Maxinutrition / Maximuscle £11.50 Sainsburys in store and online - sustain and rebuild 1.1kg and the lean mass 1kg
Latest comments (25)
rodman
9 Jul 16#25
expired
StreetfighterKEV
26 Jun 16#24
cows naturally eat grass, I'll stick with that thanks
fanpages
15 Jun 16#23
I cannot take anything with whey in it (due to intolerance issues), & being a pescetarian there is only so much protein you can gain from "oily" fish before it becomes a chore to include fish in every meal, so I use this product in Smoothies; but only buy it when it is on offer (or significant voucher codes are available):
It's a good price for 20grams of protein per scoop the 30gram versions are expensive
anthonynsinclair to _robtaylor
11 Jun 161#4
Very true
lovernotfighter to _robtaylor
15 Jun 161#21
I posted the 30g version for less than this and it went cold LOL
travis10
14 Jun 161#7
Are these products any good? Do they actually work? Will I look like Rambo? What's wrong with a normal high protein diet of eggs / chicken / fish??
JumpMan1980 to travis10
14 Jun 16#9
I think it it personal preference, if you can get the suggested 0.8-1g of protein per pound of lean bodyweight from whole foods, chicken, eggs and fish as you suggest then that its the way to go. However, if you are so big that you can simply not consume enough protein that way or not so big but need to supplement on days when you cannot prepare whole food then they may have a place in your diet. Are they better than whole food? I say no, some will say you need fast digested protein such as whey after training and first thing in the morning after your nights 'fast'. Like most foodstuffs opinion varies and is surely driven for many by the billion pound supplement industry.
yrreb88 to travis10
14 Jun 16#10
Some people don't have the chance to prepare, take and eat high protein meals all day every day. Protein shakes are just a convenient form of protein and of course aren't necessary to get bigger/stronger.
That being said, there are much cheaper proteins available. Although this is a good price for the brand, you're just paying for the name.
Yes, there are many common beliefs that all unsurprisingly require more protein and products. Even the 1g per lb is a myth seemingly promoted by the supplement industry. Studies suggest it's about 0.82g, but even that would be conservative as this was found in elite/professional body builders. :smiley:
mattsokolinski to travis10
14 Jun 16#15
Exactly. There is nothing wrong. In fact normal diet is more than enough to build muscle. If you can cover your energy requirements with a balanced diet you will cover protein requirements
Biggunspaul to travis10
15 Jun 16#19
I look like Rambo,but I eat house bricks for breakfast :smile:
londonstinks to travis10
15 Jun 16#20
It's just protein dude... just like eggs, chicken etc
wallbank999
14 Jun 16#18
this is currently in bnm bargains for £10 a tub.....
adrians8
14 Jun 16#13
27g of sugar in 100g of product?You might as well not to bother buying this crap.
matrix gold offers much better value/money imo,5kg for under 45 quid and it has 86g protein and 7.8g sugar in 100g
jimbo23 to adrians8
14 Jun 16#17
Yeh, I'm not quite sure where all this sugar is coming from. I can only assume the lactose.
JumpMan1980
14 Jun 16#16
Brilliant article - thank you yrreb88 - very interesting and worth bookmarking for future reference/ evidence
StreetfighterKEV
11 Jun 16#5
might be the cheapest of it's kind and therefore a deal, but the product itself is garbage can get grass feed organic whey cheaper lately
_robtaylor to StreetfighterKEV
12 Jun 16#6
Haha I actually prefer it to some other well known brands out there
mattsokolinski to StreetfighterKEV
14 Jun 161#14
And where is the evidence that grass fed is better or even organic is better
StreetfighterKEV
14 Jun 16#12
musclefood.com 5kg under 50 quid
PenguinsForAll
14 Jun 16#11
Like someone said you are paying for the name here. You can always find much cheaper and same quality whey protein online from various different websites such as myprotein, gonutrition or my favorite bulkpowders. Buy a sample pack from different websites and find flavours you love then start saving a boat load of money.
Nutrition for the maxinutrition posted here is 50g serving, 20 protein, 22 carbs.
Nutrition for online suppliers: 50g serving, 40g protein, 2.5g carbs. That's double the protein and a lot fewer carbs.
Also if you buy from bulk suppliers you can always find discount codes for new/old customers, cashback and many sales to take advantage of.
JumpMan1980
14 Jun 16#8
I was a fan of MaxiMuscle for years but then stumbled across the question of what percentage of the product is protein (Carbs+fat being relatively cheap and available easily from other foods) Maximuscle products are low, around just 30-40% Protein (the 30g protein per serving product is a 70g serving) Thanks to a HUKD I recently switched to MyProtein and bought in a sale their 'cheap' protein product which is 80% protein (5kg for £30 - serving size being just 25g Maximuscle tubs are only 750g -1kg) - MaxiNutrition as they are now known are pulling the wool over consumers eyes by advertising their 20g or 30g of protein per serving when you consider how large their servings are. I hope this info helps someone and am keen to know where the other commenter can get grass fed organic whey at such a low price please?
micpwelsh
11 Jun 16#2
What's it for ?
anthonynsinclair
11 Jun 16#1
This is the cheaper version of their protein, still hot don't get me wrong, I purchased 5 tubs but I think it's around 10g less protein per portion.
Opening post
Latest comments (25)
[ http://www.hollandandbarrett.com/shop/product/pulsin-soya-protein-1kg-60006973 ]
---
Nutritional Information
Typical values per 10g Serving
Energy 155kJ / 37kcal
Protein 9.0g
Carbohydrate 0.1g
of which sugars 0.05g
Fat 0.05g
of which saturates 0g
Dietary Fibre 0.05g
Sodium 0.1g
---
Peanut Butter is also a staple favourite, especially Hi-Pro (with 33.9g per 100g of the product):
[ http://www.sainsburys.co.uk/shop/gb/groceries/hi-pro-peanut-butter-crunchy-454g ]
[ http://www.sainsburys.co.uk/shop/gb/groceries/hi-pro-peanut-butter-smooth-454g ]
That being said, there are much cheaper proteins available. Although this is a good price for the brand, you're just paying for the name.
Yes, there are many common beliefs that all unsurprisingly require more protein and products. Even the 1g per lb is a myth seemingly promoted by the supplement industry. Studies suggest it's about 0.82g, but even that would be conservative as this was found in elite/professional body builders. :smiley:
matrix gold offers much better value/money imo,5kg for under 45 quid and it has 86g protein and 7.8g sugar in 100g
Nutrition for the maxinutrition posted here is 50g serving, 20 protein, 22 carbs.
Nutrition for online suppliers: 50g serving, 40g protein, 2.5g carbs. That's double the protein and a lot fewer carbs.
Also if you buy from bulk suppliers you can always find discount codes for new/old customers, cashback and many sales to take advantage of.