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Bicycling

Not All Grains Are the Same, So Be Strategic When Fueling for a Long Ride

Elizabeth Millard
3 min read
Photo credit: vaaseenaa - Getty Images
Photo credit: vaaseenaa - Getty Images
  • Consuming more than seven servings of refined grains per day can lead to a greater risk of early death, heart disease, and stroke, according to new research in The BMJ.

  • While reducing refined grains is generally a great strategy, there are instances where using them to carb-load with is beneficial before any long ride or race.


Nutrition experts often suggest avoiding refined grains—which encompasses anything made with white flour—and instead relying on whole grains that are higher in fiber and vitamins. A new study in The BMJ highlights why.

Researchers evaluated the consumption of both types of grain and compared that with prevalence of cardiovascular disease, blood lipids (fatty substances found in the blood, including cholesterol and triglycerides), blood pressure, and total early mortality. Refined grain products included white bread, pasta, breakfast cereals, crackers, and bakery products, while whole grain items were made with wheat, rye, oats, barley, and other flours where all the components of the grains were left intact.

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Crunching the numbers on over 137,000 participants over a 16-year time period in 21 countries, the researchers found that having more than seven servings of refined grains per day was associated with a 27 percent greater risk for early death, 33 percent higher risk for heart disease, and 47 percent higher risk for stroke.

Although white rice is often considered a refined grain, these associations weren’t connected to that type of rice, but researchers did suggest brown rice might be a better choice anyway.

In terms of why refined grains might have this effect, the study noted that when compared to whole grains, these products have lower fiber content. They also lack vitamins, minerals, essential fatty acids, and phytochemicals (compounds in fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, seeds, and legumes that give them their color, taste, and smell, and offer health benefits). As a result, they are absorbed very quickly in the small intestine, which can increase blood glucose concentrations—a situation that’s been connected to worse cardiovascular health.

Does that mean giving up options like pasta when you’re carb-loading for a long or intense ride or race? Not necessarily, according to Angie Asche, R.D., C.S.S.D, owner of Eleat Sports Nutrition and author of Fuel Your Body.

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“When talking about the general population, as well as everyday eating for athletes, reducing refined grains is a great strategy,” she told Runner’s World.

She notes the importance of consuming refined grains when it comes to saturating the glycogen stores in your muscles, since the glucose from carbs is the fuel your brain uses to produce energy, and it’s also your body’s preferred fuel source for exercise.

Building those glycogen stores up usually takes about five to seven days, she says. So, if you have a race or long ride on Saturday, upping the amount of refined grains in your diet early in the week can be helpful, particularly because getting the same amount of carbs from whole grains would be a struggle, Asche said. The fiber and protein in quinoa would satiate you long before you could hit the same carb amount a bowl of pasta would offer, for example.

Not every ride or race requires carb-loading, though. Shorter distances don’t deplete your glycogen enough that you need to boost the reserves beforehand, Asche said.

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Also, the majority of your meals that aren’t around race days or long rides should include whole grains, in part because they offer the minerals you need for regular replenishment, like magnesium, potassium, calcium, and sodium.

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