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How to Fuel Your Workouts (With a Spotlight on Protein & Creatine)

How to Fuel Your Workouts (With a Spotlight on Protein & Creatine)

Whether you’re stepping back into movement after a break, building consistency for the first time, or pushing towards strength and performance goals, how you fuel your workouts matters.

Not for aesthetics, not for weight loss, not for punishment, but for energy, recovery, confidence, and a body that feels supported rather than drained.

The truth is, most people think they’re “bad at exercise” when in reality, they’re simply under-fuelled. Low energy, dizziness, heavy legs, shaky muscles, poor recovery, and slow progress are often signs the body doesn’t have the fuel it needs to perform.

And without fuel, even the most motivated person will struggle.

The good news? You don’t need complicated regimes to feel stronger, more powerful, and more energised in your workouts. You just need a few key principles, with protein and creatine playing a standout role.

1. Why Fuel Matters: The Physiology Behind Better Workouts

Your body needs energy to move and this energy is drawn from the food you eat. 

When you work out, especially strength training, your body:

  • Burns through glycogen (glucose stores)
  • Breaks down muscle tissue
  • Increases its demand for amino acids (the building blocks of protein)

Uses up cellular energy (ATP)

If you haven’t fuelled well, you’re essentially trying to train without petrol in the tank.

Proper fuelling:

  • Gives you more power
  • Improves stamina
  • Enhances focus
  • Increases strength
  • Speeds up recovery
  • Reduces the risk of injury
  • Supports hormone balance
  • Keeps your nervous system stable

In short: fuel makes everything feel easier.

2. The Three Phases of Workout Nutrition

To keep things simple, think of training fuel in three stages.

  • Before: Fuel for Energy
    This is about giving your muscles the carbohydrates they need to perform.
  • During: Fuel for Stability
    Most people don’t need intra-workout snacks unless training for over an hour, but hydration is crucial.
  • After: Fuel for Recovery
    This helps repair muscle tissue, replenish glycogen, and reduce soreness.

3. Pre-Workout: What to Eat Before Training

Your pre-workout meal or snack should do two things:

  • Provide quick energy (carbohydrates)
  • Support your muscles (protein)
  • A balanced pre-workout option 2 hours before training might include:
  • Greek yogurt + fruit + a drizzle of honey
  • Overnight oats with chia seeds and berries
  • A turkey, chicken, or tofu wrap

If you're training early and can’t stomach much or need fast acting energy, try: 

  • A banana
  • A few dates
  • Fruit juice

Carbs give you energy. Protein stabilises your blood sugar and fuels your muscles. Together, they create the ideal pre-workout foundation.

4. The Role of Hydration

Even mild dehydration can:

  • Worsen fatigue
  • Reduce strength
  • Impair coordination
  • Increase heart rate
  • Make workouts feel harder

Aim for:

  • A glass or two of water on waking
  • Regular sips through the session and throughout day

5. Post-Workout: The Recovery Window

Post-workout nutrition is all about rebuilding. Your muscles are like sponges after training, they’re primed to absorb nutrients that support repair and growth.

Focus on:

Protein (for muscle repair)
Carbohydrates (to refill glycogen stores)

Balanced examples:

  • Protein smoothie with banana and oats
  • Eggs on toast with tomatoes and spinach
  • Salmon with rice and steamed vegetables
  • Tofu stir fry with noodles
  • Chicken wrap with salad
  • Greek yogurt + granola + berries

Within 1–2 hours is ideal, but don’t panic if you miss the “window.” Your body still benefits.

6. Protein: Your Workout Powerhouse

If there is one nutrient that truly elevates your training results, your recovery, and your body composition, it’s protein.

Why Protein Matters:

  • Repairs muscle fibres
  • Helps you build strength
  • Reduces soreness
  • Stabilises blood sugar
  • Supports metabolism
  • Improves hormone balance
  • Keeps you fuller for longer

How much do you need? A helpful benchmark for active people is around 20–30g of protein per meal.

Practical examples:

  • 200g Greek yogurt
  • 2–3 eggs + extra whites if needed
  • A portion of salmon or chicken
  • A scoop of high-quality Simply Go protein powder
  • Lentils, beans, tofu, tempeh (larger portions needed)

7. Creatine: The Most Researched Supplement for Strength, Mood, and Energy

Creatine is not just for bodybuilders. It is one of the safest, most effective, and most widely researched supplements for:

  • Strength
  • Muscle recovery
  • Energy production
  • Enhancing performance
  • Improved cognitive function 

How creatine works: Creatine increases your body’s stores of phosphocreatine, which helps generate ATP, your cells’ primary energy source.

More ATP = more power during strength training and HIIT.

Why creatine is especially beneficial for women: Women naturally have lower creatine stores than men. This means supplementation can have an even greater impact.

How much creatine to take: 3–5g creatine monohydrate daily can be added to water, smoothies, and protein shakes and it is most effective taken consistently. 

8. Carbohydrates Are Not the Enemy, They’re Your Training Fuel

Carbs power your muscles. Without them:

  • Your workouts feel harder
  • Your strength plateaus
  • Your mood dips
  • Cravings increase
  • Recovery slows

Nutritious carbs that support training include oats, rice, potatoes, pasta, fruit, sourdough or wholegrain bread, beans and legumes. 

9. What If You’re Returning to Exercise After Illness or a Break?

Your body needs gentler nourishment and compassionate pacing.

Try:

  • Lighter sessions to rebuild confidence
  • Balanced meals every 3–4 hours
  • Extra carbohydrates for energy
  • Steady protein intake
  • Plenty of hydration
  • Creatine for cellular recovery
  • Slow, progressive increases in intensity

Fuel well, go slow, honour your body.

10. Signs You’re Under-Fuelled

If you experience any of the following during or after exercise, your body is asking for more nourishment:

  • Dizziness
  • Fatigue
  • Irritability
  • Headaches
  • Heavy legs
  • Increased cravings
  • Poor sleep
  • Feeling emotional or overwhelmed
  • Slow recovery
  • Frequent colds or illnesses
  • Irregular periods

If you are experiencing any of these symptoms around exercise then your body is communicating with you for extra support. 

Final Thought: Fuel Is Not a Reward. It Is the Foundation.

Food is not something you earn through movement. It is what allows you to move well in the first place. When your body is properly fueled, you lift heavier, move with more ease, recover more efficiently, think more clearly, and feel more grounded. Workouts become something you enjoy rather than endure.

Support your training by:

  • Taking creatine at 3 to 5 g daily
  • Sipping fluids regularly rather than relying on large amounts at once
  • Aiming for around 30 g of protein per meal
  • Supporting energy with carbohydrates

This is what strength built with nourishment looks like.


Sources: 
https://www.mdpi.com/2072-6643/17/1/95
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40279-025-02213-6

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