A Week of Boston Marathon Fueling: Becky Wade's Food Diary
Becky Wade, 2:30 marathoner, details exactly what she ate during a week in the heart of marathon training.
Wednesday lunch. Photo: Becky Wade
Published April 1, 2019 02:42PM
Becky Wade is an American marathoner with a 2:30:41 PR training for the 2019 Boston Marathon. She offered to record everything she ate during the week of March 18–24, four weeks out from the race. Here is the real, unfiltered food diary of an elite marathoner in the heart of training.
As the friends and families of any marathoner can attest, a few giveaways let them know we’re training for another 26.2: missing toenails, extra naps, shocking tan lines, compression sock indentations, dialed back socializing, and perhaps most of all, insatiable appetites. For the 10–16 weeks that I spend preparing for each marathon, it seems like if I’m not running, I’m either eating, cooking, grocery shopping, or planning meals to come. My Boston Marathon build-up, which will culminate on April 15, has been no different.
“What do you eat?” is one of the most common questions I get from other runners. But rattling off my favorite foods (“bananas, peanut butter, chicken, eggs, avocados, bread, yogurt, beef, berries, milk, sweet potatoes…”) always rings a little hollow. So to fill in the gaps, I thought it would be fun to document and photograph everything that went down the hatch during a recent heavy week of marathon training.
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There are no hard and fast rules when it comes to my nutrition, but I have developed a food philosophy that seems to work well for me. I don’t count calories—I don’t have the mental energy for all those calculations, nor do I think it’s necessary. Instead (and you may hate to hear this), I really do listen to my body and my cravings, whether it’s for a juicy steak, cold watermelon, slow-scrambled eggs, or my fifth serving of nut butter for the day. Although I do gravitate towards many of the same foods every day, I try to cover a wide variety; the more natural and colorful, the better.
I’m all about leftovers, especially when repurposed. And nothing is off limits, though I’m definitely more cautious of what and when I eat in advance of a run (hence my predictable bagel, banana, and peanut butter pre-workout breakfast). Finally, I do my best to consume a steady stream of calories, never going more than a few hours without nibbling on something (except when I’m asleep). But as good as my intentions are, I have yet to make it though a marathon build-up without wishing I had one of those t-shirts that surely was designed by a distance runner: “I’m sorry for what I said when I was hungry.”
Below is a real and typical week of marathon training food consumption. The only things I didn’t record are coffee (1-2 cups per day), orange juice with 1 tablespoon ferrous sulfate with dinner each night (to keep my iron levels up), and the many smaller morsels I munch on while preparing meals or on my way past the pantry.
Monday Lunch. Photo: Becky Wade
Monday, March 18: My lightest running day of the week since it follows a big weekend of training, with just one easy session in the late morning.
Breakfast: Oatmeal (½ cup oats cooked in milk, with banana, blackberries, peanut butter, sunflower seeds, vanilla protein powder, cinnamon, ginger, cardamom, nutmeg)
Lunch: Bowl of roasted sweet potatoes, black beans, corn, chopped kale, feta cheese, fried egg, homemade chimichurri (condiment made of cilantro, vinegar, olive oil)
Snack: Pineapple, strawberries, clementines, handful of salted cashews
Dinner: Beef stir-fry with rice noodles, beef, red peppers, carrots, toasted peanuts, fresh basil, lime, chili-garlic-soy sauce
Snack: Greek yogurt with honey, coconut, pistachios, dried figs, cinnamon
Tuesday breakfast. Photo: Becky Wade
Tuesday, March 19: Another recovery day broken up into two sessions (longer in the morning, between the two breakfasts—roughly an hour after the first, and a shorter run in the afternoon)
Breakfast #1: Cinnamon-raisin English muffin with Kerry Gold butter
Breakfast #2: Oatmeal (one half cup oats cooked in milk, with banana, blackberries, peanut butter, sunflower seeds, vanilla protein powder, cinnamon, ginger, cardamom, nutmeg)
Lunch: Leftover beef stir-fry; pineapple and strawberries