Healthy School Lunch Ideas: 10 Tips to Pack a Better Lunch Box
The best healthy school lunch foods are surprisingly easy and fun to make and can have kids of all ages excited for the lunchtime bell to ring. Are you thinking, 鈥淏ut, my kid won鈥檛 eat lunch if it鈥檚 healthy!鈥 It鈥檚 worth giving these healthy school lunch ideas a try, as results from the showed when kids recognize their lunch as healthy, they are more likely to eat it. From holistic nutrition practitioners and fellow parents who are nutritional experts, here are 10 tips to pack a better lunch box and some inspiring healthy school lunch ideas.
3 Benefits of a Healthy School Lunch Backed by Science
- Improved academic performance
- Better mental health
- Reduced risk of obesity
Why Healthy School Lunches are Important to Your Child鈥檚 Health
According to research, there are many reasons why a healthy school lunch, which is nutritionally dense, and high in energy is beneficial for kids. In the United States, a recent movement towards healthier school lunch programs has been propelled by that the quality of what kids eat at school impacts their academic performance. Growing evidence links the consumption of fruits and vegetables with better mental health, including a 2021 study reported in the . With childhood obesity on the rise, it may seem odd to suggest high-energy lunches. Scientific evidence has linked a lower rate of obesity among those who consume more energy early to midday, than later in the day. A group of noted the positive effects of a high-energy school lunch among overweight and obese people. Skipping lunch was linked to greater adiposity amongst teenagers in a Polish .
How to Plan Healthy School Lunches
The trick to creating the best healthy school lunch is planning. When easy, healthy ingredients are on hand, packing a healthy school lunch is easier. Plus, add in a dash of inspiring ideas, and suddenly your lunch box blues are cured. Start with a grocery list!
1) Add your kids鈥 favourite vegetables
Better yet, see if you can find these vegetables in a fun, finger-food, kid-sized versions, such as cherry tomatoes, mini bell peppers, and clementine. For foods like cauliflower, carrots, and celery, you can chop these up before the school week starts, and have them ready in the fridge to pack in their lunch boxes.
2) Include your kids鈥 favourite fruits
From grapes to blueberries, plums to apples, there are many fruits that can easily be tossed into a lunch box quickly, after a quick rinse and pat dry. Pineapple, cantaloupe, and watermelon can easily be chopped into bite-sized chunks before the school week starts and stored in the fridge for an easy, healthy school lunch box addition.
3) Don鈥檛 forget fun sources of protein
Think beans in soup, crispy tofu cubes with noodles, or hemp seeds on the end of a cut banana, for vegetarian options worth adding to make your school lunch healthier.
4) Grab some fast snacks for recess
Kids can feel rushed at lunch and even more so at recess. That leaves them looking to stuff their faces quickly, seeking something with quick energy to help them keep going. From store-bought dried fruit leathers to homemade bliss balls, be sure to have some quick, nutritious snacks handy to pack in school lunches.
Guide to Packing a Healthier School Lunch Box
With your grocery list made and your kitchen stocked with quick and nutritious items, here are some tips to packing a healthier school lunch box:
5) Fast Food for Healthier Eating
A found that school-aged kids eat more fruits and vegetables when there are at least 20 minutes of seated time to eat. Consider how long it may take your child to eat the lunch your packing. Would cutting hard to chew items into smaller pieces make it easier for them to eat? Would a spoon or fork be helpful? Could it be put in a container they can pour into their mouths instead of trying to pick up small things with their fingers, one by one?
6) Think Pretty!
When lunches are filled with bright colours, it鈥檚 much more appealing, so don鈥檛 shy away from including lots of different vegetables and fruit to add some vibrancy. A whole head of cauliflower probably won鈥檛 make your kids excited, but if you chop up the cauliflower into small, popcorn-sized bites and include in a few cherry tomatoes, snap peas, and baby carrots that vegetable suddenly becomes a rainbow.
7) Trouble with Mains
Sandwiches are so last year, says your kid with an eye roll. Try a whole grain wrap, sliced into pinwheels. Better yet, think outside the box and into the thermos. For those looking for a more 鈥榬efined鈥 healthy lunch box, try a charcuterie board style main, featuring seedy crackers, hummus dip, and veggie sticks. The great void of a thermos can be filled with many things you can make in bulk on the weekend, such as soups, stews, pasta, and chili.
8) Leftovers are King
Fill that thermos with the extras you made the night before for dinner. This is a definite hit if dinner was tacos or your kids鈥 favourite Asian noodle bowls!
9) Let Them See It
If your kid is bringing home uneaten school lunches, it鈥檚 possible that鈥檚 because they didn鈥檛 know the food was there. Little kids do better with bento-style lunch boxes that can feature little bites of lots of things, allowing them to graze to their heart鈥檚 content throughout the day. Older kids may prefer to either make their own lunches so they know what鈥檚 in there or have them go through their lunch before they pack it in their school bag.
10) Include a Treat
A sweet bite is a great addition to every lunchbox. Chia pudding, energy balls, or homemade cookies can be sweet nutritional goodies. Since packaged sweets contain a lot of sugar, consider other options. In bento-style boxes, adding in a few gummy bears can be a fun way to show your child that treats can be part of regular eating. When sweets are only offered as rewards or are restricted, kids can start to create poor relationships with them, that don鈥檛 foster good food habits later in life.
More Healthy School Lunch Ideas
Looking for more inspiration on making healthy school lunches? Check out these Canadian experts鈥 inspiring food ideas and great insights into how and why kids eat the way they do:
- Allison Day RHN 鈥
- Ashleigh Grange RHN 鈥
- Cindy Spratt RHN 鈥
- Jordan Bruce RHN鈥
- Kat Krivanek RHN 鈥
- Lisa Roth Collins RHN 鈥
- Tara Antle RHN –
- Noelle Martin MSc –
- Lindsay Proust BEd –
References
Cross-sectional associations of schoolchildren鈥檚 fruit and vegetable consumption, and meal choices, with their mental well-being: a cross-sectional study. .
Student perception of healthfulness, school lunch healthfulness, and participation in school lunch: The Healthy Communities Study. .
Effects of longer seated lunch time on food consumption and waste in elementary and middle school-aged children. .
Beneficial effect of high energy intake at lunch rather than dinner on weight loss in healthy obese women in a weight loss program: a randomized clinical trial. .
Skipping breakfast and a meal at school: its correlation in adiposity context. Report .rom the ABC of Healthy Eating Study of Polish Teenagers. .
Contributed by Allison Tannis, R.H.N.
