Advice needed & would be greatly appreciated :)
BiancaW18
Posts: 26 Member
So..I am a college student living in a dorm. I have access to a stove, microwave, toaster, toaster oven, refridgerator, and a regular oven.
I have a tendency to eat the same, microwavable foods EVERYDAY!
Breakfast is usually: oatmeal or Kashi waffles
Lunch: microwavable chicken nuggets, lean pocket, or microwavable meal..etc.
Dinner: Whatver option I didn't eat for lunch.
I take a multi-vitamin but I'd much rather get my nutrients through the food I eat.
Any easy meals/snacks/etc that you know how to make & are good for you that you would like to share?
I have a tendency to eat the same, microwavable foods EVERYDAY!
Breakfast is usually: oatmeal or Kashi waffles
Lunch: microwavable chicken nuggets, lean pocket, or microwavable meal..etc.
Dinner: Whatver option I didn't eat for lunch.
I take a multi-vitamin but I'd much rather get my nutrients through the food I eat.
Any easy meals/snacks/etc that you know how to make & are good for you that you would like to share?
0
Replies
-
chicken is good for you. but i would go with non-breaded things. salads are good too but you need to count that as some of your water intake. just try to watch your calories and what you're burning and what your intake is.0
-
Breakfast: Scramble an egg in a small bowl and microwave it for 1 minute (no oil needed to cook it) and if you want more flavor, after you've cooked it, put a slice of low cal cheese on top and place it back in the microwave for 15 sec. to melt it. Drink some tomato juice and eat a banana. You need some variety.
Lunch: How about some canned tuna packed in water. Put it on a salad. I like to use salsa or dijon mustard as a dressing...I know I'm unusual. ...but its low cal and I like the taste.
Dinner: try some ground turkey ( add Adobo seasoning, dried onions, different spices to zest it up, etc.) ome or chicken sausage fried in PAM and throw in some french sytle green beans, mushrooms, etc.
Hope this helps.0 -
I'd suggest keeping more fresh fruits around, and even some vegetables that make good snacks (carrots, celery with cream cheese, etc.). Just a thought...as for the actual meals, I like some of the ideas that have already been put out there.
Good luck!0 -
A good snack is Laughing Cow cheese with Kame Rice crackers, or hummus singles.0
-
fresh fruits and veggies! And maybe look up cookbooks for microwaves? I know there's this one called a man a can and a microwave, but IDK how healthy their food is0
-
I usually eat pure protein bars for breakfast because they are easy and full of protein. I am not a breakfast eater so they are simple. For lunch I would say a salad but watch the salad dressing. (usually where the bad calories are). Then chicken for dinner with more salad or veggies. You have to start to cook. Those prepackaged meals will kill a diet fast. There are the healthy steamers which are pretty good. Give up anything breaded or plain bread if you can. That usually stalls weight loss for the most part. Hope this helps. Good luck.0
-
Just for your information, this is what chicken nuggets look like:
For lunch I tend to make myself some rice pudding or tuna salad wraps. Rice Salad is also nice to go0 -
avocados are a good source of healthy fats. On a day off, cook a weeks worth of chicken or fish, buy some veggies, cut them all up and put them in a container for the week. Buy some whole grain wraps. Tuna or canned chicken with celery, miricale whip, onion and pickle relish is a great spread on crackers, makes a good sandwich, a topping on a salad or in the wraps. you can make chicken tacos for dinner, or fish. My advice is to pick a day to cook, chop all your food. As a mom of two, I am always looking for ways to save time and this one works for me. I like avacodo on everything.0
-
Breakfast: as another person suggested microwaved scrambled eggs but instead of cheese add salsa; it's quite tasty
Breakfast: 1/2 banana, 1-2 tbsp natural peanut butter on a slice of martin's 100% whole wheat bread with coffee (1 cream)-- that's if you like coffee
Lunch or Dinner: squeeze a little lemon on salmon and a pinch of salt cook it in the toaster oven
Lunch or Dinner vegetable options: vegetable steamers; fast and delicious
Good Carb: Uncle Bens 90 sec Brown & Wild Rice; You microwave it for 90 secs0 -
Celery with peanut butter is my favorite! Maybe try different fruits and vegis with something healthy to dip them in.0
-
If you can use a crock pot, i highly recommend a healthy soap divided into tupperwear for the freezer. i do turkey chili once a week, makes 10, 1 cup servings. my go-to food0
-
avocados are a good source of healthy fats. On a day off, cook a weeks worth of chicken or fish, buy some veggies, cut them all up and put them in a container for the week. Buy some whole grain wraps. Tuna or canned chicken with celery, miricale whip, onion and pickle relish is a great spread on crackers, makes a good sandwich, a topping on a salad or in the wraps. you can make chicken tacos for dinner, or fish. My advice is to pick a day to cook, chop all your food. As a mom of two, I am always looking for ways to save time and this one works for me. I like avacodo on everything.
I agree with this. Try to eat fresh, whole foods instead of just microwave meals. You'll get more nutrients this way. Hummus is great for you and an easy snack with raw veggies. So is Greek yogurt with fruit or nuts. Peanut butter on toast is great with a banana. etc0 -
In the freezer section, the Green Giant "Steamers". Have them everyday at work for lunch. :bigsmile:0
-
Just for your information, this is what chicken nuggets look like:
For lunch I tend to make myself some rice pudding or tuna salad wraps. Rice Salad is also nice to go
Huh?0 -
I hardly ever cook in the microwave now.. only for steam fresh bags of veggies. Stock up on them! I buy big family packs of chicken breast, and separate it into smaller bags, and freeze them. I use light italian dressing and cook the chicken either on top of the stove in the dressing or in a dish in the oven, add a few veggies from the steam fresh freezer bags.. and you can have leftovers for lunches also. Take some chicken and bake it with a jar of salsa, super yummy and you can even top with mozz cheese. I also make wraps with low sodium ham, and turkey bacon...lots of veggies. Breakfast for me is usually cereal (Special K o Cheerios) peice of fruit and a yogurt.. or light wheat toast. Watch the sodium in alot of the freezer meals, thats a killer! I have salads sometimes with dinner, as a side but salas does not stay with me long enough for me to have just that for dinner.0
-
Try to eat more frest foods. It is really important to eat clean. Eggs are easy in the microwave or you can boil a dozen to last you all week. You can premake low fat soups or meals and put it in individual containers and store in the refridgator or freezer. It will make eating healthier and cleaner a little easier. It is a little time consuming for one day but totally worth it the rest of the week. Tuna pack are good too with whole grain wraps. The more options you give yourself the better your results will be and you won't get bored with eating the same old foods!0
-
Go to the grocery store sometime when you have some free time.. and just look at all your options. IMO.. healthy eating shopping takes alittle longer.. actually read the lables... think of meals you can make.0
-
Breakfast:
-English muffins (the 100 calorie ones) with either peanut butter or nutella. I cut up a banana into slices and put it on top.
-Eggs
-cereal
-toast
Lunch:
-Sandwiches
-lean cuisines
-subway
-bagels
Dinner:
-Pretty much anything, just watch how many carbs and calories and stuff.
snacks:
-apples w/ peanut butter
-bananas w/peanut butter
A GREAT WEBSITE THAT I USE FOR MEALS IS skinnytaste.com
She shows step by step pictures of meals. everything from breakfasts, to snacks to lunch, dinner and dessert recipes. She lists calories, and nutrients. It's awesome!0 -
What are your grocery shopping habits? What are the storage options in the fridge for fresh food? Generally, microwave meals are super processed, very high in sodium, and much more expensive per meal than cranking out something fresh.
If you can hit the store at least once or twice each week and have a way of storing your food so others don't snag your stuff, then there are definitely a number of inexpensive easy things you can make for yourself to help you eat healthily. (I have a daughter in college, so I understand about crazy hours and oh-so-little cash.)
At minimum, make sure you are getting some fresh fruit and veggies. Even just carrots and apples. Obviously they are also great for snacks. But adding fresh food to each meal should be a goal.
Do some prep work ahead of time and store stuff in the fridge to be used in recipes in the coming days, or the freezer for next week. Examples could be steaming veggies like broccoli, carrots, cauliflower, zucchini, etc. Flashing some peppers, mushrooms, and onions in a pan with a drop of olive oil. Whipping up some rice, pasta, couscous. Baking a couple of potatoes. I always keep a jar of pesto in the fridge (HUGE flavor for a small amount). Toss your veggies in some pesto, and put them over the rice, pasta, couscous or baked potato and warm in the microwave. Sprinkle with some shredded low fat cheese if you want. Even if you did this just a few times each week you'd save money and get better nutrion from the fresh food.
And, look at the kinds of microwave meals you gravitate toward regularly. I bet you could whip up an approximation pretty easily by using fresh food.
Bless you!0 -
Just for your information, this is what chicken nuggets look like:
Huh?
Just trying to show how unhealthy they are because I know some people tend to say that it's healthy because it's chicken. I used to love chicken nuggets but after seeing this picture I was completely cured since I don't want to eat chicken eyes etc as well.
Another thing you could try is smoothies You can also check my diary for some nice meals which are easy to prepare. (I'm a college student as well, so my cooking isn't the best)0 -
I like the dannon fruit on the bottom nonfat greek yogurt for breakfast. It has so much protein its filling. Then snack on fruit. For lunch Im getting into the healthy choice steamers. Only 200 calories and really good. I then eat some fruit or a cereal bar of some sort as a snack before dinner. I try to work out in the evening and for dinner I eat some sort of baked chicken, minimal amount of a potato or pasta (i gotta allow myself a little something bad) and salad. Last night I did sliced tomato with parm cheese, oregano, salt and pepper drizzled with olive oil. Stuck it in the oven for 15 min - delish and EASY0
-
That's what chicken nuggets look like pre-processing. That's ground up chicken stuff before they nugget shape it and bread it.
For breakfast I make an egg mug - I spray a mug with pam, put in egg beaters or egg whites (the kind in the cartons), 1 light laughing cow, and then mix it up (sometimes salsa, sometimes mushrooms, even some lean turkey). Lots of protein, totally easy, and low in calories. I also make a similar egg mug with instant oatmeal and light chocolate soy milk. Throw a banana or some peanut butter/powder in it, and it's totally yum!
I echo the recommendations on fresh fruits/veggies. Green giant has some nice individual serving size frozen veggies as well. I also think the low-sodium canned/packaged tuna and chicken are good ideas.
For dinner you could try some lettuce wraps, with mixes of lean fresh or ground meats (or the canned too) and some carrots, rinsed canned beans, and lime. I also live off of the recipes at hungry-girl.com, although she does use a lot of processed foods.0 -
The pre-packaged stuff is horrible for you...loads of sodium and a lot of them substitute sugar for the fat. A little prep work in the beginning of the week goes a long way.
If you have a little pyrex or non-stick pan that will fit in your toaster oven you can make a weeks worth of breakfast (or you can substitute it for lunch or "brinner") You can also do this in the microwave, but you have to stir it pretty often so it doesn't explode!
6 eggs (or 3 eggs + 3 egg whites)
Salsa (I use a fork to "strain" it out of the container so there's not so much water)
Handful or 2 of fresh spinach
salt & pepper
a little shredded cheese (if desired)
1/2 onion chopped
Handful of mushrooms
Put spinach on a few paper towels in the microwave for about a minute or 2. Squeeze out the excess water.
Mix the eggs (like you are making scrambled eggs)
Put all the ingredients into the pyrex pan (or nonstick pan)
Bake in the toaster oven at 350 for about 30 min (or until the eggs rise and when you lightly press on them, they pop back up)
I usually double this recipe and make 6 - 8 squares and eat a square for breakfast. You'll probably get about 4 squares. It's a little bit of prep, but it will save you a lot of time in the long run. You can store the leftovers in the fridge for about 5-7 days. Serve with avocado, hot sauce, black beans (rinse the beans thoroughly first) or you can even put it between 2 slices of sandwich thins. It's a pretty versatile dish.
I'm sorry the measurements aren't exact, I usually combine everything to taste. But it is important to cook the spinach first and get out most of the water, otherwise you get watery eggs.0 -
I like to make meals in bulk on the weekends ready for microwaving in week when i know i wont have so much time on my hands.
Soups/stews/casseroles always lurking somewhere in the freezer0 -
Just for your information, this is what chicken nuggets look like:
For lunch I tend to make myself some rice pudding or tuna salad wraps. Rice Salad is also nice to go
This is supposed to be mechanically sepparated meat. Look on the package as they have to list this. EG McDonalds uses all white meat chicken, not this. Not saying Mcnuggets are healthy but not all nuggets are the same0 -
You have all of the equipment I do to prepare food. More than a lot of college students. So are you looking to branch out? Learn how to cook? Learn how to use your equipment? Or you still want to stick to your microwave?
I agree with what others have said, more fresh fruits and veggies and cooking from scratch. But your goal is . . . ?
Pam0 -
Personally I choose not to eat processed foods and find I can cook most things from scratch using simple tools, as you indicate. For instance, chicken and fish cook beautifully in the microwave (toaster oven too).. Apply a bit of soy/paprika, if you want a bit of color. Just don't overcook or will be tough. Start at one minute increments. Broccoli does well in microwave. Add a touch of water, and cover a bit. about one minute for a large serving. Ditto for a lot of fresh veggies. Scrambled Egg in a cup. Of course the potato. Good luck.0
-
Just for your information, this is what chicken nuggets look like:
For lunch I tend to make myself some rice pudding or tuna salad wraps. Rice Salad is also nice to go
Huh?
Frozen chicken nuggets & a lot from fast food places ground up the WHOLE chicken (feet, bones, eyes, and all) into a paste so that they can make mass nuggets & save $$$..pretty gross.0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 426 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions