The Real-Life Diet of an Ultramarathoner Who Stays Away from Carbs
A look at the diet of Dean Karnazes, who once ran 50 marathons in 50 days and adheres to a mostly Paleo food intake.
Professional
athletes don't get to the top by accident. It takes superhuman levels
of time, dedication, and focus—and that includes paying attention to
what they put in their bellies. In this series, GQ takes a look
at what pro athletes in different sports eat on a daily basis to
perform at their best. Here's a look at the daily diet of ultramarathon
runner Dean Karnazes.
Running
is the easiest sport to get into casually, because all you need are
shoes and legs. As a result, there’s a lot of lore and common wisdom
about the ideal runner’s diet: Everyone knows that the night before a
big run—whether you’ve signed up for a 5k or a full-on marathon—you’re
supposed to carbo-load on stuff like diavolo pasta, brown rice, or
buckwheat pancakes.
Well... supposed to. “That’s so passé,” says Dean Karnazes.
Karnazes,
52, is an ultramarathoner who ran 350 miles—or a little less than the
distance between Los Angeles and San Francisco—in 80 hours and 44
minutes; completed 50 regular, 26-mile marathons in 50 days; and wrote Ultramarathon Man: Confessions of an All-Night Runner.
Come September, he’ll be hosting the third annual Navarino Challenge, a
marathon in Greece meant to raise awareness of childhood obesity. And
in the last 20 years of professionally being someone who runs very, very
far, Karnazes has transitioned to a mostly raw diet that upends a lot
of conventional wisdom about what runners need to eat to perform.
“I
used to live on junk food, thinking that since you burn 30- to 40,000
calories on some of these runs, you need to get as many calories as you
can no matter how you get them in.” One time, on the solo leg of a
200-mile relay run, in the middle of the night with a cell phone and a
credit card, Karnazes ordered a pizza delivered to him and kept running
while he ate the whole thing in a big roll.
His
running times never suffered from his diet, but his daily energy levels
fluctuated wildly, so he started experimenting with different foods to
see how they affected his recovery time and how they made him feel.
“When you push your body that hard you get a feel for what builds you up
and what slows you down.”
That
intuitive elimination process led him to a diet that’s pretty close to
the Paleo Diet, based on the idea that humans aren’t meant to eat
anything they can’t pick from a tree, pull from the ground, or kill
themselves. Karnazes’s diet isn’t as bacon-heavy as most
Paleo-enthusiasts. Instead it’s heavy on fruits (VERY heavy on
fruits), vegetables, cold-water fish, and yogurt. If he has any meat,
it’s organic, free-range bison, usually so lightly cooked that it’s
practically tartare.
The
absence of oatmeal and pre-run waffles may cause skepticism, but the
fact that Karnazes’s diet is enough fuel to just get him through his
workouts, let alone his monster runs, is a pretty strong argument for
its effectiveness. When gearing up for a big run he eats 8,000 to 10,000
calories a day. He starts with a base of 3,200 calories, and then adds
300-500 calories per hour of running.
His
only real meals are yogurt at breakfast, sometimes flavored with
oregano, often with fruit and nuts, and a very large dinner of salad,
vegetables, and fish or bison. Most of his carbohydrates come from
fruit, which Karnazes eats throughout the day whenever he’s hungry (“I
think the notion of three meals a day is rubbish”). And—surprise!—he’s
hungry often.
“On a good
day I run a marathon before breakfast,” he says, starting off with
nothing more than coffee and flax milk. After the three-and-a-half to
four-hour run, he waits over half an hour to eat anything else, letting
his body adjust to powering itself just on fat reserves.
The
rest of the day is constant motion. Not only are there several modified
high intensity Navy SEAL workouts (push-ups, pull-ups, sit-ups, dips,
and burpees) and eight to 12 miles of sprinting up hills and jogging
back down, but Karnazes rarely sits. His office space is designed to
work at standing-level and he’s rocking on the balls of his feet all the
time, never letting his legs rest. He is almost physically incapable of
staying still.
Like a hummingbird? I wonder aloud.
“Kind of like a shark,” he says.
Pre-morning run
Coffee with flax milk
Coffee with flax milk
Post-morning run
Greek-style yogurt (full fat, no sugar added) with cashews, banana and blackberries
Greek-style yogurt (full fat, no sugar added) with cashews, banana and blackberries
Eaten over the course of the day
Apples
Pears
Oranges
Apples
Pears
Oranges
Food and hydration for long runs
Nut butter
Unflavored coconut water
Nut butter
Unflavored coconut water
Dinner
Large mixed green salad with avocado, olive oil, ground ginger and turmeric
Raw beets
Cooked sweet potato (the one vegetable eaten cooked)
Wild-caught sashimi grade salmon
Large mixed green salad with avocado, olive oil, ground ginger and turmeric
Raw beets
Cooked sweet potato (the one vegetable eaten cooked)
Wild-caught sashimi grade salmon
Dessert
Greek-style yogurt (full fat, no sugar added), topped with olive oil and Himalayan blue sea salt
Greek-style yogurt (full fat, no sugar added), topped with olive oil and Himalayan blue sea salt

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