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Awesome Sauce
(Photo: Abby Levene)

How Many Carbs Are in Spring Energy, Really?

This fruit-based energy gel, once touted for its high-carb intake and low volume, contains about a third of calories than advertised, multiple independent nutritional analyses suggest

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Awesome Sauce
(Photo: Abby Levene)

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For the past 10 years, Spring Energy has provided endurance athletes with , and more recently drink mixes, made from 鈥渞eal鈥 foods. Athletes looking for wholesome alternatives to more traditional sugar-based gels made in a lab have flocked to Spring鈥檚 smoothie-like gels made with fruit and basmati rice.

While Spring products are more expensive than many gels, many athletes have found the tradeoff for high-quality, real food fuel that goes down easily on the run to be worth it. Until now.

After skepticism about the actual contents of Spring鈥檚 gels began brewing late last year, it turned into a full-blown controversy this week.

In January 2021, Spring Energy released a game-changing gel, Awesome Sauce. In collaboration with coaches and runners Megan and David Roche (who taste-tested and named the flavor), the applesauce, basmati rice, and sweet potato-based gel was designed to provide endurance athletes with a whopping 180 calories per 54 gram packet.

This high-carb alternative became especially enticing when was published in April 2022 reporting that ultrarunners should consume 240 to 360 calories (60-90 grams of carbohydrates) per hour. It鈥檚 no surprise that Awesome Sauce (sold at $5 a gel), with its small but surprisingly mighty nutritional content, initially flew off the shelves. It seemed too good to be true.

After several third-party lab tests, that appears to be the case.

Not-So Awesome Sauce?聽

Awesome Sauce
The applesauce, basmati rice, and sweet potato-based gel was designed to provide endurance athletes with an advertised 180 calories per 54 gram packet. (Photo: Mallory Arnold)

In late 2023, runners took to Reddit to discuss their doubts in Awesome Sauce鈥檚 nutritional facts, which were printed on the packaging and stated on Spring Energy鈥檚 website. Though it鈥檚 unclear who first performed a concrete test on the gel, two months ago, Liza Ershova, a Reddit user who uses the username 鈥渟riirachamayo鈥, posted in a thread called Ershova allegedly performed a test 鈥渋n an environmental chemistry lab鈥 and found that the dry weight of Awesome Sauce is 16g instead of the stated 45. She hypothesized that, 鈥淚f all of those grams are carbs, that corresponds to about 60 calories, not 180.鈥

On May 17, German endurance sport speciality shop Sports Hunger stating that they, too, had Awesome Sauce gels tested by a third party, and allegedly found that each packet contains 16g of carbs instead of the 45g that Spring Energy claimed.

鈥淭he maker of Spring Energy assures us that they will rework their manufacturing process to ensure that they will again reliably achieve their high numbers that they declare to have,鈥 a Sports Hunger representative says in the video. 鈥淲e hope that this is really going to happen because we believe that natural food for many of our customers is a great alternative to the regular gels.鈥

On May 28, ultrarunning coach Jason Koop, who coaches elite athletes sponsored by Spring Energy, posted an Instagram Reel saying that he鈥檇 paid for Spring Energy Awesome Sauce to be tested by a third party, RL Food Laboratory Testing in Ferndale, Washington. The results showed that the gels tested contained 76 calories and 18g of carbs. The lab results can be found on . Koop declined to be interviewed for this article.

Other runners have also come forward after attempting to replicate the gels with varying degrees of Awesome Sauce鈥檚 ingredients: organic basmati rice, organic apple sauce, apple juice, yams, maple syrup, lemon juice, vanilla, sea salt, and cinnamon鈥攁nd could not achieve the gel鈥檚 original volume of 54g. Their experiments suggest that it鈥檚 impossible to fit all of those ingredients into the small Awesome Sauce package while achieving the stated nutritional content.

Claiming Responsibility聽

On May 22, the Ershova shared Spring Energy鈥檚 response to their experiment on Reddit: 鈥淥ur analysis supports the accuracy of our product labeling. However, we will reevaluate to make sure our data is accurate. Although we hoped your experience with our products would have been wholly satisfactory, we recognize that individual needs can vary. Given the wide variety of options available across different brands, we are confident you will find the right product that suits your specific requirements.鈥

Four days later, on the Sunday of Memorial Day weekend, Spring Energy sent out an email to newsletter subscribers stating:

鈥淚n early May we submitted Awesome Sauce for third-party caloric and biomolecular analysis. Although the results indicated that on average our products deliver the designed nutrition value, we have recognized weaknesses in our processes and ingredients which can introduce unwanted variations in some batches.To mitigate those variations in our small batch production, we decided to modify some of the formulations, revise and innovate processes, and re-evaluate ingredient sources. These changes will bring higher quality and more consistency to our products. Enhancements of our products aimed to stabilize their nutrition values are on the horizon, and within the next few weeks, you鈥檒l see the results of our efforts. A new and improved version of Awesome Sauce will soon be available.鈥

The internet outrage ballooned swiftly.

鈥溾極n average鈥 鈥 if someone has a beat on where I can grab packets of Awesome Sauce at 75g of carb per pack to allow for the average of their product to be 45g overall, hit my inbox,鈥 @aidstationfireball . 鈥淓xcited to taste the new, re-formulated, $7 gels they鈥檒l replace these with.鈥

David and Megan Roche, the Boulder, Colorado-based running coach couple who collaborated with Spring Energy on Awesome Sauce, discussed the backlash on their podcast. They weren鈥檛 involved in the chemical composition and makeup of the gel, they claimed. Rather, they simply proposed the concept of a high-carb gel to their friend Rafal Nazarewicz, the founder and CEO of Spring Energy. They stated they understand the public鈥檚 outrage, and Megan added that they 鈥渄idn鈥檛 really use it鈥 during their runs because she didn鈥檛 feel that her body was responding to the energy it was supposed to provide.

In addition, the Roches stated on their podcast that they have quietly harbored concerns about Awesome Sauce for years, and while they did not explicitly tell their athletes not to use it, they made a point of promoting other gels instead. (The Roches currently have a financial partnership with The Feed, the online warehouse that sells a wide variety of sports fuel, including Spring Energy.)

David elaborated in a lengthy on May 29: 鈥淚t鈥檚 sad and infuriating that the nutrition was wrong, and we are thankful to the really smart people who figured it out on Reddit (including an athlete we coach who started the initial thread). When we described concerns to Spring, we were assured that the nutrition was correct and they followed all FDA regulations. We left the Spring sponsorship years ago, and we never received compensation for proposing the name/doing taste testing (outside of the $200 per month that we both received during the sponsorship). Since then, we have publicly directed athletes to other options for high-carb fueling, while hoping to be a source of love and support in the community. Our podcast covered our concerns as soon as the German lab testing indicated that we wouldn鈥檛 be risking making defamatory statements about a business without substantial evidence.鈥

Who Can We Trust?

Holding an Awesome Sauce gel
(Photo: Abby Levene)

While concerns around Awesome Sauce instigated this investigation, it鈥檚 not the only flavor under scrutiny. Koop sent additional Spring Energy gels, Canaberry (named after professional ultrarunner Sage Canaday) and Hill Aid, to the lab for testing. The results indicated that both of these flavors also contain fewer calories than stated on their nutrition labels.

The lab results showed that the batch of Canaberry that was tested contains 10g of carbs (versus the stated 17g), and the Hill Aid sample contains 10g of carbs (versus the stated 20g).

Koop also paid for Gu Chocolate Outrage to be tested. The results were consistent with the nutrition facts. All three of these reports can also be found on .

These vast discrepancies between Spring Energy鈥檚 reported nutrition facts and the lab results raise the question: which gels can be trusted?

According to the U.S. Food and Drug Association (FDA), most running gels fall under the category of 鈥渄ietary supplements鈥, which don鈥檛 have to be approved before being sold. However, the FDA requires that all dietary supplements have nutrition information clearly marked on a product鈥檚 packaging (including serving size, number of servings, and ingredients) and periodically inspects manufacturing facilities to confirm that products meet the labeling requirements. The FDA also reviews product labels for accuracy.

鈥淒ietary supplements are regulated by the FDA, but much of our role begins after products enter the marketplace. In fact, in many cases, companies can produce and sell dietary supplements without even notifying the FDA,鈥 the FDA states on their website.

The FDA allows nutrition labels to have an inaccuracy margin of up to 20 percent鈥攆or reference, based on multiple lab results, Awesome Sauce鈥檚 caloric content is about 57 percent less than what the label says.

Sports psychologist and ultrarunning coach works with some of the top endurance athletes in the world, and is best known for training Meb Keflezighi to聽 his 2009 New York City Marathon win. She recommends several products out on the market to her ultrarunner athletes, as well as suggestions that might work with a person鈥檚 individual plan. Typically, she suggests that athletes rotate gel flavors to avoid flavor fatigue, which can impact an athlete mentally and derail performance. So if a certain brand is proven to work well for an athlete, she says, use a variety of flavors.

鈥淚 usually use high molecular weight carbohydrates, but the thing is, they鈥檙e not as sweet as other sports nutrition products out there,鈥 says Austin, who owns a consulting business providing sport performance services to Olympic and professional athletes as well as military and industry personnel. 鈥淪o what we鈥檒l do is we might throw in another gel like the Awesome Sauce to help give them that sweet component. It鈥檚 just in their arsenal.鈥

She says, in general, her athletes who have consumed Awesome Sauce have had positive experiences, but that because these gels were just one part of the fuel plan, that muddies the waters a bit. In addition, the potential lower calorie count of this gel may make it easier to digest. However, Austin recalls that one of her clients was taking in one Spring Energy gel (multiple flavors) every hour in her ultra, but found herself so hungry that she needed to eat a lot of the food provided at aid stations on the course, too.

鈥淪he was a smaller ultrarunner, and I thought it was interesting that she was taking in all these calories,鈥 Austin says. 鈥淪he was using Spring Energy gels, and I now I鈥檓 thinking, 鈥楳aybe this is why she needed all the additional food on the course, too, because she wasn鈥檛 getting what we thought she was.鈥欌

Ultramarathon dietician is surprised and disappointed in the news about Awesome Sauce. 鈥淢y clients and myself bank on the efficiency of the gel being easy and light to carry,鈥 she says. 鈥淯nderfueling within a long run can create acute symptoms like low energy, nausea, or brain fog. Ultrarunners find themselves in dangerous situations on long runs and races, and are often in remote areas, so unintentionally underfueling could have negative consequences.鈥

Awesome Sauce
(Photo: Abby Levene)

Austin says runners can still rely on information they鈥檙e receiving about endurance fuel, but that it鈥檚 always possible there are, as Spring Energy suggests, bad batches. She鈥檚 leaning toward this being the reason for the nutritional inaccuracies (keeping an open mind that more information can come out) because she鈥檚 had experiences with bad batches of gels in the past, where the product tasted off and she brought it to the attention of the brand, who confirmed it was an error on their part.

By May 30, Spring Energy had removed Awesome Sauce from its website, although it can still be purchased in the All Inclusive and Vegan Spring sampler packs. There, Awesome Sauce is described as, 鈥渙ur best-seller, has been created for all carb lovers who want to fuel in a healthy way, with wholesome products free of added sugars!鈥

owner Lee Wilson has made the decision to take Awesome Sauce, 聽Canaberry, and Hill Aid off store shelves. 鈥淚t came down to the integrity of it,鈥 Wilson says. 鈥淎fter the other flavors came out with the test results, we decided we can鈥檛 sell it.鈥

Nashville Running Company crew member Eric May added that this whole ordeal is disappointing, especially because the gel was so popular in the community.

鈥淲e used to have people come in when we got shipments and walk out with boxes of them,鈥 May says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a bummer.鈥

He adds that a few customers have remarked that they still really enjoy Awesome Sauce and will keep using it.

鈥淗ow a company reacts to the issue tells you a lot about them, and the fact that they鈥檝e taken down their product, it means they鈥檙e probably doing their homework to see what鈥檚 going on,鈥 Austin says. 鈥淚 would say, give them a chance to rectify the situation.鈥

Sabrina Stanley, a pro ultrarunner from Silverton, Colorado, has used Awesome Sauce frequently in the past, but says she stopped eating it when she felt she was taking in three times what she should be consuming to keep hunger at bay. She adds that though it鈥檚 a huge disappointment that athletes thought they were buying a gel under the impression it was a different product, the company is the only party at fault.

鈥淧rofessional athletes aren鈥檛 responsible for making sure the nutrition label is correct,鈥 Stanley says. 鈥淭hey are often sub-contracted to give opinions and help promote a product in hopes of making a few extra dollar to continue doing what they love. They aren鈥檛 in the lab developing the product and writing the nutrition label, like the consumers, they are trusting the hired them to do their due diligence.鈥

On May 29, Spring Energy , with Nazarewicz saying they鈥檝e identified weaknesses in the manufacturing process, and that only some batches were accidentally made with varying nutritional values. Nazarewicz apologized and stated Spring Energy is introducing changes to its process and hopes to continue its mission toward making real food performance products.

鈥淪pring Energy has admitted to inconsistencies in their product and also said in a recent IG post this was not intentional or malicious,鈥 Shobe says. 鈥淗owever, to be this far off from your stated nutrition label deserves some major inspection. The whole thing made me question not only the integrity of their products but the nutritional labels of other products. Why, as a dietician, didn鈥檛 I become more suspicious of Awesome Sauce in the first place?鈥

Lead Photo: Abby Levene

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