutrition books here at Crossfit Virtuosity. The basic guideline that we follow at Crossfit is to "eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and no sugar. Keep intake to levels that will support exercise but not body fat." If you want to get a little more information you should read the following books.

Bookstack

  1. What should I eat? The Paleo Diet by Dr. Loren Cordain. Dr. Cordain has made a great argument that we should eat as our caveman ancestors ate. He points out a strong correlation between the development of agriculture and modern diseases. Get back to basics with the Paleo Diet: meat, fish, vegetables, nuts, seeds and some fruit.
  2. Where does my food come from? The Omnivore's Dilemma by Michael Pollan. Omnivore’s Dilemma is a fascinating book on the modern food chain. Where does your food come from? Probably not from where you would think or hope. This book examines some of the real costs of our modern agriculture system and the impossibly long food chain from the giant monoculture farms through the processing plants and the huge oil-consuming transportation system. It makes you think long and hard about your food choices. It is also the best written of all the books on this list.
  3. How much should I eat? Enter the Zone by Dr. Barry Sears. Ultimately if you are going to diet, you need to think about how much you are eating. We’ve all heard the phrases “eat in moderation” and “too much of a good thing.” Portions make a difference--A huge difference. Following the Zone Diet is the best, way to measure your portions. It not only works for losing weight but, more importantly, it is a performance diet. If you really want to be a star crossfitter (or merely a better crossfitter) you had better start Zoning.
  4. Why do these diets work? Good Calories, Bad Calories by Gary Taubes. Taubes has written the most thought out and well-researched diet book to date. It has a lot of good information a helps explain why all this dieting works and doesn’t work.
  5. What else do I need to know? Lights Out: Sugar, Sleep and Survival by Bent Formby and T. S. Wiley. This is probably the worst written book on the list and the most wildly speculative. However, the writers postulate a fascinating theory that should not be dismissed too quickly. Light pollution effects our sleep habits, which effect our hormones, which effect our eating habits and ultimately leads to obesity and disease. The writers claim that light pollution causes our bodies to “think” we are approaching the end of summer when the days are longest. Thus we crave more sugar and carbohydrates to store up energy for the cold winter. Turn off ALL the lights, sleep more and eat less sugar and watch the pounds melt away.


Those are the books you should definitely buy. However, definitely do NOT buy The Paleo Diet for Athletes. Initially you will say, “but we are Crossfitters and athletes so this should apply to us.” However, in this book Dr. Cordain only concerns himself with endurance athletes. He does not address the needs of athletes that use other energy pathways. The biggest problem with the book is that Dr. Cordain all but reverses some of his basic beliefs about the Paleo Diet and advocates eating more simple carbohydrates and non-paleo type foods to get more sugar into your system. Lame.


For more tips on eating right and staying healthy subscribe to the Crossfit Journal, but specifically read Issue 21 on how to follow the Zone Diet.
Subscribe to The Performance Menu
Read the following blogs.
Mark Sisson’s blog Mark’s Daily Apple
Robb Wolf’s blog

Related articles:
Corn
The F Word
How to Start Your Meal Plan

Was this article helpful to you? Do you have any other great diet books to recommend? Please post your thoughts to the comments.

Comments (7)Add Comment
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written by Peter Haas, July 13, 2008
Great list. I hadn't read omnivore's dilemma or good calories, but I've heard they were good. I'll go ahead and order them.

Thanks too for the headsup on Paleo for Athletes, I was wondering if it was relevant for CF or just for endurance athletes.
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written by Jeff, July 13, 2008
Keith
I remember being recommended "Mastering the Zone" over "Enter the Zone", from a more practical and less theoretical perspective. How do you compare the two and why do you pick Enter over Mastering?
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written by Hopefully Anon., July 14, 2008
For websites, I recommend Art deVany's: http://www.arthurdevany.com/

It is (mostly) subscrition-based now ($25 per year), but well worth it.
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SPREADSHEET/FOOD LOG
written by Beryl, July 14, 2008
Keith--big reader of your blog -I am on the west coast! Any suggestions for a simple spreadsheet to record food. I follow a paleo diet and want to start looking at proportions more closely
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written by Keith W., July 14, 2008
Jeff
I have read through a couple of Zone books and I find them repetitive. I think once you get the basics down it doesn't really matter. Once you get your mind around 7g protein, 9g carbohydrates and 3g fat, you've got all you need to know. Until you start multiplying fat blocks. smilies/smiley.gif I personally did not find Mastering The Zone any more helpful than Enter the Zone but I did not find it any worse. Flip a coin.
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written by Keith W., July 14, 2008
Hello Beryl
I don't know. There are several online programs that I know people are using to log their food and most of these will do calculations for calories and everything else. If you are able to go online everyday and log it then they'll work great. I know there are also some programs for Blackberry and Palm that can be used to log your meals.
I just use a plain old composition notebook to write down my workouts and my meals. Not very high tech. When I'm zoning I usually eat the same meals a lot so it's easier on many levels.

I will look into it some more... also if you find something that works for you, please let me know.
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written by Beryl, July 14, 2008
Keith
I have always used FITDAY.COM. I used it when I was a low carb dieter eating steak and protein powder and I used it when I was a raw food vegan. I have found paleo works best for me but I am trying to keep my protein up since I started (well started might be an exaggeration--I have been doing a modified version for 3 weeks--did 4X400 with the squats today). I am changing my emphasis from a mostly vegetable/fruit and fish diet (with the emphasis on fruit---) to add in more fish, some chicken, eggs and red meat. Difficult--especially for the first meal. I am at a good weight--just want to be stronger. I was looking for a combo log where I can transfer fitday.cm's data over. I am just lazy. I can make my ownsmilies/smiley.gif
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Last Updated ( Saturday, 12 July 2008 13:33 )