A Bigger, Better Lunch for Better Health

Published by Annie Barrett: 
October 3, 2024

We all have to eat, and what we choose to eat affects our own health and the health of the planet.

In this blog, I discuss meal timing, meal spacing, and why a bigger, better lunch may be healthier for you.

HEALTHIER EATING TIP: Eat your meals at roughly the same times during daylight hours. A consistent meal schedule is linked to better energy, balanced weight, and a reduction in metabolic risk factors.

Anahad O'Conner of the New York Times writes that "a growing body of research suggests that our bodies function optimally when we align our eating patterns with our circadian rhythms, the innate 24-hour cycles that tell our bodies when to wake up, when to eat and when to fall asleep. Studies show that chronically disrupting this rhythm — by eating late meals or nibbling on midnight snacks, for example — could be a recipe for weight gain and metabolic trouble."

Dr. Satchin Panda, a researcher on Circadian science and author of the Circadian Code argues that our bodies function best when we eat our meals daily during an 8 - 12 hour window, eating our breakfast in the morning and finishing dinner by the early evening. (Read this article here.)

HEALTHIER EATING TIP: Eat a nutrient dense breakfast and make lunch the largest meal of your day to optimize your digestion, energy, and weight.

Ayurveda, the healing tradition of India and sister science of yoga, and modern science are in agreement with regards to meal timing, meal spacing and what to eat when. Ayurveda has always emphasized that meal spacing and making lunch the largest meal of the day are keys to health and longevity. Ayurveda argues that when the sun is at its highest, at the noon hour, the body is most primed to take in the largest meal. Scientific evidence support this. Eating the bulk of your food in the first half of the day is better for our health because we are biologically best equipped to digest food more efficiently and burn more calories in the earlier part of the day.

Making the shift to a bigger better lunch.

A few generations back, the midday meal that we call lunch was called dinner. Folks stopped working and gathered at midday or early afternoon to eat their largest meal together. It was a time to be nourished and to relax. After this, folks would return to their work or chores. Later in the day, they would gather again for a smaller meal called supper, Supper: think something "supplemental."  A lighter meal, not a large, heavy meal. This healthy pattern of eating is still practiced in many parts of the world.

Shifting our eating pattern to making lunch a larger meal requires meal planning. Whether you work from home or work away from the home and gather with your family for dinner in the evening, one strategy could be to plan to make enough dinner so that you'll have leftovers for lunch for the next day. Before serving your dinner, put away healthy portions for lunch for the next day in lunch containers. Then, serve yourself a smaller portion for dinner. Better yet, save the dense, heavy food for lunch and eat something lighter and more digestible like soup for dinner.

Take a proper lunch break.

When it's lunch time at work, make it an occasion. Get away from your desk. Gather with your colleagues, your friends, your family. members, or even take time by yourself, and take a real pause to eat and relax before getting back to work.

HEALTHIER EATING TIP: Eat an earlier dinner and fast for 12 -14 hours between dinner and breakfast to optimize digestion, reduce inflammation, and balance weightAyurveda and growing scientific evidence suggests that you should eat a nourishing breakfast, a bigger lunch, and an earlier, lighter dinner. Allow at least three hours between finishing dinner and going to bed. Allow at least 12 hours between dinner and breakfast. Evidence suggests that 13 hours or more of fasting reduces inflammation and may help promote better weight.


More strategies for healthier meals for busy people

Some people find it helpful to invest in better lunch containers. You. may choose to use glass containers that you can reheat easily. You could also get yourself a food thermos. If you like to go out to eat, you could try going out for lunch instead of dinner. Another strategy might be to use a pressure cooker (like an Instant pot) or a crock pot to save time in order to make healthy food at home.

Looking for recipe suggestions?
​See my list of Vibrant Soulful curated recipes.


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