First a little background on carb loading; what ideally is and what it has become and how it can be abused.
Carb loading is a method of topping off sugar (glycogen) stores in the body. Carb loading actually starts with unloading. A true carb loading activity requires a few days of carb depletion in the diet coupled with higher intensity workouts so that in laymans terms, blow the soot out of the system. Your workouts should be star seeing I feel nauseous type of big muscle work. It should occur over a 2-3 day period 7-10 days pre-race. From there, while maintaining you Kcal you up your carb intake by 10-15% for 3-4 days. I have gone through this cycle and the first time I went through, I was ready to shoot my coach as I felt sore and weak for a couple days. Then all of a sudden my body felt refreshed and I ran a couple PRs This is not a pleasant experience and not one that I recommend to anyone who is just looking to finish.
What it has become
simply a pre-race party where we get to have a meal with fellow runners. It has morphed to a night before the race meal, way too late to do anything physiologically other than top off you sugar stores. It really serves no other purpose than to celebrate, I have arrived and I am ready to slay the course.
How it is abused
First, the average person in the US population carb loads as a matter of course with their normal diet. Many Americans diets are 60+% carbs or higher. If you think comfort food, or processed foods, you are really thinking carbs. I have seen folks go back for 3rds and 4ths at a prerace pasta feed. I have always wondered if they were the runner or the spectator
I am never sure how they would digest their intake over the next 5-7 hours.
A good rule of thumb is to follow a balanced diet plan as you train. Feel free to bump carbs up the night before a long run, but within reason
but make sure that you stay light with the meal. If you feel satiated or stuffed, then you over loaded. I think it more important as you come into a long run (training or race) to hydrate very well (to a point where urine is just colored) and keep you meal the night before light. It is also important to eat a carby breakfast 2 hours or so prerace so you spike up the glycogen levels in the blood stream as the race starts.
What I have been reading about over the last 3-4 years is fat loading the 2-3 days prerace and how it can work to fuel your engine. Note that your body looks to two fuels (there are others but keeping this simple) for running down the road. Sugar or carbs is a high energy, fast burning fuel. But if used exclusively, you will fall flat on your face in less than 90 minutes. The other fuel source is from fats. Your long lean slow twitch muscles (the ones you recruit for a marathon) use fat as their fuel source. Your body has multiple days of fat stored and ready for use in the event it needs a long-term fuel. Walking is almost all fat sourced activity while sprinting 100m is an almost all sugar-based event. Running a marathon is a uses a high percentage of fat as fuel, but requires some level of sugar for the fast twitch muscles being recruited for speed. All this to say that fat loading has some merit, if done correctly. Again, we are talking about shifting the diet 10% higher in fat for 2-3 days. Remember it should be good fats and not the bad ones. Even with this type of loading, I shift back to a light and balanced evening meal prerace.
A lot of stuff to say hang in there. It takes some experimenting to see what your body favors. Based the fat loading theory, your chicken fingers are not all that bad.