Suplementos Baïa Food y ayuno intermitente: qué tomar y qué no rompe el ayuno

Baïa Food supplements and intermittent fasting: what does and doesn’t break a fast

"El ayuno no va de no comer. Va de darle a tu cuerpo el tiempo que necesita para hacer las tareas de mantenimiento que no puede hacer mientras digiere. Los suplementos que tomes durante esa ventana, o ayudan, o estorban. No hay tercera opción."

DATO CLÍNICO

El cambio metabólico de glucosa a cuerpos cetónicos empieza hacia la hora 12 y se completa entre la 18 y la 24. Es cuando aumenta la β-hidroxibutirato circulante y mejora la sensibilidad cerebral a la insulina (Mattson, Longo, Harvie. Ageing Research Reviews, 2017).

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2026-05-05 Baïa Food intermittent fasting, fasting supplements, microbiotic creamer, focus creamer, turmeric latte, breaking a fast, autophagy, mTOR, AMPK, fasting-compatible supplements
"Fasting isn't about not eating. It's about giving your body the time it needs to carry out the maintenance tasks it can't do while it's busy digesting. And whatever supplements you take during that window either help or get in the way. There is no third option."

What happens in your body during intermittent fasting

When you stop eating, your body doesn't switch off. It does the opposite: it activates metabolic pathways that have been on pause for hours because glucose was high and insulin was in charge.

In the first 4–6 hours after your last meal, your liver empties its glycogen reserves. Around the 12-hour mark, the real metabolic shift begins: glucose and insulin fall, glucagon and AMPK rise, and the body starts converting fat into ketone bodies for fuel. And this is where the word everyone keeps talking about appears.

Autophagy.

It's the process by which your cells clean themselves: they break down damaged proteins, faulty mitochondria, and cellular debris that no longer function. Yoshinori Ohsumi won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 2016 for describing how it works. Autophagy is activated when mTOR is suppressed and AMPK is switched on — a state that only emerges properly with fasting or serious caloric restriction.

CLINICAL DATA

The metabolic switch from glucose to ketone bodies begins around hour 12 of fasting and completes between hours 18 and 24, depending on prior metabolic adaptation. This is the point at which circulating β-hydroxybutyrate rises and brain insulin sensitivity improves (Mattson, Longo, Harvie. Ageing Research Reviews, 2017).

CLINICAL DATA

A review published in Cureus in November 2025 (DOI: 10.7759/cureus.97773) analysed 55 studies on intermittent fasting and concluded that 16:8 and alternate-day protocols produce significant improvements in HbA1c, insulin sensitivity, lipid profile and gut microbiota composition. Effects are dose-dependent: the longer the fasting window, the more pronounced the metabolic shift — up to a point.

The most commonly used protocols in clinical practice:

  • 12:12 — eating within a 12-hour window. This is the minimum. Most people already do it without realising, if they have an early dinner and a normal breakfast.
  • 16:8 — the classic. Skip breakfast or dinner. This is the one most people sustain long-term.
  • 18:6 and 20:4 — for those who have been doing it for a while. Autophagy kicks in more strongly here.
  • OMAD — one meal a day. Not for everyone, and not something I recommend without professional support.

I've been doing 16:8 four or five days a week for seven years. It's not magic. It's a tool among many. But it changed my relationship with hunger — and, above all, with cravings.

What breaks a fast and what doesn't (the practical rule)

This is where people get confused. And where the marketing gets creative.

The right question isn't "does this break my fast?" but rather "what kind of fast am I doing?" Wanting to lose abdominal fat is not the same as seeking deep autophagy for a longevity protocol. The rules change.

Types of fast and what breaks each one

Type of fast Goal What breaks it
Functional fast Insulin sensitivity, blood sugar control, satiety Any carbohydrate or protein. Fats and fibres do not.
Strict fast Fat loss, ketosis, digestive rest Anything with more than approximately 25–50 kcal.
Autophagic fast Cellular clean-up, longevity Only water, black coffee and plain tea. Any amino acid or fat breaks it.
Therapeutic fast Support in oncology, autoimmune conditions Only under medical supervision. Rules are individualised.

95% of people who fast are doing a functional fast, even if they believe otherwise. And for that type of fast, the rules are more relaxed than social media would have you believe.

Pharmacist's note: if you are fasting for pure autophagy (longevity goal or a Longo-style protocol), then yes: water, black coffee, plain tea. Any supplement with calories or amino acids will break autophagy. If you are fasting to lose fat or regulate insulin, supplements without sugar and without protein are generally compatible.

The MCT question

Medium-chain triglycerides — the famous MCTs — are the oldest debate in fasting. The short answer: they provide calories, but they don't raise insulin and are metabolised directly into ketone bodies. For functional fasting they are compatible. For deep autophagy, they partially suppress it because they activate some mTOR through the mevalonate pathway.

A February 2026 review on MCTs and fasting summarises it well: MCTs reduce peak autophagic state compared to water-only fasting, but the reduction is partial, not total. For most people, the practical benefits outweigh that marginal autophagic cost.

In the pharmacy I see far greater adherence with MCTs than without. People who take them last through the fasting window much more easily, without that 11 o'clock crash that usually makes them give up and reach for a biscuit.

Why Baïa Food works well with fasting

Baïa is a Spanish brand, founded in Madrid by Guillermo and Loan, B Corp certified since 2024. The core philosophy is very specific: functional foods with no added sugars, no sweeteners, no additives, and clinically supported doses. That sounds like brand copy, but when you look at the labels, they deliver on it.

And for fasting, that matters for three reasons:

  • Zero added sugar means zero glycaemic spike. What would break your fast with another brand simply doesn't happen with Baïa.
  • Zero sweeteners is a detail that tends to be underestimated. Sucralose, acesulfame K, and especially polyols can produce a cephalic insulin response even without delivering real sugar. Baïa sidesteps all of them.
  • Doses are within the clinical range. They don't put 100 mg of ashwagandha in for marketing purposes — they use the 600 mg of KSM-66 that was used in the studies. The difference matters.

There are cheaper brands. There are brands with more flavour options. There aren't many with this combination of transparency and properly calibrated doses. That's why it's the one I recommend most often when someone asks what to take during a fast and wants to buy a single brand.

Baïa supplements you can take during a fast

These are the ones I use myself and the ones I dispense most often. Each serves a different purpose, so the order here is by time of day rather than preference.

Cúrcuma Latte (morning, afternoon, whenever you like)

The cleanest of the range for fasting. Organic turmeric with ginger, cinnamon, coconut powder and black pepper. The black pepper isn't decorative: piperine multiplies the bioavailability of curcumin by twenty. Without that combination, almost all the turmeric you take passes straight through without being absorbed.

It provides around 25 kcal per serving when prepared with water — virtually zero impact on insulin. If you're doing a functional fast, take it without worry. If you're doing a strict autophagic fast, save it for your eating window.

Why I particularly like it during fasting: prolonged fasting slightly raises intestinal inflammation markers in some people — especially those who are only a few weeks into adapting. Curcumin may help buffer that.

CLINICAL DATA

Piperine from black pepper increases the bioavailability of curcumin by 2,000% according to the landmark study by Shoba et al. (1998, Planta Medica). Without black pepper, 95% of ingested curcumin is excreted without being absorbed. This is why turmeric without piperine — or without fat — achieves very little.

Pharmacist's note: if you are taking anticoagulants (warfarin, acenocoumarol, apixaban, rivaroxaban) or antiplatelet agents, moderate your turmeric intake — curcumin has a mild antiplatelet effect. This is not an absolute contraindication, but it is a reason to mention it to your GP before taking several doses per day.

Focus Creamer (mid-morning)

Citicoline, L-theanine, coconut MCTs. Citicoline raises phosphatidylcholine levels in neuronal membranes and L-theanine takes the edge off caffeine. It's a combination that works very well in practice for people who hit a cognitive slump at 10:30 or 11 in the morning while fasting.

It provides around 30–35 kcal per serving, almost entirely from the MCTs. For functional fasting, it's fine. For autophagy, it's not.

I take it when I have demanding meetings mid-morning and know that black coffee alone won't be enough. It's the creamer I've tested most extensively on myself.

CLINICAL DATA

The combination of caffeine and L-theanine (in a 2:1 ratio) improves attention and reaction time more than caffeine alone, according to a meta-analysis published in Nutritional Neuroscience (Owen et al., 2008). Citicoline adds to this by raising brain phosphatidylcholine levels — a precursor of acetylcholine, associated with memory and focus.

Pharmacist's note: do not take Focus Creamer after 6 PM if you plan to sleep that night. Citicoline activates the cholinergic system and, although L-theanine is calming, the net effect for many people is stimulating. If you need concentration in the evening, black coffee or green tea is a better choice.

Microbiotic Creamer (from hour 16 of your fast onwards)

This is where things get interesting. It contains chicory inulin with FOS (a prebiotic fibre your body doesn't digest but your microbiota does), Lactospore (a spore-forming probiotic that survives gastric acid), lion's mane extract and coconut MCTs.

The million-pound question: does this prebiotic fibre break the fast? Technically, no. Your small intestine doesn't absorb it, so it doesn't enter your bloodstream as calories. It reaches the colon where your microbiota ferments it, producing short-chain fatty acids (butyrate, propionate, acetate), which do enter circulation — but at a very slow rate and without an insulin spike.

CLINICAL DATA

A study published in Frontiers in Nutrition (October 2024) showed that intermittent fasting combined with prebiotic fibre produces greater alpha-diversity of the microbiota than fasting alone. Inulin and FOS have the strongest evidence base for this effect.

For me, the Microbiotic Creamer represents "upgraded fasting": when I'm 16–18 hours in, this is what I reach for. I'm feeding the good bacteria while I'm not eating myself. That sounds strange when you put it that way, but it's exactly what's happening.

What I don't recommend during a fast

The Beauty Creamer contains 10 g of hydrolysed collagen per serving. That's 40 kcal of pure protein — amino acids that activate mTOR. It breaks an autophagic fast completely, and it breaks a functional fast for many goals. Don't take it during your fasting window: save it for your first meal or post-workout breakfast. The whey protein and plant protein are the same: they break the fast. Both are excellent — but for the eating phase.

How to break your fast with Baïa: the first meal

Breaking your fast badly throws away half the work of the fast itself. If you open your eating window with a croissant and a milky, sugary coffee, the resulting insulin spike leaves you worse off than if you hadn't fasted at all. I see this in the pharmacy every week.

The rule that works: break with protein, fat and fibre. Carbohydrates at the end, not the beginning.

That's why the Baïa pairing I recommend for breaking your window is:

  • Pure Protein Whey Isolate — 22 g of protein per serving, negligible lactose because it's an isolate, no sweeteners. I take it with water or almond milk and a serving of Cúrcuma Latte stirred in. Ready in two minutes.
  • Plant Protein Cacao — the plant-based option, 18 g of complete protein from pea and rice, also sweetener-free. For those who don't tolerate dairy or follow a vegan diet.

One word of caution. Protein isolates on their own can break the fast too abruptly for some people: a pure amino acid profile generates a notable insulin response. If you're particularly sensitive, have some vegetables or a handful of nuts first and leave the protein for 15–20 minutes later. My personal protocol is exactly that: olives, a little avocado, wait ten minutes, then a whey shake with turmeric. Find what works for you. But always break with something that isn't sugar.

Protocol I recommend in the pharmacy

This is the framework we give when someone starts 16:8 and wants to support it with Baïa products. It's the sensible version, not the Instagram version.

1

Hours 0 to 12 (overnight)

A complete final meal for the day: protein, fat, vegetables and a small amount of complex carbohydrates if you've trained. No supplements at midnight.

2

Hours 12 to 14 (on waking)

Water with a pinch of salt. Black coffee if you want it. If you struggle to get going, a Baïa Cúrcuma Latte with hot water. This moment is for hydrating and activating, not eating.

3

Hours 14 to 16 (mid-morning)

This is where most people slip. If you notice brain fog, Focus Creamer with coffee or tea. If you feel hungry, Microbiotic Creamer in a plant-based drink. If you're going fine, don't add anything.

4

Hour 16 (opening your eating window)

Break with fat or fibre first (nuts, avocado, hummus). After 15 minutes, a whey or plant protein shake with Cúrcuma Latte. This is now your first proper meal.

If you're doing 18:6 or 20:4 the framework shifts, but the logic is the same: during the fast, whatever you take needs to make physiological sense. And when you break it, protein first, never sugar.

And before I close — something I always say in the pharmacy: fasting is not for everyone. There are profiles that should never fast without professional support, and I cover them here because it saves a lot of conversations later.

⚠️ Pregnant or breastfeeding women

Caloric and protein requirements are too high. This is not the right time.

⚠️ People with a history of eating disorders

Fasting can reactivate restriction patterns. Don't attempt it without support from a psychologist or dietitian.

⚠️ Type 1 or type 2 diabetes with glucose-lowering medication

Serious risk of hypoglycaemia. Only under medical supervision with an adjusted treatment plan.

⚠️ Children and adolescents

They are in a growth phase. No.

Baïa Food selection to support your intermittent fasting

Of the eleven Baïa products we stock at Farma2Go, these are the four that customers who come into the pharmacy asking about fasting supplementation actually use. Three for the fasting window and one for breaking it.

Quick comparison: which to take and when

Product When to take it Compatible with Key actives
Cúrcuma Latte Morning or afternoon during the fast Functional fast + light autophagic fast Curcumin + piperine + ginger
Focus Creamer Mid-morning during the fast Functional fast Citicoline + L-theanine + MCTs
Microbiotic Creamer From hour 16 of the fast Long functional fast Inulin + Lactospore + lion's mane
Pure Protein Whey Isolate Opening your eating window No type of fast (breaks it) 22 g grass-fed whey isolate
Baia Food Microbiotic Creamer 300g

Baia Food Microbiotic Creamer 300g

My personal choice for longer fasts: chicory inulin, Lactospore and lion's mane. Feed your microbiota while you're not eating.


ADD TO CART
Baia Food Focus Creamer 150g

Baia Food Focus Creamer 150g

Citicoline and L-theanine with MCTs. For the mid-morning cognitive slump during a fast. Complements or replaces your coffee.


ADD TO CART
Baia Food Cúrcuma Latte 150g

Baia Food Cúrcuma Latte 150g

The cleanest option for fasting: turmeric with active piperine. Natural anti-inflammatory and virtually zero calories when taken with water.


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Baia Food Pure Protein Whey Isolate Cacao 750g

Baia Food Pure Protein Whey Isolate Cacao 750g

For breaking your fast: grass-fed whey isolate, cacao flavour, no sweeteners. The first proper meal done right.


ADD TO CART

If I had to choose just one, it would be the Microbiotic Creamer. It's the one that makes the most difference over time for people who fast regularly: the microbiota responds, digestion improves and the discomfort that can follow longer fasts almost disappears. But the combination I recommend most often is Cúrcuma Latte in the morning and Pure Protein to break the window. That pairing resolves 80% of cases.

Frequently asked questions about Baïa Food and intermittent fasting

Does taking Microbiotic Creamer break a fast? +

It depends on your goal. If you are fasting for deep autophagy, it does partially break it — it provides around 35 kcal per serving and the MCTs activate some mTOR. If your goal is metabolic flexibility, blood sugar control or satiety, it is compatible: the inulin feeds the microbiota without raising insulin.

Can I add Baïa Food Cúrcuma Latte to my coffee while fasting? +

Yes, in a small dose. Turmeric, ginger, cinnamon and black pepper add virtually no calories. If you prepare it with water or black coffee (not milk) you maintain a functional fast. The coconut powder adds a little fat, but the amount per serving is minimal.

Which Baïa Food product should I take to break my fast? +

Pure Protein Whey Isolate or Plant Protein, depending on whether you prefer whey or a plant-based option. Breaking with 20–25 g of quality protein is the most solid approach: it stabilises blood sugar, activates mTOR for muscle protein synthesis and prevents the rebound hunger that typically follows breaking a fast with carbohydrates.

Is Focus Creamer better than coffee for fasting? +

It's complementary, not a substitute. Citicoline and L-theanine provide focus without a cortisol spike, and the MCTs deliver ketone energy. I use it mid-morning when coffee alone starts making me jittery. Don't take it after 6 PM if you intend to sleep — citicoline is stimulating.

How many hours do I need to fast before supplementation is worthwhile? +

Below 12 hours you don't need anything. Between 14 and 16 hours, a Cúrcuma Latte or Focus Creamer can help with concentration and satiety. From 18 hours onwards, the Microbiotic Creamer helps protect the microbiota during longer fasts.

Is intermittent fasting suitable for everyone? +

No. Pregnant or breastfeeding women, people with a history of eating disorders, type 1 diabetes, very low body weight or children should not attempt it without medical supervision. If you take regular medication, speak to your pharmacist or GP first.

DISCOVER MORE ABOUT FUNCTIONAL NUTRITION AND SUPPLEMENTATION

Pharmacist recommendations for combining Baïa Food with your intermittent fasting

Start with one. Don't buy all four at once — you'll overwhelm yourself. My recommendation: Cúrcuma Latte in the first week to see how you get on with it and how your body tolerates it during the fast. If that goes well, add the Microbiotic Creamer in the second week. And if you exercise, bring in the Pure Protein to break your window.

And ask before you buy. If you have a medical condition, take regular medication or are only a few weeks into fasting, it's worth checking the plan before spending money on something that may not fit your situation.


Scientific references:

  • Brasse P, Zerdka J, Staszkiewicz K, et al. "Intermittent Fasting: Efficacy, Safety, and Its Impact on Body Weight, Glucose Metabolism, and Gut Microbiota". Cureus 17(11), 2025. DOI: 10.7759/cureus.97773
  • Zhang A, Wang J, Zhao Y, He Y, Sun N. "Intermittent fasting, fatty acid metabolism reprogramming, and neuroimmuno microenvironment". Frontiers in Nutrition 11:1485632, 2024. DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2024.1485632
  • Liu S, Zeng M, Wan W, et al. "The Health-Promoting Effects and the Mechanism of Intermittent Fasting". Journal of Diabetes Research 2023:4038546. DOI: 10.1155/2023/4038546
  • Vasim I, Majeed CN, DeBoer MD. "Intermittent Fasting and Metabolic Health". Nutrients 14(3):631, 2022. PMID: 35276989
  • Mizushima N, Komatsu M. "Autophagy: renovation of cells and tissues". Cell 147(4):728-741, 2011. PMID: 22078875
  • Mattson MP, Longo VD, Harvie M. "Impact of intermittent fasting on health and disease processes". Ageing Research Reviews 39:46-58, 2017. PMID: 27810402
  • Hewlings SJ, Kalman DS. "Curcumin: A Review of Its Effects on Human Health". Foods 6(10):92, 2017. PMID: 29065496
  • Synoradzki K, Grieb P. "Citicoline: A Superior Form of Choline?". Nutrients 11(7):1569, 2019. PMID: 31336565

Article reviewed by Jorge Peláez (GPhC registration pending UK). The information provided is for educational purposes only and does not replace individual pharmacist or medical advice. If you take regular medication or have a medical condition, consult a healthcare professional before taking supplements during a fast.

 

Tabla comparativa: Suplementos Baïa Food y ayuno intermitente

Tipo de ayunoObjetivoQué lo rompe
Ayuno funcionalSensibilidad a la insulina, control de glucosa, saciedadCarbohidratos o proteína. Las grasas y fibras no.
Ayuno estrictoPérdida de grasa, cetosis, descanso digestivoCualquier cosa con más de 25-50 kcal.
Ayuno autofágicoLimpieza celular, longevidadSolo agua, café solo y té. Cualquier aminoácido o grasa lo rompe.
Ayuno terapéuticoApoyo en oncología, enfermedades autoinmunesSolo bajo supervisión médica. Reglas individualizadas.

Si tienes dudas qué elegir, este cuadro te marca los criterios objetivos a tener en cuenta.

Preguntas frecuentes

¿Tomar Microbiotic Creamer rompe el ayuno?

Depende de qué objetivo persigas. Si haces ayuno para autofagia profunda, sí lo rompe en parte porque aporta unas 35 kcal por cazo y los TCMs activan algo de mTOR. Si tu objetivo es flexibilidad metabólica, control de glucosa o saciedad, es compatible: la inulina alimenta la microbiota sin elevar insulina.

¿Puedo poner Cúrcuma Latte de Baïa en el café durante el ayuno?

Sí, en dosis pequeña. La cúrcuma, jengibre, canela y pimienta negra apenas suman calorías. Si lo preparas con agua o café (no con leche) mantienes el ayuno funcional. El coco en polvo aporta algo de grasa, pero la cantidad por cazo es mínima.

¿Qué Baïa Food tomo nada más romper el ayuno?

Pure Protein Whey Isolate o Plant Protein, según prefieras whey o vegetal. Romper con 20-25 g de proteína de calidad es lo más sólido: estabiliza la glucosa, activa mTOR para síntesis muscular y evita el hambre rebote típica de romper con carbohidratos.

¿Focus Creamer es mejor que el café para el ayuno?

Es complementario, no sustituto. La citicolina y la L-teanina aportan foco sin pico de cortisol, y los TCMs dan energía cetónica. Yo lo uso a media mañana cuando el café ya empieza a darme nervios. No te lo bebas a las 6 PM si vas a dormir, que la citicolina activa.

¿Cuántas horas de ayuno tengo que hacer para que valga la pena suplementar?

Por debajo de 12 horas no hace falta nada. Entre 14 y 16 horas, un cúrcuma latte o un focus creamer ayudan con la concentración y la saciedad. A partir de 18 horas, el microbiotic creamer protege la microbiota durante ayunos más largos.

¿El ayuno intermitente vale para todo el mundo?

No. Mujeres embarazadas, lactantes, personas con historial de trastorno alimentario, diabetes tipo 1, peso muy bajo o niños no deberían hacerlo sin supervisión médica. Si tomas medicación crónica, consulta antes con tu farmacéutico o médico.

Referencias científicas

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