Anyone fancy helping with a meal prepping nightmare?
flabtograd
Posts: 11 Member
I'm a uni student who works part time too, so as a result I leave the house at 6am and don't return home until between 6pm-9pm (mon-thurs), 6am-3pm on a friday.
My problem is that I have no access to a refrigerator or microwave during the day, so I need to bring foods with me that will last throughout the day without being refrigerated but that I can also eat without reheating. I do have a food thermos that keeps food hot for 7 hours, but obviously requires me to wake up even earlier to cook/reheat food and prep the thermos so I don't use it particularly often. Especially because I would have to fill it at around 5.45am so I would have to eat the hot food around 12-1pm at the latest and I'm in class until 2pm, so that kind of screws that up.
I'm looking for breakfast, lunch and dinner options. Snack suggestions could also help!
I don't eat mushrooms and can only eat eggs if they are hard boiled, but anything else is fair game (well except anchovies, but I don't anticipate that they will be first on anyone's list).
I realise I have a lot of issues here, but if anyone has any suggestions then I'll be really appreciative. This schedule and lack of healthy options has meant I've ended up gaining around 30lbs in 2 years (and I was already overweight) so it isn't ideal. I'm at my wits end.
My problem is that I have no access to a refrigerator or microwave during the day, so I need to bring foods with me that will last throughout the day without being refrigerated but that I can also eat without reheating. I do have a food thermos that keeps food hot for 7 hours, but obviously requires me to wake up even earlier to cook/reheat food and prep the thermos so I don't use it particularly often. Especially because I would have to fill it at around 5.45am so I would have to eat the hot food around 12-1pm at the latest and I'm in class until 2pm, so that kind of screws that up.
I'm looking for breakfast, lunch and dinner options. Snack suggestions could also help!
I don't eat mushrooms and can only eat eggs if they are hard boiled, but anything else is fair game (well except anchovies, but I don't anticipate that they will be first on anyone's list).
I realise I have a lot of issues here, but if anyone has any suggestions then I'll be really appreciative. This schedule and lack of healthy options has meant I've ended up gaining around 30lbs in 2 years (and I was already overweight) so it isn't ideal. I'm at my wits end.
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Replies
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Tuna and wholewheat pasta salads are a great option and should keep well1
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Tuna and wholewheat pasta salads are a great option and should keep well
Thanks , I have two types of tuna pasta salad that I often switch between, but I wasn't sure if I was consuming too much tinned tuna or not!
Do you have a go to recipe? Just wondering if it's any different to the ones I make so it can give me something a bit different0 -
Get a flask and cool bag, then you can have stew/chilli/soup etc and salad, sarnies, whatever needs to be kept cool.0
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things that are canned.. chicken, salmon etc..0
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Not a good situation. You want to be careful you don't get food poisoning. Amazon sells all kinds of travel ice packs/cooling packs for food. You might buy one and try it out.
These things aren't the best food, and are expensive, but you don't have to refrigerate them plus you can buy them everywhere (grocery and drugstores): SlimFast shakes with 20 G protein and 1 G sugar. They're 180 calories. I have been eating/drinking them while some work is being done on my kitchen. You can combine them with a McDonald's side salad with lowfat dressing (or a small salad at your university cafeteria or fast food place).0 -
You need to invest in something like this and some ice packs Sandwiches, salads etc can be prepped the night before
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Hummus with raw vegetables -carrots, cherry tomatoes, celery, peppers, broccoli, cucumber- (and flaxseed crackers) should keep well. Add a hard boiled egg for extra protein. Hummus usually doesn't have ingredients that spoil if out of the fridge for a couple hours even though it's always refrigerated. Canned baked beans (in tomato sauce) on bread/toast will be fine for a few hours too. Three bean tuna salad is full of protein and an alternative to the pasta salad. Shredded cabbage and carrot salad can be an option, add olive oil dressing before eating. Combine it with tuna or egg for protein. Though shredded cabbage might wilt after several hours outside the fridge.2
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You can pour a little water out of a bottled water and freeze. Use them as ice packs and when they melt you can drink the water. Laughing cow cheese is sold room temperature at least two stores that I know of. They have several light flavors. You could spread on celery or bell pepper wedges. I have been using a lot of mason jars to pack meals and snacks. Maybe with an insulated bag and the frozen water trick you could take a few new things. I also here Yeti products are amazing but pricey.
Mason Jar Ideas: soupspiceeverythingnice.blogspot.com/p/masonables.html0 -
One more thing. The Domestic Geek does a lot of meal prep ideas. She just did snack boxes. https://youtube.com/watch?v=dj6lbCtpRKg
What about veggie noodles (zucchini) and cauliflower rice? Here is a tabouli salad with cauliflower. soupspiceeverythingnice.blogspot.com/2014/05/recipe-review-cauliflower-tabouli.html1 -
Get an ice pack and an insulated bag or small cooler. Freeze water in a bottle.
Look up bento boxes for ideas.
Nut butters, nuts, seeds
Sandwiches or wraps
Hummus
Beans or lentils
Rice, rice balls
Hard boiled eggs
Pasta
Granola, granola bars
Muffins
Fresh fruits and vegetables- salad greens, cabbage, celery, broccoli, carrots, tomato, zucchini, sugar snap peas, apples, berries, bananas, oranges, etc
Pickled vegetables
Yogurt
Tuna or canned chicken
Popcorn
pretzels
Canned fruit, applesauce
Beef jerky
http://www.columbusparent.com/content/stories/2011/02/23/ntk-the-go-to-guide-school-lunches.html2 -
If you have a slow cooker why not prep a stew or something similar the night before - have it cook while you're asleep and then load up your food thermos while it's hot. That way you won't have to get up too much earlier4
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I've been going with cheese (30 g) and crackers (6 Triscuits) and a pile of raw veggies (carrots, cauliflower, cherry tomatoes, etc.) for lunches lately.
I also like Wasa/Ryvita with avocado and sun dried tomatoes.
Nuts, seeds and dried fruit (carefully portioned) are good snacks. As are fresh fruit.0 -
Peanut butter and banana sandwiches on whole wheat (brown) bread0
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Thank you everyone this has been really helpful . Much appreciated!0
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flabtograd wrote: »Tuna and wholewheat pasta salads are a great option and should keep well
Thanks , I have two types of tuna pasta salad that I often switch between, but I wasn't sure if I was consuming too much tinned tuna or not!
Do you have a go to recipe? Just wondering if it's any different to the ones I make so it can give me something a bit different
Friendly advice: you should compute your Mercury exposure from a lot of tuna consumption. I love the stuff also; it may not be loving you back as much.0 -
Hard boiled eggs!0
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Think camping foods except you have more options. You may also want to eat smaller meals more often, since you can't heat up anything, most of what you eat may work better as snacks.0
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Consider petitioning your SU for some student access microwaves? It's becoming increasingly common for universities to offer self-service "tea point" type facilities for students (the sort of thing that is usually provided for employees.
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Not sure what type of work you do so this may not be possible:
You can buy one of those mini crock pots (which is actually a warmer, not a cooker) and keep it at work. Bring your soup/chili/curry that is "cold" from your thermos. Put it into the warmer as soon as you get to work and it will be piping hot by the time you have a break.
I've seen them here for $12-$15 and a friend of mine loves hers.0 -
With that schedule I would ideally eat breakfast and dinner at home, then have a variety of snacks (nuts, hard boiled eggs, cut up veggies) to tide me through the day.
In reality I would probably end up eating out once a day (what a grueling schedule), there are ways to make eating out work and stick to a calorie limit if you want.1
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