Lunch ideas

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Anyone have any good lunch ideas other than salad? I work long hours and have to pack a lunch if I want to have healthy food as the food my work provides is not healthy but I want other options other than salad thanks for any idea or recipes
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  • MushroomLadyJR
    MushroomLadyJR Posts: 89 Member
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    How many calories are you aiming for?

    My lunches tend to be around 500 calories. Usually two mini wraps stuffed with whatever veggies I have with quorn or cheese (sometimes both). I typically have 2 or 3 servings of fruit with this and occasionally 25 grams of crisps. This keeps me pretty satisfied until dinner (anytime between 7-8)
  • serindipte
    serindipte Posts: 1,557 Member
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    Sandwiches with fresh veg/fruit on the side, a can of soup, wraps, leftovers from the night before. These are my mainstays.
  • heyersb820
    heyersb820 Posts: 6 Member
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    I’d say I’m shooting for around 400 calories per main meal
  • WholeFoods4Lyfe
    WholeFoods4Lyfe Posts: 1,518 Member
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    Leftovers. I eat a lot of leftovers. It's so easy. When I make dinner, I purposefully make enough so that I can take some to work the next day for lunch.
  • mutantspicy
    mutantspicy Posts: 624 Member
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    I like to make a batch of carbs on sunday that I can store and then combine easily with a variety of meat or veggie options. I will make black beans, or lentil stew or a batch quinoa or brown/wild rice mix. I can warm those up at work and eat along side some smoked salmon or rotisserie chicken that's precooked.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,868 Member
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    In the winter I usually have leftovers from dinner because we do a lot of soups and stews and casseroles and whatnot. In the nicer months I usually grill a bunch of chicken on Sunday and take that with various sides...I do that about 3x per week and usually have a sandwich or something the other two days.
  • eleiter69
    eleiter69 Posts: 7 Member
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    Tuna wrap, hardboiled eggs, definitely dinner leftovers, ham or turkey and a slice of cheese wrapped around a pickle (my personal favorite, because I love pickles, just have to watch the salt), lots of fruits and veggies (I've started dipping raw veggies in salsa or a little bit of homemade guacamole instead of ranch like I used to - I just can't eat raw veggies without a dip), rice and beans.
  • HoneyBadger302
    HoneyBadger302 Posts: 1,991 Member
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    I bought some "bento" style food containers, which I'm finding are great for "meal prep" (which I'm trying to incorporate into my life). Salads are fine, but add some variety! Different bases, different toppings - look at what some restaurants have for salads (we have one locally, Ladle and Leaf that has lots of great salads) and use them for inspiration for adding some variety to your choices.
  • vallary14
    vallary14 Posts: 215 Member
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    Today I brought tuna fish and had it with some crackers, grape tomatoes and cucumber. Leftover roasted veggies or baked potato are good options too and I’ve found the roasted veggies are even good cold(no microwave here) have that with some cottage cheese or yogurt.
  • callsitlikeiseeit
    callsitlikeiseeit Posts: 8,627 Member
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    look through the forums on here. theres hundreds of threads on the same topic
  • snemberton
    snemberton Posts: 175 Member
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    I make a crab and shrimp salad sometimes. Crabmeat, cooked shrimp, cherry tomatoes, diced cucumber and bell pepper. Toss it with a zesty italian dressing. A HUGE bowl is right at 300 calories, but lots of protein and low fat. I have a few Triscuits with it too.
  • Lounmoun
    Lounmoun Posts: 8,426 Member
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    Leftovers
    Sandwich or wrap
    Vegetables
    Fruit
    Hard boiled eggs, rolled omelet, egg muffin
    Yogurt
    Cheese
    Hummus
    Cottage cheese
    Pasta salad, bean salad, corn salad
    Stuffed tomato, stuffed cucumber, stuffed zucchini, stuffed pepper, stuffed mushrooms
    Meatballs
    Muffin, granola bar, protein bar
  • amgreenwell
    amgreenwell Posts: 1,268 Member
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    LEFTOVERS, as others have said, they are the best and easiest way to get a solid meal without any work on my part. I also love making a big crock pot of soup and eating it all week at work. SO many amazing soup recipes out there. You can even have some bread and cheese with it if you find the right stuff to fit into your calories.
  • hesn92
    hesn92 Posts: 5,967 Member
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    I always plan to cook enough food for dinner to last two dinners and a couple lunches. It’s very cost effective and I get to eat good, hot food for lunch. If we happen to not have enough for me to bring for lunch, I will make a sandwich plus maybe some fruit or something.
  • nickssweetheart
    nickssweetheart Posts: 874 Member
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    I really like soup for lunches because it actually improves in the fridge. Making a big batch on whatever day I'm not working will often carry me through 3 or 4 days of meals or more (I freeze it if it's going to be more than 4 days worth.)

    In the winter I ate a lot of:

    Split Pea Soup
    Curried Pumpkin Apple Soup (you don't need the whipping cream or can substitute a bit of canned coconut milk and personally i use olive oil instead of butter)
    Easy Lentil Stew

    Now I'm thinking a bit lighter, so I'm fixing things like:

    Tomato, White Bean and Kale Soup
    Roasted Tomato Soup (I cut the olive oil down to a couple of tablespoons and omit the cream)
    Asparagus and Pea Soup (use the lemon!)
  • skelterhelter
    skelterhelter Posts: 803 Member
    edited May 2018
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    I was big into Mexican style sweet potatoes for a while. Just pop a sweet potato in the microwave for about twelve minutes, slice it open, and top with low fat cheddar, salsa, reduced fat sour cream, and nutritional yeast (optional, but I liked the umami flavor it added). You could bulk it up even more by adding lentils, black beans, ground turkey, etc. Pair that with some fruit, a yogurt, hard-boiled egg, veggies, whatever, and you have a nice lunch ;)
  • mutantspicy
    mutantspicy Posts: 624 Member
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    I bought some "bento" style food containers, which I'm finding are great for "meal prep" (which I'm trying to incorporate into my life). Salads are fine, but add some variety! Different bases, different toppings - look at what some restaurants have for salads (we have one locally, Ladle and Leaf that has lots of great salads) and use them for inspiration for adding some variety to your choices.

    This actually sounds interesting to me. I'll check this out, I like the idea of it. I currently just use the cheap glad takeaways. They're cheap do what I want /stack nice. I take 4 takeaways per day. 1 salad, 1 microwavable dish usually beans/lentils, 1 raw veggie pack and 1 yogurt /fruit mix.
    I've been wanting to upgrade to something a little more durable and flexible.
  • daniellewhiteliving
    daniellewhiteliving Posts: 67 Member
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    Homemade soups or casseroles with plenty of veg and a wholemeal pitta. You can bath cook then freeze..just defrost in microwave!
  • rheddmobile
    rheddmobile Posts: 6,840 Member
    edited May 2018
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    I like grain bowls - prep the grains ahead, prep a couple of proteins such as roast chicken and tenderloin, then assemble grains plus a protein, veg, legumes, and spices/toppings/sauce of choice. Can easily be made Thai, Japanese, Mexican, Mediterranean, or Indian with slightly different choices. So a Mexican bowl might be turmeric rice, black beans, chicken, vegetables, and lime juice, salsa, low cal sour cream, plus avocado. Japanese would use edamame and ponzu sauce.
  • dotren
    dotren Posts: 26 Member
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    If you go to pinterest or youtube and search for "meal prep xx calories a day" (put in your calorie goal, of course :)) there are some easy ideas. Also searching those sites for "no cook lunch prep" and terms like that will get you some good ideas :)