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High Efficiency

After meals.

Metabolic profile analysis. Technical breakdown of After meals and its impact on skeletal muscle retention and daily energy expenditure.

Total Energy1kcal
Bio-Protein30g
Carbohydrates20g
Total Lipids1g

Nutritional Efficiency Report

After meals is a very low-calorie food with high-protein content. At 1 kcal per 100g, it delivers 30g of protein — representing 12000% of its total caloric load. Carbohydrates account for 8000% and fats for 900% of calories.

"Efficiency Score 1.00 — this asset ranks in the top tier of the DataFood database for protein delivery per calorie. Optimal for fat loss, lean bulking, and body recomposition phases."

At 20g carbs per 100g, it is better suited to carb-cycling or maintenance phases.

With only 1 kcal per 100g, After meals is a high-volume food — you can consume a large serving while keeping total caloric intake controlled. This makes it particularly effective for hunger management in deficit phases.

Protocol Compatibility

Ketosis Impact

At 20g carbs per 100g, it is better suited to carb-cycling or maintenance phases.

Thermic Effect (TEF)

Protein content of 30g per 100g triggers a significant Thermic Effect of Food. The body expends approximately 20–30% of protein calories during digestion, yielding a net caloric benefit compared to equivalent fat or carbohydrate sources.

Expand Your Protocol.

Based on the metabolic profile of After meals, these related data nodes are most relevant to your nutrition architecture:

Integrate Asset.

Use the clinical weekly planner to distribute After meals across your metabolic windows.

Generate Weekly Protocol

Input physical metrics to generate a synchronized 7-day protocol.

1. Biological Metrics

2. Dietary Logic

Institutional Disclaimer: The nutritional data provided for After meals is derived from clinical databases and algorithmic estimation. This report is for metabolic infrastructure planning only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a clinical nutritionist before implementing aggressive deficit protocols.