Dr. Pepper and Ice Cream are probably my 2 favorite things in the world… Hey, as long as you burn all of it off right away, you can eat pretty much anything!!!
I would suggest switching to Diet Dr. Pepper and, if they sell them, frozen yogurt cones immediately. But then again, I heard you generate more power if you weigh more. Who cares about watts/kilograms anyway? Michael Rasmussen? What a loser.
Or you could switch to this awesome diet that I’m currently on. Make sure not to fill the water glass all the way, water is fattening. Only a tablespoon of rice. On days where you ride 5+ hours, you can help yourself to 1.5 tablespoons of rice and a full glass of water. Never cook the rice because when rice is cooked it absorbs water, and water is fattening.
Seeing how my first year with Husky Cycling I dropped as low as 155lbs (albeit it was stripped down and dehydrated post-ride) during the road season, now a few years later I’m up to 175lbs. Maybe there is a positive relationship to Husky Cycling and weight gain? I can’t help think even though I feel faster how much faster I’d be 20lbs lighter. However I think I’d rather suffer on a bike than ever time I was itching for a Ben and Jerry’s fix. I’ll leave the Dr Pepper to Zahn.
wagemd:
Dr. Pepper and Ice Cream are probably my 2 favorite things in the world…
Hey, as long as you burn all of it off right away, you can eat pretty much anything!!!
21 January 2008, 2:27 amadmin:
I would suggest switching to Diet Dr. Pepper and, if they sell them, frozen yogurt cones immediately. But then again, I heard you generate more power if you weigh more. Who cares about watts/kilograms anyway? Michael Rasmussen? What a loser.
Or you could switch to this awesome diet that I’m currently on. Make sure not to fill the water glass all the way, water is fattening. Only a tablespoon of rice. On days where you ride 5+ hours, you can help yourself to 1.5 tablespoons of rice and a full glass of water. Never cook the rice because when rice is cooked it absorbs water, and water is fattening.

21 January 2008, 11:14 amTay Dawg:
Seeing how my first year with Husky Cycling I dropped as low as 155lbs (albeit it was stripped down and dehydrated post-ride) during the road season, now a few years later I’m up to 175lbs. Maybe there is a positive relationship to Husky Cycling and weight gain? I can’t help think even though I feel faster how much faster I’d be 20lbs lighter. However I think I’d rather suffer on a bike than ever time I was itching for a Ben and Jerry’s fix. I’ll leave the Dr Pepper to Zahn.
22 January 2008, 11:29 pm