When I used to make lunches to bring with me to work, I'd just eat cheese and cherry tomatoes.I need some quick recipes for meal prep sunday. I just started and found it saves me a lot on lunch costs and may help me to get an intermittent fasting routine in order. But I am running out of ideas. So far I have tried these recipes below. Just so we are clear, I hate cooking.
Week 1:
300g chicken fillet strips browned with onions. Threw in a pack of Mcain mexican vegetables and Rice Mate which is basically rice and small pack of breyani spice. Cooked in 600ml water for 20 minutes and Bob's your uncle, lunch packs for 5 days. I found it to be very tasty but the portions maybe just too small.
Week 2:
300g chicken fillet strips browned with onions. Added a pack of random frozen veggies and a tablespoon on Rajah mild & flavorful and 300g rice. Cooked for 20 minutes but did not taste quite right. Added a tablespoon of Rajah Medium and again I am your uncle with a week of lunch packs. Not so flavorful this time and very spicy but a lot better than garage pies.
Week 3:
300g chicken fillet strips browned with onions. Random veggies and a can of mushrooms. 350g rice/water and a pack of Knorr Thai green curry. Very tasty IMO and not too spicy at all.
I feel like I have depleted my cooking skills which is basically heating up food for hobos. Any tips and tricks for easy meal preps?
Around 100g of cheese and something like 8 cherry tomatoes. It can get monotonous, but it works.
The reason I chose cheese specifically is that it has a decent combination of fat and protein, along with calcium and vitamin K2. Calcium and vitamin K2 are both great for teeth and bone health, in combination with vitamin D and magnesium.
Tomatoes add a nice contrast to the cheese, which can taste a bit "dry". I suppose you could make some low-carb crackers and eat those with the cheese and tomato. Tomatoes also have a bit of potassium, and good levels of other healthy goodies.
Another thing you can try is tinned fish. Woolies sells Lucky Star middlecut in brine, which is middlecut mackerel in brine. It's one of the healthiest things you can eat, being rich in protein and healthy fat (Omega 3 fats).
The downside of middlecut in brine, and the reason I don't eat tinned fish in general all that much anymore, is because it is tinned. The inside of the tin is lined with a small amount of plastic, to keep the fish from coming into contact with the tin. This plastic is not healthy for you. It often contains bisphenol-A, which messes with your endocrine systems (including testosterone I believe). The thing is, some tins claim to be bisphenol-A free, but then what are they using instead? So, I haven't eliminated tinned fish, I just eat less of it.
You can make a salad with tinned fish and it could be pretty healthy and low carb. Tinned fish, lettuce leaves, tomatoes, avocado maybe, some olive oil and vinegar.
