The Johny Hendricks Diet

Five minutes into a conversation with country boy Johny Hendricks, one of the happiest UFC fighters you could ever meet, and it’s abundantly clear that the native Oklahoman’s entire life is One Big Playground. The one-punch knockout artist loves to…

Five minutes into a conversation with country boy Johny Hendricks, one of the happiest UFC fighters you could ever meet, and it’s abundantly clear that the native Oklahoman’s entire life is One Big Playground. The one-punch knockout artist loves to fight, loves to hunt, loves to fish, loves spending time with his family, loves to play video games … and pretty much spends every waking hour indulging in one of the aforementioned. About the only deprivation the 29-year-old outdoorsman/pro athlete endures is at the dinner table, where for fight camps he must forgo his constant cravings for McDonald’s double cheeseburgers and fast food in general (a diet, he confided, that actually fueled him to win two NCAA wrestling titles a few years back).

Fresh off Hendricks’ stunning 46-second knockout of Martin Kampmann, a lot of fans are wondering “What’s next?” for the recently de-bearded standout, who has defied many people’s expectations with his rapid rise up the welterweight rankings. Will Hendricks (14-1) get a shot at 170-pound champ Georges St-Pierre, or will he instead have to wait for the much-discussed mega-fight between GSP and Anderson Silva that is still fantasy at this point? Hendricks doesn’t know the answer either, but he knows he won’t be getting back up to 218 pounds in-between fights as he did before the Josh Koscheck fight. When it comes to making weight, Hendricks is a Mike Dolce disciple. As someone who loads up on venison, hog meat and chicken – Hendricks is proof of how Dolce individually tailors each fighter’s diet plan to suit their body types and taste buds.

OH, DEER!

I eat a lot of venison, chicken, eggs, salads. I ate a lot of catfish growing up. During the summer we’d go fishing, then we’d have a fish fry or put our catch in the freezer and cook it up later. In summer time, I try to shoot a hog. Right now it’s deer hunting season; I shot a doe this morning.

THRILL OF THE GAME

I love hunting, being outdoors. It relaxes me. You don’t think about fights or anything else, just the hunt (and) “Are you gonna get game? Are you gonna pull the shot off?” After I pull the trigger, shoot the deer, I gut it and take it to a local processor. They cut it up for you, package it, and then I put it in my freezer. I usually get 30 or 40 pounds of meat from a doe; that will last me little over a month.  I like that it’s very fresh and lean meat and not all the chemicals and preservatives you find in other meat.

EGGS WITH A PUNCH

I eat oatmeal on occasion, but usually I eat three scrambled eggs and I’ll add asparagus, onions, peppers, spinach and tomatoes.

NOT-SO-COUNTRY CARBS

In the off-season I eat so much that when I start training camp Dolce wants to shrink my stomach a little bit so the meals get smaller. He knows I tend to overeat … Dolce lets me eat bread up to a certain point, some pastas. But during camp we’ll mix some venison, asparagus, tomatoes, onions and peppers with quinoa.

THE YOUNGER YEARS

I ate healthy. I ate a lot of chicken, tacos and eggs growing up. But when I was in college at OSU (Oklahoma State University, me and (teammate) Muhammed Lawal, “King Mo”, would go lift weights all the time and eat fast food. I was eating fast food all the time – only red meat: Big Macs, double quarter-pounders, double cheeseburgers. I ate it all. I love it all! I was eating McDonald’s probably three to four times a day. I got really strong lifting and eating all that.

I got to where I was happy with it and could function well so I ate like that pretty much all the way through college. In college wrestling I might lose 12 pounds in a day, so once I got my weight down to 165 pounds I could eat pretty much whatever I wanted. I still stayed lean and performed.

MMA … A DIFFERENT ANIMAL

Now I really can’t eat like that because I have fights every three months and if I eat fast food all the time, and pack on too much, it’s hard to lose all that extra weight. But after a fight I usually treat myself to a week of eating whatever I want to. This past week I’ve been gorging a lot.

BIG BOY ON FIGHT DAY

I might get up to 218 pounds after a fight, so for the Koscheck fight I came in (fight day) at 200 pounds. But for the Kampmann fight I went into the Octagon about 190 pounds and felt a lot faster.

TEA TIME

During camp I only drink two things: water and iced tea. I used to love sweet tea, but Dolce made me get off sweet tea. No sugar for me.

The Benson Henderson Diet

He’s never tasted a drop of alcohol. Never took drugs. He shuns the nightclub scene on Saturday nights in favor of the neighborhood book store. Benson Henderson, for all his life, has been a straight-laced person who loves reading Biblical scriptures…

UFC lightweight champion Benson HendersonHe’s never tasted a drop of alcohol. Never took drugs. He shuns the nightclub scene on Saturday nights in favor of the neighborhood book store.

Benson Henderson, for all his life, has been a straight-laced person who loves reading Biblical scriptures, and immerses himself into books and the martial arts. The reigning UFC lightweight champ, who clashes with Nate Diaz on Dec. 8 (UFC on FOX), is a renowned gym rat; FOUR-A-DAY training sessions are the norm on his schedule. So how does this 29-year-old specimen fuel his world championship frame? “Smooth” discussed the diet that has anchored his rise as one of the sport’s most ultra-aggressive, well-rounded and insanely conditioned fighters. If you’re a sucker for Korean barbeque, stick around …

UFC: Growing up, what were some of the staples of your childhood diet?

Henderson: Coming from a Korean household we had rice for breakfast, lunch and dinner! It would be white rice and some sort of meat – beef or pork. We ate a lot of kimchi, stuffed cabbage, spiced cucumbers or spiced turnips, that kind of stuff.

I had a roommate from Korea back in college and was fascinated that he would eat kimchi for breakfast ..

Yep, breakfast, lunch and dinner!

How much has your diet changed over the years? How frequently do you get to eat some of your favorite Korean foods?

I still eat kimchi now, maybe not every day, but two times a week or so. It’s pretty healthy for you. I eat white rice too even though some people complain ‘Oh, it’s so bad for you!!’ I’m like, ‘Really? You’re going to complain about white rice!?’ You’re going to complain about white rice when people are eating fast food hamburgers and stuff like that? Really!?

I eat Korean food a couple times a week. My mom sends me big huge jars of kimchi and that lasts a couple of months and then she brings me more. My mom is a great cook. She sends me already-made food and all I do is throw it on the stove and heat it up. So it looks like I’m cooking when someone sees me eating and they say, ‘Ah, Henderson, man, you made that?’ I’m like, ‘Oh, yeah, I made it, I cooked it up!”

For people not familiar with Korean food, you go to a Korean restaurant and we’re talking about some huge meals … some serious throwing down. You could easily go eat Korean for two and drop $100 easy at a good place. Do you get to indulge in those big Korean meals very often?

Yes, traditional Korean meals serve LOTS of food, so I definitely can’t do that. I have to stay away from having my (preferred) four, five or six bowls of rice and pork or beef and all that good stuff. But when I’m not in training camp I will definitely indulge myself.

I am well aware that you train FOUR times a day. That is mind-blowing to a lot of people – pro fighters included – who think that much training could lead to overtraining and injuries. What convinced you that working out four times a day would be advantageous? How long have you been doing it and how often do you eat to pull that off?

It just takes practice. There are so many arts to master in mixed martial arts so you have to make time to learn it all. Of course it’s tough, of course it’s hard, it’s not supposed to be easy!

I’ve been doing four-a-days three or four times a week since the very beginning. I might start the day with my strength and conditioning coach, then have a private with my boxing coach or Muay Thai coach. I have a blended arts standup coach and then I need to work with my Brazilian jiu-jitsu instructor and head coach, John Crouch. There are not enough hours in the day to do as much practice as I would like to, but I do the best I can.

My meals during the workouts on those four days are smaller. You obviously can’t have large meals and practice on a full stomach. I eat one hour before my workouts and within an hour after my workouts. I eat eight meals a day, really small meals, but I’m constantly feeding my body.

Give us a breakdown of those meals? Are some of those meals protein shakes or supplements?

I think those are the easy way out. I don’t do any nutritional shakes or supplements or anything like that. I don’t do any protein (supplements), I don’t do anything. Everything I get I get from my food. I like food too much.

I usually eat oatmeal and egg whites for the first meal and maybe a slice of double fiber whole wheat toast. Throughout the rest of the day it’s pretty much brown rice, chicken breast … sometimes I’ll switch it up and have ground lean turkey or fish. I’ll also add some veggies.

Tell us a little more about the philosophy behind your aversion to supplements?

I’ve just never taken any supplements. It’s not because of anything I’ve read or heard, it’s just my own personal preference. It’s just something I don’t want to do.

Nighttime eating … what’s the latest you allow yourself to eat?

My last meal of the day is normally 10 or 10:30 (p.m.). It might be chicken and a big salad. I won’t eat rice that late.

Who taught you the most about diet?

For me it was a lot of trial and error. When you’re younger you can get away with a lot of stuff and as you get older you have to be smarter about it. My college wrestling coach (at The Blair College in Nebraska) taught me a lot about diet and nutrition. Not too long ago I hired a nutritionist who worked with me for about three or four fights. He helped me out a ton.

Are you still working with a nutritionist?

No, not now. He gave me a ton of knowledge and that’s what I wanted. I still use a lot of the information that he gave me.

Do you have a preferred meal you eat after weigh-ins or before your fights?

No, I don’t let myself think like that. I can’t be thinking, ‘Hey, I want lasagna … Well guess what – you’re in Japan, you can’t have lasagna!”

Now I do have a post-victory meal. As much as possible I try to hit up a Korean barbeque restaurant because that’s my stuff!

The Jake Ellenberger Diet

More than anything, what unfolds at UFC 154 will shape the 170-pound hierarchy headed into 2013 and perhaps put Georges St-Pierre and Anderson Silva on a “catch weight” collision course. While four other welterweights will have their chance to shin…

More than anything, what unfolds at UFC 154 will shape the 170-pound hierarchy headed into 2013 and perhaps put Georges St-Pierre and Anderson Silva on a “catch weight” collision course.

While four other welterweights will have their chance to shine in the limelight Saturday night in Montreal, no one should forget about Jake Ellenberger, who will have the night off, watching the pay-per-view broadcast in Orange County, Calif. The 27-year-old U.S. Marine Corps veteran is a tireless worker, has won seven of his past eight UFC contests and 17 KOs prove that he owns arguably the heaviest hands in the division.

Precisely because he’s not fighting this weekend (and thusly not burdened by more important matters, such as the misery of weight cutting), Ellenberger (28-5) found time to share the nutritional habits and philosophies that have made him a force to be reckoned with.

TYPICAL DAY

Ellenberger: I eat a lot of eggs, chicken, and fish. I might eat 3-4 scrambled eggs each day, though sometimes I eat 6-8 eggs in a day. I always eat the egg yolks, too. I’m not a fan of egg whites; egg whites are for bodybuilders. It’s good fat and I need the energy so I eat the yolks.

And some steak. I’m a big meat eater. You know, I’m from Nebraska and we eat a lot of beef. I also love seafood. I usually stay away from steak and red meat as I get close to weigh-ins.

BREAKFAST

I can’t go without eating. I don’t go anywhere without eating. During a fight camp, inside of six to eight weeks, I’ll have oatmeal in the morning before a high-intensity workout.

On my off days, I might eat scrambled eggs and two pieces of Ezekiel toast. My favorite is the cinnamon raisin. Sometimes I’ll put almond butter and honey, or agave, over the toast.

SUPPLEMENTS

I don’t take a lot of supplements. Every once in a while, after a long, hard workout, I might have a protein shake. But I usually rely on fish or meat, brown rice or quinoa, beans, greens and cooked vegetables. I eat a lot of vegetables.

Something I like to cook is quinoa, peppers and eggs. Throw that together and you’ve got an awesome meal.

NUMBER OF MEALS PER DAY

I eat five to six meals per day. I try not to eat after 9 p.m.

A good friend of mine, Mike Dolce, I’ve worked a lot with him on cutting weight. I’ve known him since 2006. I met him when I lived in Portland (Oregon) and we trained together. He knows what he’s doing!

GRILLMASTER

I’m a big griller, so if I’m not training for a fight then I’m grilling all the time: Red meat, steak, chicken, garlic, asparagus … I enjoy having backyard barbeques. Even now I can do that because the weather is pretty nice right now in (southern) California.

LIQUID FUEL

Ellenberger: I was raised drinking any kind of water, from the faucet or wherever. But when I’m training I usually drink reverse-osmosis and de-ionized water and then I’ll add some trace minerals. I drink at least a couple gallons a day. I also love Iced Tea and lemonade – Arnold Palmer is my favorite. But I drink iced tea – green tea or black tea – with no sugar when I’m trying to lose weight.

Torn ACL Unites GSP, Dominick Cruz

There will be mass hysteria at Bell Centre this Saturday night. A curiosity beckons: How many of the frenzied thousands do you think will be pulling for Carlos Condit?Ten people? Fifteen? 20?!A rough estimate: A tiny decimal of the crowd will be cheeri…

There will be mass hysteria at Bell Centre this Saturday night. A curiosity beckons: How many of the frenzied thousands do you think will be pulling for Carlos Condit?

Ten people?

Fifteen?

20?!

A rough estimate: A tiny decimal of the crowd will be cheering for Condit. If 20,000-plus pack the arena in GSP’s hometown, maybe 50 will be Condit aficionados. Tops.

It’s no surprise that GSP, a dominant champion armed with an exceptional and endearing humility, has millions of fans. One of them, I discovered recently, is Dominick Cruz (19-1).
 
Under normal circumstances, the Arizona-born Cruz might be neutral or pulling for the American (Condit) in the title scrap. But tearing the Anterior Cruciate Ligament in his knee – as GSP did – struck a deep chord of empathy in the bantamweight world champion. Still unable to spar, and still enduring grueling bouts of rehabilitation on a daily basis, a big part of Cruz will be living vicariously through GSP this weekend. Watching intently back in San Diego, Cruz’ heart and emotions will be fully invested in the main event and its outcome.

“I’m somewhat nervous about it, as weird as that is,” the 27-year-old said. “I use other athletes as motivation for me. I look at what (NFL player) Adrian Peterson of the Minnesota Vikings has done … he’s back to full form and looks awesome … and it makes me think, ‘If he can do it I can do it.’ You got GSP – depending on how that fight goes, my mind will adapt. If he wins, I say to myself, ‘If he can do it I can do it.’

“If he loses, I’ll tell myself, ‘He couldn’t do it, but I will.’”

Cruz raves about how All-Pro Peterson has recovered as quickly as any prominent athlete ever has from the devastating knee injury.

“He was back within under nine months,” Cruz said. “He was back running sprints uphill at four months.”

While inspired by Peterson, Cruz also believes MMA and football place different stresses on the knee.

“Our sport is, in my opinion, much more lethal on the knee,” Cruz said, surmising more preparation and time is necessary for a return to the cage than to the football field.

GSP(22-2) hasn’t fought live in 19 months, raising obvious questions about “ring rust” and whether the best GSP ever can be expected to show up (and some believe anything less than the best GSP will be dethroned Saturday by his most dangerous opponent ever). Condit is a gentleman outside of the cage, but a cold-blooded mercenary inside of that unforgiving space. It will likely be the first time in over a year that GSP has someone kicking at his legs with everything they’ve got. How GSP copes with those leg kicks could be a huge X-factor in this bout. As well as anyone, Cruz knows the psychological battles GSP has had with himself.

“The biggest problem with the ACL tear is the mental aspect of it,” Cruz said. “You now have to teach your body to have trust in a knee that you’ve been babying for, in his case, 11 months. So now you have to put that out of your mind and not think about it, not worry about it. That’s the hardest part of the whole situation: Having faith in that knee.”

Which GSP shows up Saturday night? The athlete extraordinaire who hasn’t lost in five and a half years and typically wins by a landslide? Or a less confident fighter that no one recognizes?

“We won’t know until fight day,” Cruz replied. “We just won’t. He’ll either look like himself or he won’t. This is the worst thing I’ve ever been through in my entire life. It’s horrible … But I do think that GSP has proven to be one of the most mentally strong people there is, so if anybody can do it, it’s him. I wish him the best and I cross my fingers for him because we share the same injury and I wouldn’t wish it on my worst enemy.”

 

The Martin Kampmann Diet

No offense to Diego Sanchez, but there is no doubt in my mind that Martin Kampmann deserved to have his hand raised after their bloody fisticuffs. And Kampmann vs. Jake Shields … well, I believe the wrong guy (Shields) got the nod that night, too. So…

No offense to Diego Sanchez, but there is no doubt in my mind that Martin Kampmann deserved to have his hand raised after their bloody fisticuffs. And Kampmann vs. Jake Shields … well, I believe the wrong guy (Shields) got the nod that night, too.

So, in my view at least, Kampmann has rattled off seven straight wins against a virtual murderers row in the UFC’s welterweight division. When I study the Denmark native’s trail of conquests over the past three years – including Jake Ellenberger, Thiago Alves, Rick Story and Paulo Thiago – I am dumbfounded as to how such a crowd-pleasing, top-notch fighter isn’t more revered and appreciated by fans. The Las Vegas transplant should be knocking on the door of stardom, to be honest. The fact that he has thus far been underappreciated must be somehow tied to his relatively low-key personality, because when it comes to drama and action, even the great Georges St-Pierre’s fights pale in comparison to a Martin Kampmann bout. The latter leaves it all in the cage every time and always daringly hunts for the finish.

So I’m plenty hyped to watch Kampmann battle heavy-handed Johny Hendricks Nov. 17 in the UFC 154 co-main event, mindful that the outcome might determine the No. 1 contender at welterweight. I caught up with Kampmann this week and picked his brain about the nutrition plan he relied upon to get down from 205 pounds for the most important fight of his life.

AFTER HIS LAST FIGHT IN JUNE (KO OVER ELLENBERGER)

I had knee surgery after the fight and got up to 205 pounds. After a fight I’ll eat anything. I like meat but don’t eat much meat during training camp. After a fight, though, I might go to Texas de Brazil and go crazy. Or I’ll stock up on Ben & Jerry’s ice cream and I’m glad that only comes pint-sized and in small sizes because otherwise I’d eat too much of it. If I’m not training for a fight I love In & Out Burgers. They’re great. But I can’t eat three Double-Doubles at In & Out, have a milkshake and then go train. You wouldn’t want to eat that and then get punched in the stomach, that’s for sure.

After the Ellenberger fight I went home to Denmark and ate a lot home cooking. I didn’t get to do any cardio or MMA training so I got a little heavy.

CUTTING FROM 205 TO 171

I have been heavier for this fight than usual because of the knee surgery. A week and a half ago I weighed 195 (pounds). So I’ve had to worry about my weight a little earlier than normal. Usually I don’t think about it until two weeks before the fight. But this time I started cutting down early on how much I eat.

But usually cutting to 170 is no problem at all. Even when I was fighting at 185, I could eat whatever I wanted and then, two weeks before the fight, I would start cutting down on my calories.

DANISH DISHES HE MISSES

When I’m in Denmark I eat a lot of seafood. We have a lot of good dairy products, including a special kind of chocolate milk. The milk in stores is guaranteed to come from the cow within the past 24 hours, so it’s very fresh.

Of course we have good Danishes and candy stuff, though I don’t eat them as much. I love Smorrebrod, which is an open-faced sandwich that most Danish people eat. It’s a special kind of dark bread covered with salami, seafood – any kind of toppings. You eat it with a knife and a fork. I love that.

BREAKFAST

I eat a big bowl of raw (uncooked) oats with unsweetened soymilk every day. I’ll put some raisins or strawberries on top. I eat it like it’s cereal. It’s a solid meal that gives me good energy and keeps me going the rest of the day.

LUNCH AND DINNER

After my morning practice I’ll usually eat some brown rice or quinoa with vegetables. I try to eat healthy. I stay away from red meat during camp and eat a lot of fish and salmon. Sometimes I will eat Rugbrod (the dark and seeded bread that is popular in Denmark), which is like a Rye bread and is very healthy (high in whole grains and fiber).

For dinner I eat similarly. I’m very fortunate to have a wife that cooks. She makes me lasagna, salmon, stuff like that. Maybe some brown rice or quinoa, baked yams, onions, beets or a salad on the side.

THE HITMAN’S TAKE ON SUPPLEMENTS

I’m not a big supplement guy. Sometimes I might take a greens supplement or a multi-vitamin, or a protein powder with no flavor and little additives. I might mix the protein powder into a fruit smoothie with orange juice and frozen strawberries, otherwise it tastes like s—. I don’t like taking protein powders with additives because you don’t really know what that stuff is and it’s probably not good for your body.

ORGANIC

I like to eat organic. The more organic, the better. My wife does the grocery shopping and she tries to buy organic, but we’re also price conscious so she won’t buy organic if something is ridiculously expensive.

FIGHTING A FORMER TRAINING PARTNER

I’ve trained with Johny lots of times. He helped me a lot with my wrestling and I helped him with his striking so we know each other pretty well. But that won’t be a factor in our fight.

When Johny and I sparred he was pretty raw. He was pretty much a wrestler who was learning jiu-jitsu. He had a good ground game. His boxing at the time wasn’t very technical but he still had heavy hands so you had to respect that. But I feel good about this fight with John and I’m confident that I will beat him.

Nutrition’s Ultimate Guinea Pig: The Middle-Aged Athlete

This week’s nutritional column kicks off with a twist. I’ve had the privilege of interviewing some of sport’s finest in this space (such as Dominick Cruz, Urijah Faber, Mike Dolce, Forrest Griffin, Tito Ortiz, Demetrious Johnson, vegetarian Aaron…

This week’s nutritional column kicks off with a twist. I’ve had the privilege of interviewing some of sport’s finest in this space (such as Dominick Cruz, Urijah Faber, Mike Dolce, Forrest Griffin, Tito Ortiz, Demetrious Johnson, vegetarian Aaron Simpson and a host of others). I have diligently studied these men — who I consider to be the hardest working athletes in the world — and the dietary decisions fueling their pursuit of peak performances. Picking their brains is a passion of mine. Yet some of my reasons for sponging as much nutritional (and other) knowledge as possible from these Alpha Males are, quite frankly, entirely selfish.

You see, I am 40 years old. Don’t look 40, don’t feel 40, but nevertheless my birth certificate and driver’s license frequently remind me that I was born in 1972. The increased amount of time it takes for injuries to heal reminds me that I’m 40. A salt and pepper pattern in my beard reminds me that I’m 40. Twenty-something women often give me a strange look when I reveal (with some reluctance, I might add) them I’m 40 – and their “Your almost as old as my dad” expressions remind me that I’m 40.

It’s a mixed bag, folks. Because experience is a wonderful teacher and ally to have when navigating an ever-changing and chaotic world. Four decades into my life, I actually feel that 40-year-old ME would most definitely manhandle the 23-year-old ME in a scrap, would absolutely school him in a game of basketball or a grappling match, and is all-around much healthier. Yet the 800-pound gorilla never completely leaves the room. It is impossible not to occasionally ponder how much longer my athletic ascension will continue. Whether you are a weekend warrior, amateur athlete or a pro, Father Time eventually intervenes. This is a certainty. The north of 35 years old athlete often gets caught in psychological warfare against the ultimate enemy: Himself.

In the end, for competitive athletes at least, it really boils down to two choices. 1) Do you want to leave on top – on your own magnificent terms with a lot more left in the tank, as athletes such as John Elway, Michael Phelps and Barry Sanders did – or #2) “ride it until the wheels fall off” (as Donald Cerrone once told me) as pretty much 99 percent of all elite athletes do until they are a fraction of their former playing selves, embarrassing themselves, with pundits and fans screaming “Retire!!!” to them on an almost weekly basis.

I was around in the early 2000s when Randy Couture was still blowing minds and ragdolling men 15 years his junior. I mean, from the time Couture was 38 or 39, almost every press conference the guy ever participated in inevitably devolved into the same, obvious circus of insinuations: “OK, how much longer until this guy gets old overnight inside of the cage?”

Nobody interviewed Couture without bringing up age-related questions. This monotonous song-and-dance literally followed the legend around for nearly a decade until his retirement at age 47. I remember interviewing Randy and how he would talk about the science of peak training, about taking a lot more rest during camps than his younger days. He always preached eating “greens” and monitoring a good alkalinity to acidity ratio, long before kale and PH levels became a bigger deal to a growing number of athletes hiring their own nutritionists.

Anyway, I honestly believe that the middle-aged, age-defying athletes like Couture are more than just inspirational – they are ideal guinea pigs for the rest of us. We see teenagers and twenty-something athletic phenoms who eat darn near whatever they want and still light up the competition (I could give you a long list of them, including NFLer Chad Johnson, former world champ Miguel Torres up until a few years ago, and current UFC flyweight champ Demetrious Johnson). But as an athlete ages, they need to claw and scratch for every advantage. The margin for error is slimmer. You can’t just eat whatever you want. You can’t just hit the gym everyday like a raging psycho and “Do Work” as the younger crowd so casually espouses. Forty-something eyes don’t see punches or 95 mph fastballs coming as well. Reflexes slow down. Muscle and injury recovery takes longer. And all of the sudden what you eat becomes a HUGE deal (assuming you give a damn and still want to daringly pursue peak performances).

Every person is unique and different. I believe that discovering your own ideal diet requires many years of experimentation, evolution and open-mindedness. What follows are MY OWN insights and experiences regarding nutritional approaches I have adopted from fighters and other worthwhile resources. These are just my opinions about what has worked for me. Hopefully some of these insights will be beneficial to you as well.

BREAKFAST

 Since I first started this column months ago, I would say the majority of fighters eat oatmeal for breakfast. It’s a very solid choice: Whole Grain oats are a great complex carb (source of energy) and easy to digest (so that you have plenty of energy for your workout or morning meeting, whatever the case may be).

A distant second for many athletes are egg whites and/or homemade vegetable and fruit shakes from a juicer. Again, the shakes are typically packed with raw nutrients and easy to digest.

My choice: Love oatmeal with raisins or RAW honey, or I go with a raw veggie and fruit shake. I also frequently eat kale or spinach salad with carrots, quinoa, Extra virgin olive oil and spicy spirulina sunflower seeds on top. I actually enjoy the salad (easy to digest) but imagine it’s a hard sell for most of you at 8:30 in the morning.

POST-WORKOUT MEAL

The consensus from everything I’ve read, and almost every fighter I’ve interviewed, is that it is ideal to start re-fueling within 30 minutes of your workout. Get some protein and complex carbs in you, and sugar and fructose can actually be beneficial in this window because they transport the protein, etc. into your cells quicker (thereby speeding up recovery). Allow no more than 90 minutes to pass between the end of your workout and this refueling.

My choice: I’ve really experimented in this area. For a time I relied on whey protein shakes with water, adding Branch Chained Amino Acids and glutamine. Then I scrapped that and turned to Vegan proteins (brown rice or pea proteins), which in my opinion were cleaner (less sugar) and contained more natural ingredients. Important note: I felt just as strong consuming the Vegan proteins as I did consuming the whey proteins. There was no noticeable drop-off. If anything, the more vegetarian and greens I consumed (usually about 90 percent of my diet) the better my cardio and recovery seemed to be.

At present: Right after an intense workout I eat one or two organic apples with maybe four or five tablespoons of organic peanut butter. Why? It’s easy to prepare. Gives me plenty of protein and some carbs and natural sugars. A lot of people operate on the assumption that whey and meat proteins are superior to, say, bean and nut proteins. I used to subscribe to this “manly” and popular theory as well. Until I read the must-read book, “The China Study” by Dr. T. Colin Campbell (one of the pre-eminent nutrition-centered biochemists of our time). Dr. Campbell’s opinion, after more than 40 years studying food science under microscopes and helping arrange the most comprehensive nutrition study ever conducted, is that protein is protein. Period. That’s good enough for me.

I know a lot of people scoff and ridicule athletes like Aaron Simpson, Mac Danzig and Arian Foster for their vegetarian ways, but why are so many people criticizing a diet they have never even tried for themselves? Is that really an intelligent approach to forming your opinion on something? Why not at least try SOME vegetarian dishes and see how your body responds rather than bashing what you’ve never experienced? (For the record, I’m not saying you should go TOTALLY vegetarian or vegan, just sprinkle some into your diet to see how your body responds).

SUPPLEMENTS

A lot of fighters spend hundreds of dollars per month on their supplements or they have sponsors who give them hundreds of dollars of product. I used to be of similar mindset and spent roughly $300 or so a month on nutritional supplements (everything from Alpha Lipoic Acid, to probiotics, to Whey and Vegan protein powders, and Liquid Kyolic, among others).

Then I spoke with our sport’s nutrition Jedi, Mike Dolce, who convinced me otherwise. Dolce enthusiastically promotes that athletes, ideally, should meet their nutritional needs via real foods. That is to say, a whey protein shake is NOT equal or superior to a slab of bison. And a Vegan protein shake (clean and raw as it may be) is not equal or superior to kidney beans or peanut butter proteins. That is Dolce’s theory and I subscribe to it as well. Utilizing this wisdom my post-workout recovery and energy levels seem equal or greater to my performances when I was dropping $300 on supplements per month. My supplement bill now hovers around $60 a month and I feel strong (still buy chia seed, goji berries, Cacao powder (thanks to a Renzo Gracie tip!), Omega-3 fish oil, Flaxseed oil, multi-vitamin, B- and D- vitamins, Enzymes and Chlorophyll every month).

ORGANIC

Recently, as you may have seen, news headlines nationwide broadcasted the findings of a group of American scientists claiming they had discovered that organic food provided no more nutritional value than non-organic food. To which myself and many other conscientious eaters think, “Duh!!!” I don’t doubt for one second the veracity of their findings, though these scientists and the reporters drumming up these misleading headlines missed an obvious and even bigger point: People like me don’t eat an organic apple because we think it’s necessarily any more nutritious than the pesticide-covered apple. Many of us pay extra for organic because we have no idea how a pesticide or Genetically Modified Organism (GMO) will cause damage to our cells (or our children’s cells) over time! To me, it’s just good old-fashioned common sense. Why would you want so many extra chemicals lurking in your food and entering into your body? In my mind, that just can’t be a good thing for our health.

According to the New York Times, former First Lady Laura Bush “insisted that fresh organic foods be served in the White House. And U.S. News online ran a story in 2009 titled, “The Obamas Turn the White House Organic.”

Now, if the focus on organic is good enough for the last two presidents and their families, well, it’s good enough for me. Which is why I eat organic the vast majority of the time – as much as possible (lumping with me the likes of Urijah Faber, Aaron Simpson, Mike Dolce and Kyle Kingsbury, among others).

MEAT

I love a good steak just like the next guy. Love grilled chicken, too. But it’s rare that I eat red meat (unless I hit up a Brazilian steak house) and I eat chicken maybe once every two weeks. For me, red meat just takes too long to digest and robs me of energy. And I’m worried about the ingredients (hormones, antibiotics, etc.) in a lot of our chicken supply. And, as I stated earlier, I feel just as physically strong and recover even faster from strenuous workouts relying on beans and nuts primarily.

Now again, not everyone agrees. I’ve sat next to Randy Couture and seen the guy just devour chicken breast off the bone. And that guy is as age-defying as it gets. So, whatever you prefer. Just saying what works for me. And if you ever do start eating meat (as with anything), my advice is to transition gradually. Over months, not days or weeks. Dramatic diet changes usually won’t last.

SALADS

If you’re going to be peak healthy, in my mind, then you’ve pretty much got to eat a lot of salads or rely on a juicer. One of the biggest misconceptions about healthy eating is that it will mean death to your taste buds. My experience is that it’s not true. I actually eat a greater variety of food now than ever and I actually read labels – which is a good thing, because the further you progress into conscientious eating the more you may ask yourself, “What is That doing in our food?”

I eat a lot of raw kale, spinach, onions, avocados (fat is so underrated and so vital for an athlete), green olives, tomatoes, artichoke, hot sauce, jalapeno peppers, cayenne pepper and garlic.

I am a big fan of juicers – kale, spinach, carrots, apples, ginger, blueberries, almond milk. The folks at Blentek actually gave me a blender and it’s amazing how you can get all your nutrients and then 20 minutes later be able to practice. Digesting a raw shake is so easy.

ONE LAST THING

I’ve got news for you folks, even those of us who study this stuff A LOT, and read labels and care about organic and GMO’s , etc… we’re all still relative neophytes. It’s an ongoing, never-ending process. Like being a master of anything, there is no such thing because the landscape always changes. Can you master golf? Can you master learn all there is to know about a martial art? No. But you can be a lot better tomorrow and a year from now and 10 years from now if you set goals, work toward them and embark on the journey. You need to find what works best FOR YOU.

These are some of the things I have found that have helped me on my ever-evolving journey into middle age. Hope they help you, too!