deniall wrote:1. I have calculated that I need 3512 calories per day to bulk. How much of this is made up of fat, protein and carbs? Obviously carbs will be very low (around 30g) but do we have a set target for fat and protein?
Carbohydrates 4kcal/g: 30g (120kcal)
Protein 4kcal/g: 2.75g per kg of lean body weight, or 1.25g per lb of lean body weight. You need to know your body fat percentage to figure this, but based on the assumption that you're very lean, you should be ingesting around an absolute MINIMUM of 150g of protein per day. Let's go with 188g protein as your starting figure; you'll adjust this upward if needed, and probably should as you're ecto. 188g protein == 752kcal.
Fat 9kcal/g: You've 2640kcal/day left. That's approximately 294g of fat.
If it were me, I'd bump the protein up to around 200g/day minimum so I'm eating a bit less fat. Remember, though, that
dietary fat doesn't create body fat. Carbohydrates can, and protein can if you eat enough of it, but fat mostly gets burned or wasted by the human body. Eating plenty of fat prevents protein from getting burned for energy as much, though.
2. Do we pretty much just design our own workout using all the basic compound movements in the same format provided in the e-book? Example, legs and back on Day 1.
I vary it based on my needs; you should, too. Just remember to try to avoid working a body part directly the day after you've worked it indirectly or vice-versa.
3. Is meal frequency or total number of meals per day important?
I like 6 meals per day as it keeps me on-plan much better than 3. YMMV.
4. Are BCAA's ok during workout?
No opinion, really. I have a full meal about an hour to 2 hours before hitting the gym, usually sip my protein shake along with water during my workout, and then chug down the rest post-workout. My suggestion is only this: whatever you're going to do, do it consistently for at least several weeks (preferably a few months) before you change it, otherwise you'll have no good gauge on the performance of a supplement or routine.
Biggest piece of advice: stop worrying about specifics, just go get under the bar and try to eat right, particularly by getting enough protein. Additional knowledge comes with time and experience, not via hanging out on message boards

Hypocrite alert: I was around fifty pounds heavier and completely out-of-shape eight months ago, and while I know how to diet, I'm a newbie lifter. You may want advice from someone with years under the bar rather than months. Then again, I read a lot, and love motivating and being motivated by others... on message boards like this one

--Matt B.