One of most basic ways to
do more with less is to bring your lunch to
work; if you usually spend just $7 a day on lunch, bringing it four
days a week (splurge and buy lunch on the fifth, if you like) can
easily leave $100 or more in your wallet each month. Though you do
end up spending a little more on groceries, the savings --
especially if you learn to love leftovers -- can be
substantial.
Bringing your lunch to work doesn't mean throwing a soggy
sandwich into a baggie and tossing it in your purse, though. It
also doesn't mean a dazzling selection of non-nutritive items
from the snack machine. Here are five lunches that take little
effort to prepare:
Steak and Bleu salad: Fresh greens, cherry tomatoes, and
thin slivers of leftover london broil, pot roast, or even shredded
roast beef from the deli. Fill a small container with bleu cheese
dressing and drizzle it over the salad just before you eat it.
(Don't have any small jars? A zip-top plastic bag can keep the
dressing contained; to drizzle, snip of part of one corner with
scissors and squeeze like a pastry bag.)
Chips and dip: Believe it or not, low-salt tortilla chips,
a small bowl of refried beans, and a small bowl of guacamole can be
a perfectly healthy (and filling) lunch. Make your own beans, or
choose a premade version without lard to keep the fat content
low.
Deconstructed sandwich: The thing I dislike about
sandwiches that they always fall apart when I try to take a bite --
usually spilling something ugly onto my shirt or jacket. Packing
the components seperately can mitigate the mess, and it tastes as a
good. My current favorite: smoked turkey, thinly sliced Granny
Smith apple, cheddar cheese, and marble rye bread.
Bag o' snacks. Sometime, I don't even have time
for lunch, but its easy to keep hunger at bay if I graze throughout
the day. Apple slices, peanut butter, dried fruit, nuts, carrot
sticks, celery sticks, whole-grain crackers, and some low-fat
string cheese fit the bill. Too much like what's in your
child's lunchbox? Think "appetizers" instead of
snacks, and pack frozen potstickers (Trader Joe's has some good
ones), breadsticks wrapped with ham, cubes of cheese, and slices of
bell pepper with dressing as a dip.
Fried rice. Transform leftovers at home into fried rice and
bring it to work. It's easy: Leftover rice + slivers of
leftover chicken or a quickly scrambled egg + the odds and ends of
leftover veggies + soy sauce + sesame oil. Heat in a pan -- or, if
you're really out of time, in the microwave at work.
I'm hungry, so please share your ideas in the comments:
What's your favorite last-minute lunch to bring to work?
Lylah M. Alphonse writes about juggling career and parenthood
at The 36-Hour Day and Work It, Mom!, and blogs at
Write.
Edit. Repeat.
