28-Days-to-Lean Meal Plan
With the right plan and the right discipline, you can get seriously shredded in just 28 days.
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William Wolcott doesn’t believe in a one-size-fits all diet. That’s an understatement, actually. Wolcott, founder and owner of Healthexcel, a customized nutrition company, owns the registered trademarks for both Metabolic Type and Metabolic Typing (MT), a system based entirely upon human individuality. He’s devoted more than 30 years of his life to studying and implementing MT, so when he sees yet another diet book hit the shelves that recommends a single meal plan for thousands of people with different nutritional requirements, he wonders when people will wake up.
“Metabolic Typing is concerned with how the body produces energy,” Wolcott says. “And the biological reality is that different people have different engines of metabolism. When you eat food, it’s transported to the cells and, supposedly, converted to energy. It’s that conversion to energy that’s the critical factor.
When you eat food that’s not right for you, meaning that it’s wrong for your engines of metabolism, you’re not meeting your genetically determined requirements for nutrition. When that happens, cellular inefficiency results, which ultimately leads to systemic inefficiency.
So if you’re talking about athletic performance, how the body creates muscle tissue, or whether the body puts on fat or burns fat for energy, it all goes back to one thing: your genetic-based requirement for nutrition. You meet that requirement, you get peak performance. If you don’t meet that requirement, you’ve got problems. Not only will your performance suffer, but as years go by, you’ll also develop degenerative diseases.”
So the question is, how do you determine your genetic requirements? Wolcott strongly recommends first finding a certified MT adviser, which you can do at mt-advisors.info. With an adviser, you’ll learn exactly what foods your body needs—including what macronutrient ratios and amounts you require and how those ratios and requirements may or may not change during the course of the day. For those who would rather do it on their own, Wolcott offers but doesn’t recommend the site metabolictypingonline.com, where for $39.95 you can find out your Metabolic Type and what foods you should be eating, minus any consulting with an adviser.
“The body is designed to be perfect,” Wolcott says. “Every cell knows exactly what to do and how to do it perfectly. When it doesn’t happen, it’s because the wrong fuel was used. It’s like any engine. You have to give the right fuel to an engine for it to achieve its full energetic potential.”
Approximate recommended Macronutrient ratios: 40% Protein, 30% Fat, 30% Carbs
Breakfast | Bacon, scrambled eggs, small serving of potatoes fried in butter |
Lunch | Dark meat chicken, raw carrots,celery, cauliflower with olive spread or mayo/yogurt dip |
Snack | Full-fat cottage cheese mixed with flaxseed oil, ½ sliced green apple |
Dinner | Broiled salmon, steamed green beans, quinoa with butter, spinach salad with sliced olives,vinaigrette dressing |
Approximate recommended macronutrient ratios: 25% Protein, 15% Fat, 60% Carbs
Breakfast | Soft-boiled egg(s), whole-wheat toast with 1 tsp butter, apple |
Lunch | White tuna on whole-grain bread with tomato, sprouts, celery, onions, and mayo; small bowl vegetable soup |
Snack | Pineapple and low-fat cottage cheese, organic bread |
Dinner | Chicken breast, baked potato with low-fat yogurt, steamed broccoli, beets, green salad with olive oil and vinegar |
Approximate recommended macronutrient ratios: 30% Protein, 20% Fat, 50% Carbs
Breakfast | Hot whole-grain cereal with whole milk and berries (optional: eggs or cottage cheese) |
Lunch | Cheese sandwich comprising 1–2 pieces of whole-grain bread, tomato, lettuce, onion, pickle, mayonnaise; side of coleslaw |
Snack | Cottage cheese with olives on rye crackers |
Dinner | Roast beef; steamed beets with butter; spinach salad with onion, croutons, olive oil, and vinegar |