Home Cycling Should I eat real food or sports nutrition products for cycling? A look at what’s best for fuelling a ride, and whether ultra-processed items are an issue

Should I eat real food or sports nutrition products for cycling? A look at what’s best for fuelling a ride, and whether ultra-processed items are an issue

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Cycling is full of rites of passage, whether it’s falling over sideways outside a crowded pub garden in clipless pedals or, on a more positive note, riding your first century. Somewhere along the line, you’re also likely to experience the bonk for the first time. Often memorable but never fun, it’s a need for food, or sugary drink, that goes way beyond hunger or thirst – rather, it’s a feeling of having been hollowed out and completely drained of energy.

The usual remedy involves repairing to the nearest garage forecourt and consuming your bodyweight in confection and sugary drinks. Once you’ve experienced it, you’re unlikely to forget the importance of fuelling your riding – and what happens when we don’t consume enough. The idea for sufficient energy is obvious enough, but there is a vast array of options on where exactly that energy comes from. Should we choose ‘real’ food – bananas, home-made flapjacks and the like – or pre-packaged sports nutrition, gels and powdered drinks?

James Shrubsall

A lifelong cyclist and cycling fan, James’s racing days (and most of his fitness) are now behind him. But he still rides regularly, both on the road and on the gravelly stuff. James is feeling vindicated in his lifelong faith in chocolate milkshake and sarnies.

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