hi I'm a truck driver and I'm looking for ideas on what food to buy

bigtanklucas2001
bigtanklucas2001 Posts: 12
edited November 16 in Health and Weight Loss
Hi I'm a truck driver and trying to find out what food I can buy I have a micro wave in my truck
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Replies

  • Mr_Knight
    Mr_Knight Posts: 9,532 Member
    edited April 2015
    Buy whatever food you like to eat, that fits in your microwave!

    :drinker:
  • Mycophilia
    Mycophilia Posts: 1,225 Member
    Trucks have microwaves in them?! :o Time for a career change!
  • I was trying to find out what the best food to get cuz I need to lose weight
  • No it's mine I have a 2500 watts inverter if u eat out all the time it's costly
  • PeachyPlum
    PeachyPlum Posts: 1,243 Member
    I was trying to find out what the best food to get cuz I need to lose weight

    Help us out. What kind of things do you normally like to eat? If you tell us that, we can probably give you some ideas of how to eat things you enjoy in a more healthy way.
  • Umm I eat about any thing that my problem
  • polly1970
    polly1970 Posts: 18 Member
    Have you figured out your caloric allowance for the day? Then you can start plugging the pieces of your meals in. Find out how much you can have each day and portion out your meals and snacks. A microwave in your truck will certainly help. I use my microwave all the time for those Green Giant Steamers. Tons of veggies (most with sauce!) and very low calorie impact.
  • PeachyPlum
    PeachyPlum Posts: 1,243 Member
    Okay. I just bumped up a thread for you that had a lot of advice from other truck drivers and their families - maybe that will help?
  • Yes it's 2400 and today I used 2300 each meal was around 600 to 700

  • Thank you it did a
    PeachyPlum wrote: »
    Okay. I just bumped up a thread for you that had a lot of advice from other truck drivers and their families - maybe that will help?

  • Little
  • time4jenn
    time4jenn Posts: 35 Member
    Soup- buy canned soups and then heat them up on your stop.
    Snack- popcorn
    Baked Sweet potatoes are yummy :)
    Eggs - you can add salsa for some zip
    if I think of more I will post- feel free to add me!
  • ticiaelizabeth
    ticiaelizabeth Posts: 139 Member
    Umm eggs are a good breakfast option, and you can easily mix in some veggies. Oatmeal is another one. You could "toast" bread for sandwiches using parchment paper, or toast different types of nuts, but beware as their calorie content is high so small portions are key. Veggies are also super easy in the microwave. I often use it to cook sweet potatoes, corn on the cob, etc.
  • hncary
    hncary Posts: 176 Member
    You can buy pre-cooked frozen chicken from tyson (I'm sure there are other brands too) and all you have to do is microwave it. Frozen veggies that can be steamed in the bag in your microwave, cans of black/pinto beans, nuts, bananas, oranges, apples, make oatmeal in a large portion before you leave and you can microwave it each day for breakfast/snacks, cereal/protein bars, rice cakes, cans of soup, lunch meat and bread. Do you have a mini fridge/freezer as well because not all of these ideas will work without one. Its all about counting your calories and making sure you don't exceed them. You don't necessarily need to eat any certain types of food to lose weight, but these are some ideas of foods that will help you hit your macros and won't kill you in calories. Good luck!
  • Thank you
    Umm eggs are a good breakfast option, and you can easily mix in some veggies. Oatmeal is another one. You could "toast" bread for sandwiches using parchment paper, or toast different types of nuts, but beware as their calorie content is high so small portions are key. Veggies are also super easy in the microwave. I often use it to cook sweet potatoes, corn on the cob, etc.

  • Yes I have a Colman cooler that plugs into the cigarette lighter plug
    hncary wrote: »
    You can buy pre-cooked frozen chicken from tyson (I'm sure there are other brands too) and all you have to do is microwave it. Frozen veggies that can be steamed in the bag in your microwave, cans of black/pinto beans, nuts, bananas, oranges, apples, make oatmeal in a large portion before you leave and you can microwave it each day for breakfast/snacks, cereal/protein bars, rice cakes, cans of soup, lunch meat and bread. Do you have a mini fridge/freezer as well because not all of these ideas will work without one. Its all about counting your calories and making sure you don't exceed them. You don't necessarily need to eat any certain types of food to lose weight, but these are some ideas of foods that will help you hit your macros and won't kill you in calories. Good luck!

  • 23susu23
    23susu23 Posts: 68 Member
    There are microwave grills that work pretty well. I have one. You can actually brown meat and make grilled sandwiches in the microwave with them. I cook fish and veggies in it too. Look on Amazon or QVC. You can find some videos on You Tube or QVC.com that can give you some ideas. If you want to spend $30-40, it would expand your food options. I also like to use silicon cookers in the microwave. They are very easy to clean and work great.
  • Thank you I will have to look into that
  • hncary
    hncary Posts: 176 Member
    Well since you have the cooler you could even look into meal prep on a smaller degree. Cook a bunch of chicken breast/ground turkey/hard boiled eggs at the beginning of the week and then all you have to do is warm it up. It makes it super easy and is very little work to prepare. Then you always have a good main course/protein source ready so its easier to make better decisions while on the road. Then you could do the frozen veggies in the microwave or bring some canned veggies to go with your meats and you could use them in all different ways. You could make tacos, wraps, put the meat over salads, etc. And you could meal prep a bunch of rice as well and have that with your meals too. It would take minimal work to prepare and would make it easy while you are on the road.
  • bbutler921
    bbutler921 Posts: 5 Member
    My dad is also a truck driver. He has a microwave, a small fridge/freezer and a George Foreman grill. He eats soups, chicken, frozen veggies, rice, etc. If you have room I would highly suggest getting a small fridge/freezer and George Foreman grill.
  • Michelletrk
    Michelletrk Posts: 53 Member
    Do you have a place to plug in a crock pot? I had a friend that would throw stuff in there and it would be ready when he stopped.
  • Michelletrk
    Michelletrk Posts: 53 Member
    Also portion everything out ( chips, fruit, nuts) that way you know each bag has X calories, and you can be aware of what your eating instead of just grazing. I do this at work, I have snack box raisins, dried fruit, nuts, all portioned and then if I get hungry I just grab a baggie and I can eat with out having to calculate out right then and there the work is done, also bags of veggies :)
  • spiralated
    spiralated Posts: 150 Member
    The steamfresh bags of pasta and veggies in sauce are really good. I eat those at work a lot. My cousin who's a truck driver swears by peanut butter and bananas or apples when he's in a trouble spot and doesn't know what to eat.

    If you can store them - the bags of steam-in-bag veggies are good because they're usually on sale at any big-box store/supermarket and you can add things like some hard cheese, hard boiled eggs and/or beans to them to add protein. Most hard cheeses (in my experience) doesn't have to be keep ice-box cold if you eat it in a few days and its not in the sun.

    If you buy snack size ziplocks - you can use these to portion out nuts, granola, pretzels etc and eat them in combo with other things or if you need to go another 40 miles before dinner. :)

    Best of Luck!
  • T1DCarnivoreRunner
    T1DCarnivoreRunner Posts: 11,502 Member
    Just a few thoughts, most of which are probably obvious but I'll say it anyway:

    Take a food scale so you can measure more precisely if you buy stuff on the road. Bring along premixed salads (chicken/turkey/ham, lettuce, spinach, tomato, cucumber), but leave the pre-cut meat separate so it can be heated in the microwave before mixing in with your salad. Just go easy on the dressing or use low calorie dressing. Also, watermelon does not have a lot of calories for the volume. Cut some up and keep in a container in your cooler.

    I'm not sure how often and for how long you stop, but I'm guessing you go for a long time between stops. So for those in-between times you don't have the ability to actually pull over and cook something but you are hungry, get some dill pickles and keep them handy.

    Of course, don't forget to drink plenty of water. If you need soda for energy, get diet soda. Regardless of what you might hear, your body DOES use the water from soda (i.e. it does not dehydrate you), and since diet pop/soda has no calories, it is the better option. I'm guessing you drink quite a bit of coffee also, just be careful what you put in it and keep in mind that coffee does have some calories.

    When you are resting and are done sleeping but have time before you can start up again, use the time to walk around. It will help wake you up and help burn calories.
  • 7lenny7
    7lenny7 Posts: 3,498 Member
    Though not a truck driver, I do take lots of road trips and recently my eating habits on these trips have undergone some self scrutiny. I used to have bags of various items in reach so I could graze along the route. No more! Figure out what you want to eat between stops, take out the appropriate amount, and pack everything else out of reach. If you can get to it, you can't eat it!

    Healthier options I now eat on the road:

    apples
    bananas
    clementines
    baby carrots (with hummus if I need a dip)
    caramel rice cakes - pretty much just filler, but only 50 cals. They're messy, so I break them into bite-size pieces while they're in the bag
    Greek yogurt
    Kashi bars
    sliced meat

    One thing my wife started making for us on road trips is Thai chicken wraps. They're filling and low calorie (and damn good!):
    FlatOut flatbread wrap
    1.5 oz of Tyson pre-grilled chicken strips
    1/2 cup coleslaw mix (cabbage & shredded carrots) (or Asian salad mix without the dressing)
    dry chow mein noodles (or the won ton strips from the Asian salad mix)
    2 tsp of Thai Peanut Sauce

    That is only 260 calories. You can use tortillas instead of the wraps, but that adds another 50 calories or more. With a bit of creativity you could come up with other wraps.

    Another thought...at home we use a Hamilton Beach Breakfast Sandwich Maker. I thought they were rather gimmicky, but I ended up using them quite a bit. They only use 600 watts so if you can use a microwave, you can use this. With a multi-grain english muffin, 3 or 4 slices of lunch meat (or canadian bacon), a slice of cheese, and 1 egg, a breakfast sandwich totals 290 calories. The eggs and cheese don't need refrigerating if they're used within a week and not left in the hot sun. Get one of those plastic carriers for the eggs...they're in the camping section of sporting good stores and are usually yellow. Check out the Hamilton Beach website for several sandwich ideas. You can use muffins, bagels, bread, croissants, any sliced pre-cooked meat or sausage patties, tuna, different cheeses, etc.








  • 7lenny7
    7lenny7 Posts: 3,498 Member
    Regarding the weighing of food on the road...let's say you buy a bag of something to snack on, like pretzels. The bag tells you that there are 10 servings and each serving is 140 calories (pulling numbers out of the air). You split up the big bag into portions you're likely to eat and come up with 8 ziplock bags. Now just take the overall calories of the package...1400 calories...and divide by the number of portions you come up with, which is 8. End result is 175 calories. Alternately, if you're scanning bar codes, use the portion size it comes up with, but edit it to indicate you're eating 1.25 servings (10 divided by 8). Each bag may not be exactly that size, but on average they are. This way you avoid having to weigh the servings out.

    I use this method for things like frozen yogurt. I just eat maybe a spoonful at a time. I don't log each spoonful, but when when I eat 25% of the pint, I'll log that much. Then another 25% of it when I reach the halfway point, and so on. No tedious weighing, but when I'm done, I'll have accounted for every calorie.

  • T1DCarnivoreRunner
    T1DCarnivoreRunner Posts: 11,502 Member
    7lenny7 wrote: »
    Regarding the weighing of food on the road...let's say you buy a bag of something to snack on, like pretzels. The bag tells you that there are 10 servings and each serving is 140 calories (pulling numbers out of the air). You split up the big bag into portions you're likely to eat and come up with 8 ziplock bags. Now just take the overall calories of the package...1400 calories...and divide by the number of portions you come up with, which is 8. End result is 175 calories. Alternately, if you're scanning bar codes, use the portion size it comes up with, but edit it to indicate you're eating 1.25 servings (10 divided by 8). Each bag may not be exactly that size, but on average they are. This way you avoid having to weigh the servings out.

    I use this method for things like frozen yogurt. I just eat maybe a spoonful at a time. I don't log each spoonful, but when when I eat 25% of the pint, I'll log that much. Then another 25% of it when I reach the halfway point, and so on. No tedious weighing, but when I'm done, I'll have accounted for every calorie.

    That makes sense with packaged food, but when I do road trips, I'll buy fruits at gas stations and convenience stores. Also, you have some variations of how much is in some of the self-serve foods. For example, the Pilot / Flying J scrambled eggs... how much you put in a cup makes a difference (of course, then you need to make sure you tare out the scale too) as would the weight of bananas, oranges, or apples you pick up. If you eat such foods very often, it can make a difference over time.

    Honestly, my 10 day / 5K mile road trip is not going to make a huge difference for specific measurements on food compared to the other 355 days of the year and if I gain during a trip, I have time to make it up (I usually do a lot of hiking on my travels, so I'll have deficits anyway). But if you are on the road 240 days (just estimating based on 20 days/month) per year, a 10%-20% variance on every piece of fruit can certainly add up.

    Still, if it is too much burden to use a scale, it is better to estimate than to leave it out of your log completely.
  • 7lenny7
    7lenny7 Posts: 3,498 Member
    That makes sense with packaged food, but when I do road trips, I'll buy fruits at gas stations and convenience stores. Also, you have some variations of how much is in some of the self-serve foods. For example, the Pilot / Flying J scrambled eggs... how much you put in a cup makes a difference (of course, then you need to make sure you tare out the scale too) as would the weight of bananas, oranges, or apples you pick up. If you eat such foods very often, it can make a difference over time.

    I'm not familiar with the Flying J eggs, but for fruit, I just use the typical values that come up in MFP. I had a large orange last night and it came up as 86 calories. 10% either way isn't going to make a practical difference, particularly considering in the long run, some oranges I eat will be more, and some will be less. Same holds true for bananas, plums, grapes, carrots, etc.

    If I had a low calorie budget of 1200 to 1500 I might feel differently.
  • Luv2Munch
    Luv2Munch Posts: 22 Member
    Hi as a suggestion - when you at your home base i would make either: stir-frys, chili, beef stew, shepherd' pie, bake chicken breasts which you would then freeze in individual portions. Take as many servings out of the freezer that you would need for road trips and supplement with either baby carrots, celery sticks, bagged salads [bring your own dressing]. For snacks, suggest almonds, rice cakes [you can get them in many flavours, no fat cold cuts [eat sparingly as the sodium content can be high depending on the brand]and boiled eggs. Buying canned anything isn't great for weight loss as the contents generally have a lot of sodium. Good luck and let us know how you do. Regards, barbyk
  • wkwebby
    wkwebby Posts: 807 Member
    Definitely look into your filler foods and snacks so that you watch out on your sodium. The Tyson precooked chicken is great, both convenient and tastes good, but packs a mega whopping number of sodium in one serving. If you eat three meals with these chicken strips, you're bound to retain water. As a trucker, I'm sure you don't get to drink as much water as you'd like, and this additional sodium will only make you retain even more (you retain water if your body doesn't get enough on a normal basis).
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