Once hailed as the holy grail of post run recovery, chocolate milk held court in the sports world for years. Carbs, protein, electrolytes, all in one glorious, sweet, mildly nostalgic carton.
But now? Every influencer, PT and part time nutritionist seems to be pushing collagen smoothies, protein mousse, or some £4.50 oat based drink with activated spirulina and the personality of a wet sock.
So… is chocolate milk still relevant? Or have we moved on to trendier nonsense?
The Case For the King
Let’s start with the basics. Chocolate milk contains:
- Carbs to refill your glycogen stores
- Protein to repair those hard working muscles
- Electrolytes (like sodium and potassium) lost in sweat
- Liquid to rehydrate
- And crucially, tastes like actual food
Plus, it’s affordable, widely available, and doesn’t require blending, scooping, or shaking like you're prepping for a space mission.
The Downsides
It’s not perfect. Some runners can’t stomach dairy after a session. Some prefer lower sugar options. And yes, if you’ve just run a gentle 3K around the park, necking a full pint of chocolate milk might be… excessive.
There’s also the lactose intolerance brigade, for whom a recovery drink shouldn’t come with digestive consequences.
But for most runners, especially after longer or harder sessions, it still does the job.
What About The Fancy Stuff?
Protein shakes, plant based smoothies, post run “elixirs” with turmeric and mushroom extract, look, they might be fine. Some are even decent. But they often cost a fortune, require more effort than you’re willing to give when you’re dripping in sweat, and rarely deliver anything you can’t get from, say, a glass of milk and a sandwich.
And let’s be honest, chocolate milk doesn’t make you feel like a wanker.
Final Word
Is chocolate milk still the king? Maybe. It’s certainly still in the royal family. It’s cheap, tasty, functional, and doesn’t need a 12 step prep process. Until something better comes along that doesn’t cost half your weekly food budget, it’s still a solid throne to sit on.