Tips for the Travelling / Single / Busy Athlete
November 1st, 2011 by JenHowieOkay, so at least one of these categories will describe one of us at some point, or maybe you are always all three! Regardless, there are always times when staying on top of your nutrition is not exactly easy. Here are a few tips I have.
Eating Out - Research your options. Whether you are eating out near home, or on the road, see what is around. Try to find places that let you create what you want. For instance, Chipotle, Mad Greens, Noodles and Co will let you put whatever you want on your plate. Look on their site and see how what you like shakes down nutritionally. When I looked up my standard burrito at Chipotle I was surprised to see that a burrito could come out close to 1,000 calories. So, I tweaked the fillings and made it fit to what I wanted. No rice, yes beans, sour cream, but no cheese, add veggies, etc. you get the picture. A lot of restaurants have great nutrition pages on their site, look into them and after a while you will have an idea about what you are getting.
If you are in a position of eating out at a place where you don’t know all of the nutrition stats, you must rely on your intuition. Focus on switching out what you need to in order to make what they have better for you. If the standard dish includes fries, ask for a salad or their fresh veggies. Top the salad with oil in vinegar instead of thousand island. Choose either cheese, or mayo, but don’t do both. Really when it comes down to it, we all know what to do, it is just hard to do it sometimes.
Make Ahead - If you have some time on the weekend, start making preparations for the next weeks meals. Here are a few things you can make ahead and reap the benefits of all week long
-Cut up a few days veggies so that you can either eat them straight out of the bag, put them in a salad, or saute them quickly.
-Marinate and grill chicken, pork, lean steak, tofu so that you can quickly add a great source of protein to a salad, wrap, sandwich
-Make a pot of soup full of veggies, beans and chicken. Anytime you need a quick snack you are sure to get a hearty and healthy meal. Here are a few of my favorite recipes …
Veggie Drawer Soup (similar to Minestrone)
2 boneless skinless chicken breast cut in bite sized pieces
1 tbsp olive oil
1/2 onion diced
2 garlic cloves
2 large carrots diced
1 green pepper diced
1 yellow squash diced
1 zucchini diced
1 can fire roasted tomatoes (diced of crushed)
2 cans low sodium chicken broth
1 cup water
1 can garbanzo beans (or kidney)
1/4 head of cabbage diced (or a 1/2 a bag of frozen chopped spinach)
salt and pepper to taste
red pepper flakes to taste
1 tbsp Italian seasoning
In a large pot, cook chicken in 1 tbsp olive oil on medium heat. Once cooked, add in garlic, onion and carrots and cook until onions are transparent. Add all veggies except cabbage (or spinach) add broth, water, tomatoes, beans and spices and allow to lightly simmer for 20 minutes. Add in cabbage (or spinach) and allow to simmer for another 10 minutes. The veggies should be tender crisp.
If you would like to add pasta to this, for more carbohydrates, I recommend cooking the pasta separately and adding it as needed. Adding it to the pot will cause the pasta to become mushy as time draws on.
Another way to easily add veggies and high fiber carbohydrates to your diet is…
Corn and Bean Salsa
1 can black beans drained and rinsed
1/2 bag frozen sweet corn thawed
1/2 sweet pepper diced
1/2 small red onion
1 Roma tomato seeded and diced
1/4 cup chopped cilantro
either 1 Serrano or 1 jalapeno (depending on heat tolerance) finely chopped
juice from 1 lime
salt to taste
Combine all ingredients in a bowl. Add to wraps, eggs, salads, top chicken or fish, eat with corn chips or with a spoon:)
In a hurry in the morning and want to up the nutrition in your bowl of oatmeal try making this oatmeal on the weekend and reheating it on a weekday morning…
Steel Cut Porridge
1 tbsp butter
1 cup steel cut oats (aka, pinhead oats, Irish oats, Scottish oats)
1 cup milk (cows, soy, almond, rice)
3 cups water
pinch of salt
1 tsp vanilla
1 tsp cinnamon
3 tbsp brown sugar
Melt butter in saucepan, add oats and toast over medium heat stirring frequently. When the oats start to smell nutty remove from heat and add in the milk, water, salt, vanilla, cinnamon and brown sugar. Return to heat an allow to return to a low simmer over low to medium heat for about 45 minutes. You will want to stir about every 5 minutes.
Variations include…
adding 2/3 cup pumpkin puree and nutmeg ( you can also use mashed sweet potatoes)
replacing brown sugar with maple syrup and adding sauteed apples
Topping options…
blueberries, pecans, Greek yogurt, bananas, etc
Steel cut oats are higher in fiber than instant oats. They have a chewy and hearty texture that will leave you feeling fuller, longer.
Planning Ahead is KEY!
Weekends go by fast and sometimes we start the week behind. Make planning meals, shopping and prepping a priority. When you are trying to figure it out at the last minute every time, you are more likely to grab what is quick and easy, not what is healthy and will help you achieve your goals. If you have family to help, put them to work! They can help you with meal ideas. If your kids are old enough, let them help you chop veggies, or boil eggs, or cook up the chicken. Once you get on top of staying organized with your nutrition, is really does get easier.
Please let me know if you have any more questions. Good luck!