A low-carb style of eating called the ketogenic diet has quietly become the rage among ultra-endurance athletes and elite soldiers. Here's how they fuel up.
7 a.m.
Sweeney starts witha blendered combination of Mayorga Organics coffee, coconut oil, grass-fed butter, heavy cream, and a raw organic egg. He follows that up with three baked eggs, three ounces of smoked salmon, and a few avocado slices.
10 a.m.
Mid-morning, he eats a bowl of full-fat plain Greek yogurt topped with walnuts or macadamia nuts.
12 p.m.
Lunch is a large bowl of spinach with a sprinkling of blue cheese, four ounces of buttered grilled flounder, crumbled bacon (sometimes), and a tablespoonof olive-oil-based dressing. He has afew ounces of cheese on the side.
Is the High-Fat, Low-Carb Ketogenic Diet Right for You?

3 p.m.
Sliced cheddar or Mont d’Or cheese wrapped in prosciutto serves as Sweeney’s afternoon snack.
7 p.m.
For dinner he eats three to four ounces of salmon with asparagus, broccoli, or cauliflower, and a salad topped with a few ounces of cheese. Dessert is more cheese or a square or two of dark chocolate—preferably salted and above 70 percent cacao.
Total: 2,800 calories, 80 percent from fat, about 12 from protein, and 8 from carbohydrates.
Wash It All Down
Sweeney drinks about a gallon of water a day, much of it lime-flavored Poland Spring sparkling water. “Most people on the keto diet don’t get enough water,” he says. “When you’re ketogenic, especially if you’re eating a lot of cheese, water is super important to keep your digestive tract cleaned out.”
How to Avoidthe Keto Rut
Sweeney eats eggs for breakfast every day, but he changes his protein sources for lunch and dinner, swapping in chicken, duck, and occasionally lamb.
Do keto in phases. For six to eightweeks before an event, Sweeney is strict, measuring his ketone levels three times a week and keeping his carbohydrate intake below50 grams per day. During the off-season, he’s more laid-back. After a strict phaseof keto, he says, “you’re adapted, and it takes almost as long for your body to go back to burning glucose as fuel.”
Half a glass ofred wine with dinner now and then helps the cheese go down.
You can learn more about Patrick Sweeney and follow his adventures by visiting his website.