The
Daily
Fix
4 rounds:
Salmon Patties
HbA1c and why Trainers should care about Glycation
The iceberg beneath “normal” blood sugar numbers
4 rope climbs for time
Plank hold for equivalent time
Rest
Crispy salmon patties made with fresh or canned salmon, herbs, and a touch of creaminess.
Ingredients
For the Patties:
1 lb fresh cooked salmon (or two 6 oz cans, drained)
2 large eggs
½ cup grated Parmesan cheese
½ cup almond flour (or crushed pork rinds for extra crispiness)
2 Tbsp mayonnaise
1 Tbsp Dijon mustard
2 green onions, finely chopped
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 Tbsp fresh dill or parsley, chopped
1 tsp smoked paprika
Salt and black pepper, to taste
For Cooking:
2–3 Tbsp butter or tallow, for frying
Optional Garnish:
Lemon wedges
Fresh dill or parsley
Dollop of sour cream or garlic aioli
Macronutrients
(per serving, makes 4)
Protein: 35g
Fat: 32g
Carbs: 3g
Preparation
In a large bowl, flake salmon with a fork. Stir in eggs, Parmesan, almond flour, mayo, Dijon, green onions, garlic, dill, paprika, salt, and pepper until well combined.
Shape mixture into 6–8 small patties. Place on a parchment-lined tray and refrigerate 15–20 minutes to firm up.
Heat butter or tallow in a skillet over medium heat. Cook patties 3–4 minutes per side until golden brown and crispy.
Plate with lemon wedges, herbs, or your favorite low-carb dip.
If the 4 climbs take you 60 seconds, then plank hold for 60 seconds. If the climbs take 100 seconds, hold for 100 seconds.
Start each round on the 10-minute interval (0:00, 10:00, 20:00, 30:00.)
Post each climb time, and round time to comments.
This article by Hollis Molloy, trainer and MetFix Academy staff member, explains why HbA1c should be viewed by coaches as more than a diabetes screening tool—it’s the visible tip of a much larger glycation “iceberg.” HbA1c reflects a 90-day average of blood glucose exposure, but glycation damage accumulates for years in slow-turnover tissues like nerves, joints, and vascular walls, quietly eroding performance, recovery, and resilience. “Normal” or borderline A1c values can still coexist with significant underlying tissue damage, particularly from fructose-driven glycation that A1c does not capture. Framed as a coaching metric rather than a medical diagnosis, rising A1c becomes an early warning signal trainers can act on nutritionally—well before metabolic decline shows up as disease.
THURSDAY 260129