Early season century – fueling for the long ride

I rode a century today with my husband, who also follows a ketogenic diet. We stayed at a hotel the night before so we knew breakfast would be a challenge. Since there are a lot of questions about how to fuel for a long ride on a ketogenic diet, I thought I’d share what we eat during the day in case it is helpful to others.

First of all, I need to point out that we have been following a ketogenic diet for 4 years now, so our bodies are fully adapted to burning both carbs and ketones for energy. I say this so nobody reads this and tries this before their body is fully fat-adapted.

For breakfast, Jonathan had a Stabilyze bar, and half of a peanut butter sandwich made with vegan oat bread (no grains or eggs, and low carb). I had a full peanut butter sandwich and half of an Atkins shake. We also had coffee with cream. Neither of us ate again for about 38 miles, when he had some peanut butter filled pretzels, and I had a handful of salted almonds and a bite of a Stabilyze bar. The rest of the day I tried to finish the Stabilyze bar but was unable to, but did have a handful of peanuts and almonds periodically, as did Jonathan. We each had one bottle with ZipFizz and the rest of the day we drank water.

Our total riding time was 6 hours, and neither of us was very hungry when we finished but we forced ourselves to eat a hot dog at the finish. I’m guessing our ketone levels were pretty high which was why we weren’t very hungry. We carried all of our own food as aid stations typically have snacks that are high in sugar and carbs. The only thing we ate at the aid stations was peanuts, and we shared half of a banana with peanut butter on it at one stop.

The biggest thing for us was staying hydrated, so we tried to be very diligent about drinking. I have many more sore muscles than Jonathan, but we both feel pretty good about this early season century. I hope those of you reading find this helpful, and I welcome your thoughts and questions!

4 thoughts on “Early season century – fueling for the long ride”

  1. You said you were not hungry after a 6-hour ride. I ride almost all rides fasted and only drink water. I finish usually with a blood glucose around 70 mg/dL and ketones at about .50 mmol/L so you can tell I am only marginally keto adapted. Before and after these rides I am definitely not hungry. Usually I am thirsty, but that is my fault for drinking too little. Some day I will venture into the 12-hour rides and this will require fueling, but for now it is water only on long easy rides.

    1. I am the same. The only difference is that my glucose is close to 100. I guess that climbing and hard efforts mobilize liver and muscle glycogen. And with glycogen running around (hence the high readings) it’s normal that ketones go down.
      But after one hour of ending the ride, glucose comes down to 80 ish and ketones to 1-1.2.

  2. This is fascinating because some cyclists are obsessed with replacing the calories they burn on a ride. It seems like you guys aren’t worried about it. Do you try and eat more later on on the day to replenish the calories you burned or you just don’t worry about it?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *