What do you eat when you don't have much time to cook?
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Something I did last night. Took leftover chicken diced it up, cut up carrots, onions, garlic, ginger, and a jalapeno. Throw the veggies in a tbps of olive oil and cooked til soft, added in the chicken and warmed it back up. Then I took a store bought asian peanut sauce I had and threw it on top and mixed it in. Served it in lettuce wraps, with crushed peanuts, lime, and cilantro. Took about 20 minutes start to finish.1
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frozen waffles and a tablespoon of peach jam, 190 calories 3 minutes.0
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Large quantities of raw veggies, with hummus, tatziki, or other protein-y dip. Like I'll eat an entire cucumber, a cup or two of cauliflower, and the dip. And then if I'm not full I'll have a slice of whole wheat bread, with butter or a slice a cheese (or half whole wheat, let's be honest, some 100% WW bread is disgusting, lol) .0
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What is not much time and how can you afford not making cooking - and health - a priority?1
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These are unhealthy choices but
Lean cuisines
Ramen noodles
Instant Oatmeal
Frozen pizza
So I try to cook as much as possible. Plus I ate this so much in college that the taste sometimes makes me sick esp Lean cuisines.
Healthier options would be
Fruit and veg smoothie (which I do sometimes)
Protein shake or smoothie
Soup or broth (will fill you)
Frozen veggies like broccoli and cheese
Or cauliflower mash potatoes0 -
BellaMermaid96 wrote: »
In that case, you really should get into the habit of preparing food ahead of time. When I worked in an office, I used to spend a few hours on the weekends and make lunches, snacks, and dinners for Monday-Thursday. Hard boiled eggs are good snacks and can be unrefrigerated for a few hours. I like them with salted almonds or sunflower seeds (which can also be unrefrigerated), and sometimes baby carrots.
You could also make a sandwich, either in that 5 minutes, or in the AM, or the night before if you're not a morning person.
If you find oats and yogurt filling (I don't - not enough protein for me) you can mix them up the night before - look up "overnight oats" for more info and ideas.1 -
okohjacinda wrote: »These are unhealthy choices but
Lean cuisines
Ramen noodles
Instant Oatmeal
Frozen pizza
So I try to cook as much as possible. Plus I ate this so much in college that the taste sometimes makes me sick esp Lean cuisines.
None of those foods are inherently unhealthy.4 -
Breakfast type meals are usually quick and easy. I'll sometimes do scrambled eggs with sausage and cheese with whatever veggies I've got lying around.
Or I'll have a meal that consists of snackish foods, like slices of cucumber, hummus, cheese cubes, turkey pepperoni and some summer slaw on a plate.
I don't quite meal prep, but I do often have chopped veggies in my fridge from last time I cooked. These are helpful to throw into a pan for a quick saute, paired with any protein. And as a last resort, I'll have a pre-packaged soup or meal but these are high in sodium so I try to avoid them if I can.0 -
in the meal prep camp you can also premake and then freeze burritos - breakfast or otherwise. i make about 10 at a time with scrambled eggs, veggies, faux sausage and sometimes cheese and / or potatoes. they end up with about 300 calories and reheat really well. just unwrap the foil / wrap in a paper towel and microwave for one minute.0
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Brown rice, grilled chicken, veggies0
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I started eating pre-cooked meats and packaged veggies, and my stand by protein powder mixed in oatmeal. The problem with most pre-packaged foods is the sodium goes way up so look out for that! Good luck!1
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Eggs are my go food (it's still cooking but takes like 2 minutes). Frozen veggies in those individual packages. Sometimes when I really desparate I resort to cereal.0
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Eggs. Burritos with Gardein.0
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Meal prep is the key. Cook for multiple days at once. Whenever I cook, I'll usually make enough to provide for one meal of leftovers and a lunch or two. It takes just as long to grill 6 chicken breasts as it does to grill 2.0
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Things I like to keep on hand: frozen tilapia, salmon filets. Run under cold water for a few minutes then put in the oven (season as you like) for ~20 minutes. Pair with whatever fresh veggies you have on hand. Easy.0
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Eggs. Fried, boiled, scrambled, omelettes...
Pasta. You can make a number of quick pasta toppings in the time it takes for the noodles to cook.
Rice with various things through it - canned fish is a good addition.
I keep pots (about 250ml) of leftover cooked meat in the freezer, which makes it very easy to make a quick meal.0 -
Huel? Quick, nutritious and surprisingly palatable if you hoy a load of fruit, cocoa powder, coffee etc in it.
I generally have one a day instead of a "proper meal" more than that and I crave texture too much.0 -
What do I eat when you don't have much time to cook?
Everything I can get my hands on.2 -
just some veggies, rice or quinoa, and either some legumes or a meat alternative....sorta the same as i eat when I do have time0
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AlabasterVerve wrote: »If it's just me (and I don't feel like taking 15 minutes to cook) I'll make up a plate of snack foods. Whatever I have on hand works - nuts, cheese, leftover meat, sliced fruit & vegetables, pickles, hard boiled eggs etc.
This is what I eat for lunch every day and most dinners if my husband doesn't cook. I also include crackers, olives, dried fruit, and cured meats. And I keep around some commercially made "snack packs" for when I'm REALLY lazy or just want a change. I like the P3 packs in particular.0 -
sandwich, this summer it's been tomato sandwiches or BLTs
scrambled eggs
frozen meal although I won't eat them often due to the sodium in them0 -
protein bar0
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I cook and freeze brown rice in half cup portions then microwave with frozen or canned veggies. And rotisserie chicken. I hate to cook....1
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I mix up portions of ground turkey with onions and garlic and have it in my freezer and 1-2 in my fridge at all times. I just mix it up into an omelette. High fat (im low on fat if your not just remove 1 or more of the egg yolks) and high protein. Way i make it is under 300 calories to not a bad meal and delicious + almost perfect macros (for me).
Half a can of tuna/ flaked chicken or turkey works in a pinch to if you dont want to prep the ground meat beforehand i just prefer to avoid the excess sodium0 -
BellaMermaid96 wrote: »I'm trying to find healthy ideas. I can only think of tuna or salads.
I make several small takeout spinach salads at the local grocery and load them with shredded carrots, black olives, chick peas, etc. Each salad is enough for one meal. I also buy Amy's brand canned soup (low sodium). That's an organic brand that's sold in most grocery stores inthe US and on Amazon.
I agree with the people who said to make meals ahead of time and freeze them.1 -
Vegetarian here. Bag of microvave broccoli (cooked) , half can black bean from can, diced peppers or pepper rings (prepared veggie area of grocery), sprinkle of walnuts, raisins and squirt of sriacha. 5 minutes and filling.1
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How much time do you need cooking? Prepping, cooking and doing the dishes never takes more than 30 minutes for me. And I always cook from scratch. There are some exceptions of course: tinned chopped tomatoes taste better than the watery things you can get at supermarkets here for example. If I buy something convenience'd I always look at the ingredients. a tin of tomatoes is fine. I would not buy a tin of tomatoes with sugar or herbs added.0
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Favorite meal on the go: Lenny & Larry's Snickerdoodle Protein Cookie and a banana, with coffee & half and half. Right at about 500 calories.0
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The food I have prepped in advance - I normally have a couple of meals in the fridge/freezer (such as Chilli, Thai Green Curry, Beef Strogonoff, Saag Paneer, Salmon Fishcakes, Falafel, etc) that can be quickly re-heated or cooked through and eaten with some steamed veg/microwave rice. I prep workday lunches for Mon-Fri - usually some homemade soup (takes about 25 mins to make 4 portions), pasta or salad (cooks whilst making the soup) or some leftovers from the freezer with some salad or microwave rice.
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super quick - Instant cup of noodles, bag of microwave veg, stir all together after cooked crack an egg in and microwave again, bish bash bosh job done shove a bit of extra soy or sweet chilli too after it's done. (obvs instant noodles are processed and salty but meh ;P)1
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