[quote name='mykevermin']Just so I'm clear, you're talking black coffee limits, right? The diabetic part threw me off by presuming that it must be laden with sugar, cream, and all that crap.
I may just do that. I'm getting ready to go buy a cup on route to a research presentation (what we all want to be doing on a Friday afternoon), but I'm going to place stricter limits on my caffeine intake soon. Thanks for the headsup.
Specialk, I take a multivitamin and fish oil capsules every day. That's not very exciting, sure. On days that I lift (3x), I drink nitric oxide beforehand (stuff like BSN brand "NO X-plode"), and have a protein shake after lifting. On days I do strictly cardio (2x), I just have water, and nothing else. I'm no expert on stacks, but I find this combination to be both very useful and easy on the wallet.
EDIT: And just so we're clear, Gatorade is for chumps.

[/QUOTE]Yeah, black coffee.
Drinking caffeine in large amounts as coffee over a short period of time has been shown to raise blood sugar. Caffeine does this by enhancing the effect of two hormones (adrenaline and glucagon). These two hormones release stored sugar from the liver resulting in high blood sugar. And what happens when blood sugar levels are increased: This results in large amounts of insulin being dumped into your blood stream. Remember that the job of insulin is to regulate your blood sugar. It needs to do something with the excess glucose (sugar). The easiest thing for insulin to do with it is to store it in your body as fat. Simply put: coffee can affect your blood sugar which could interfere with the body's ability to burn fat.
So you don't have to cut it out entirely, just trim it down and spread it out a bit.
Edit: Did you learn nothing from that woman who died in the Wii contest? Gatorade IS a rip-off, but I'd still include some banana and maybe a few tortilla chips in a post work-out snack just to keep sodium and potassium in your brain.