The key to healthy snacking is to find foods that have as much nutritional value as possible that will fill you up so you aren’t hungry again a short time later.
For example: A 100-calorie pack of chips or cookies will leave you feeling hungry again very soon AND they are not providing you with any nutrients. If you eat a banana and a few almonds, you are eating something nutritious (vitamins, minerals, fiber, etc.) that will fill you up longer (and help you feel better) and help you avoid the sugar crash.
The more “whole foods” (unprocessed or minimally processed) you eat, the better.
Have different snacks during the week to keep it interesting and to increase the different types of nutrients you are getting.
Note: Eating organic is best, but do what your budget and preferences allow.
- Almonds, walnuts or cashews (a small palm full is usually a serving)
- Sunflower seeds and raisins
- Celery and almond butter (peanut butter or sun butter) 1-2 tbsp
- Rice chips with hummus
- Organic Tortilla Chips and salsa or guacamole (for those that just HAVE to have chips).
- Veggie sticks (celery, carrots, cucumber) and hummus or guacamole
- Kale chips (make your own) – for recipes visit: AllRecipes.com
- Zucchini oven chips (make your own)
- Sweet potato chips or fries (make your own)
- Apple slices with nut butter or sun butter
- Pumpkin seeds and dried cranberries
- Greek yogurt with granola (IF you tolerate dairy. Tip: read labels – avoid high fructose corn syrup and artificial colors & sweeteners)
- Green smoothie with flax or chia seeds
- Fresh fruit or fruit salad
- Make your own trail mix with raw nuts seeds and dried fruit
- Baby carrots and/or celery, cucumber with hummus
- Dinner leftovers
- Salad with a variety of vegetables and olive oil-based dressing
- For an easy on-the-go snack, check out Lara Bars (get the ones without added sugar).
- Mixed berries (or mixed berry smoothie with flax seeds or chia seeds)