Vitamins & Minerals: The Food-First Checklist for Consistent Gains

Vitamins & Minerals: The Food-First Checklist for Consistent Gains — EZMUSCLE Personal Trainers Melbourne
Mike Mentzer — Heavy Duty Nutrition reference image
Mike Mentzer (reference image)

Publish date: 2025-06-05


“Heavy Duty” nutrition is simple on purpose: build a realistic plan around calories, macro balance, and consistent training effort—then stop letting marketing dictate your next diet phase. Mike Mentzer’s short nutrition booklet pushes that idea hard: principles first, hype last.

This article modernises those principles and plugs them into the EZMUSCLE Method—so you can execute under real-world pressure: work deadlines, inconsistent sleep, and the constant temptation to overhaul everything at once.

Micronutrients are the quiet performance layer

You can ‘hit macros’ and still feel terrible if you’re low in magnesium, potassium, iron, or fibre. Food quality matters for long-term progress.

Food-first checklist

  • 2–3 serves of fruit daily.
  • 3–6 cups of veg across the day.
  • A calcium source (yoghurt/cheese or fortified alternative).
  • Fatty fish 1–2x/week or omega-3 foods.

Supplements (when they help)

A basic multivitamin can be a safety net if your diet is messy, but it’s not a replacement for real meals and consistent eating.

Quick-start checklist

  • Calories: pick a target and hold it for 14 days.
  • Protein: hit it daily (food first, supplement optional).
  • Training: progress reps or load; don’t chase exhaustion.
  • Recovery: protect sleep; walk daily; deload when needed.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Changing the plan every 48 hours.
  • Using bigger deficits/surpluses instead of better consistency.
  • Ignoring steps and sleep, then blaming macros.
  • Chasing novelty instead of progression.

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Written by Anthony Nitti — IRFE Global Personal Trainer of the Year (2025), National Personal Trainer of the Year Australia (2025), and holder of Patent AU2021105042A4.

How Vitamins & Minerals: The Food-First Checklist for Consistent Gains | EZMUSCLE works at EZMUSCLE

Most people don’t need more motivation — they need a plan that matches their body, schedule, and starting point. Our coaching is built around posture-first movement, progressive strength work, and simple weekly checkpoints so you know exactly what to do next. If you’re coming in with pain, low confidence, or a stop‑start history, we begin by making the basics feel safe and repeatable.

Step 1: Assessment and baseline

We start with a baseline that is practical and measurable: how you move, where you feel tight or unstable, and which lifts or patterns currently irritate you. From there we pick the safest variations that still train the muscles you want to build. This protects momentum — the fastest results come from consistency, not from “perfect” programs you can’t sustain.

Step 2: Posture-first strength training

Strength training is the engine for body composition. The key is choosing progressions you can repeat week after week without flare-ups. We prioritise technique, breathing, and joint positions first, then build volume and load. You’ll see a clear progression path: what you do today, what you’ll do next week, and what the next phase looks like.

Step 3: Fat loss or muscle gain (without extremes)

Most “quick fixes” fail because they’re too aggressive. We keep nutrition simple: protein targets, a sensible calorie approach, and habits you can do on busy weeks. If you want fat loss, we aim for steady weekly progress. If you want muscle gain, we focus on training performance, recovery, and a controlled surplus.

Step 4: Accountability and progression

Your plan only works if it survives real life. That’s why we use checkpoints: wins, missed sessions, recovery, and what to adjust next. This is how you stop starting over. We track what matters (strength markers, body composition trends, and movement quality) and we remove the noise.

Who this is for

What you can expect

Expect sessions that are structured and coached. You’ll know the “why” behind each exercise, the key cues to focus on, and the progression target. Over time you’ll move better, feel stronger, and build a routine you can actually keep. We also encourage you to keep your plan boring in the best way — repeatable, measurable, and sustainable.

Safety and screening

Training should be challenging, not risky. If you have existing medical conditions, we recommend you clear exercise with a qualified clinician. We can modify training around common limitations, and we focus on form, recovery, and sensible progression to reduce injury risk.

Frequently asked questions

Do I need to be fit already? No. We build from your current baseline and progress from there.

How often should I train? Most clients do 2–4 sessions per week depending on goals and schedule. Consistency beats intensity.

How long until I see results? Many people feel better in 2–4 weeks. Visible body composition changes typically build over 8–12+ weeks.

Can you train me at home or outdoors? If your page is about mobile coaching, we tailor the plan to your environment and equipment.