Pack a Healthy Lunch

Do fast food meals make it hard to stick to a healthy eating plan? Don’t worry – eating right is in the bag when you pack your own lunch. Bringing food from home can help you eat better, feel better and save money, too. Instead of standing in line at the cafeteria at lunchtime, you’ll have time for a power walk in the crisp autumn air!What’s a good lunch?Lunch should provide a quarter to a third of your daily nutrients, depending on how often you eat. A soda and bagel won’t do that! What will? Getting a variety of foods from MyPlate food groups – at least two servings of fruits and vegetables, as well as whole grains and foods rich in protein and calcium.Planning makes it easy• Post a list. A good use of all those refrigerator magnets is to hold a list of your favorite lunch items – tuna salad, vegetable soup, bran muffins, etc. Add to it whenever you get an idea. It will keep your lunches from getting boring.• Make lunch at dinner. Pasta for supper? Put some in a lunch container, then add the leftover vegetables and some salad dressing for an instant pasta salad – ready to go in the morning! Tacos tonight? All the trimmings will liven up tomorrow’s sandwich. Extra tossed salad? Pack it for lunch and bring a single-serving can of tuna for an elegant salad.• Use your freezer. If you have access to a microwave at work, freeze single portions of leftovers to take for lunch. If not, you can still freeze things such as muffins and sandwiches for lunch.• Have a fallback pattern. Know what to pack when you don’t know what to pack! Have a basic lunch plan of a piece of fruit, a zippered bag of pre-cut vegetables, a sandwich on whole-grain bread and a small nonfat yogurt. Keep these staples in your kitchen so it will be easy to grab and go!Just dessertsWhen you’re counting calories, dessert counts. So make it count nutritionally, too. If you have to have a ‘little something’ to round out your meal, be sure there are healthy pluses – a tofu-based pudding, baked pear with raisins, a few dried apricots with almonds. These might just keep you from raiding the vending machines in the afternoon!Keep it freshSoggy sandwiches and salads aren’t appealing, so pack wet ingredients separately. Lettuce and tomato slices can be put in a small plastic bag and added to sandwiches at the last minute, salad dressings and other condiments can be put in small containers.Play it safeThe basic food safety rule says to keep hot foods hot and cold foods cold. If you can’t use a refrigerator, keep your lunch cold by packing it in an insulated cooler or lunch bag with a frozen ice pack. It will stay fresh up to six hours. A frozen juice box will also keep your food chilled, and be slushy enough to drink with lunch. If foods need to stay hot, pack them piping hot into a good thermos.Pearly whitesCan’t brush your teeth after lunch? One study found that chewing sugarless gum immediately after eating helps rid your mouth of decay-causing acid.Mix 'n' MatchTired of the same old sandwich? Try something new! Choose a base from the ‘outside’ list, and add one, two, three or more things from the ‘inside’ list to jazz it up. You might want to pack the insides in separate containers.Outside• Whole-wheat bread (100%)• Whole-wheat pita bread• Bran muffin• Lavosh (flat bread)• Corn tortillas• Whole-grain, lowfat crackers• Flour tortillas• Rice cakes• Pumpkin or banana bread• Cornbread• Oatmeal bread• Steamed white or brown rice• Leftover pastaInside• Nut butter or peanut butter (try it mixed with applesauce, tofu or cottage cheese)• Hummus or mashed bean spreads• Sliced lettuce, tomato, cucumber, summer squash, radishes, peppers• Fresh herbs or dried seasoning mixes• Shredded carrots, beets, cabbage• Thinly sliced apples, pears, peaches, bananas• Lowfat cheese or soy cheese• Tuna, salmon or sardines• A slice of skinless roasted chicken breast or turkey• Apple or pumpkin butter• Mashed sweet potatoes• Salsa (mix sliced tomatoes with prepared salsa to lower the sodium)• Refried beans• ChutneyBy Cheryl Sullivan, MS, RD.

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Judy Doherty, MPS, PCII

Judy’s passion for cooking began with helping her grandmother make raisin oatmeal for breakfast. From there, she earned her first food service job at 15, was accepted to the world-famous Culinary Institute of America at 18 (where she graduated second in her class), and went on to the Fachschule Richemont in Switzerland, where she focused on pastry arts and baking. After a decade in food service for Hyatt Hotels, Judy launched Food and Health Communications to focus on flavor and health. She graduated with Summa Cum Laude distinction from Johnson and Wales University with a BS in Culinary Arts, holds a master’s degree in Food Business from the Culinary Institute of America, two art certificates from UC Berkeley Extension, and runs a food photography & motion studio where her love is creating fun recipes and content.

Judy received The Culinary Institute of America’s Pro Chef II certification, the American Culinary Federation Bronze Medal, Gold Medal, and ACF Chef of the Year. Her enthusiasm for eating nutritiously and deliciously leads her to constantly innovate and use the latest nutritional science and Dietary Guidelines to guide her creativity, from putting new twists on fajitas to adapting Italian brownies to include ingredients like toasted nuts and cooked honey. Judy’s publishing company, Food and Health Communications, is dedicated to her vision that everyone can make food that tastes as good as it is for you.

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