Leaving on a Jet Plane: Making Healthy Choices on the Road
This is a month packed with travel to meetings for me. It coincided with giving a talk to a group that spends a lot of time on the road planning and organizing meetings about making and offering healthy choices.
This got me thinking about the things I’ve learned about healthy eating while making my way from concourse to concourse on trip after trip. I don’t have all the answers, but I used to travel by plane weekly and I continue to travel with some frequency, so I at least bring some hard fought experience.
Travel can be physically and psychologically draining so when I’m on the road, I try to make healthy choices as much as possible. Doing so also helps alleviate guilt I might feel indulging in a local specialty that might not make a healthy choice list, like I did on a recent trip to Chicago when I got to dig into one of my all time favorites - Sweet Mandy B's red velvet cupcakes. (As a New Yorker, I don't get excited about Chicago-style pizza.)
Making healthy choices on the road actually begins at home. Airports are full of junk food so I try to pack things at home that I can toss in my carry-on bag. Here are a few of my favorites
Nuts – I usually toss a bunch in a Ziploc bag and then I have them as a snack in my hotel room too. The other option I recently discovered are packaged mini-bags of roasted almonds that Trader Joe’s sells. I love these for when I’m running late and don’t have time to assemble a whole snack pack. They’re also great in my desk drawer when I’m in the office and to keep in the car – they’ve saved me from grabbing a candy bar or a fatty spongy blueberry muffin a few times!
Dried fruit – on its own or mixed in a baggie with the dried nuts.
Packets of plain instant oatmeal. Sure, steel cut is better, but this is a much better option than a fat and calorie laden Danish or muffin. The dried fruit does double duty here as a mix-in.
Recently, food companies have begun to make some healthier pre-packaged snacks targeted to kids. The great news for those of us over 8 is that the “anything in a shiny package” concept that appeals to kids often means a travel friendly food for us. This is a danger zone as well so tread carefully. Yogurt is a great snack but many yogurt-containing foods (including the organic kind) have as much sugar as a candy bar! One recent favorite of mine are squeezable applesauce and carrot-applesauce. I’ve found them at Trader Joes and Whole Foods.
I have mixed feelings about snack bars – in a pinch, many make better choices than a traditional candy bar or certainly the cookies and cakes sold in airport coffee shops. But they nearly universally aren’t a healthy food the way that nuts, fruit and plain yogurt can be. The best source I’ve found for reviews and evaluations of these is the Snack Girl website – so rather than reinventing the wheel, I suggest you head over there for her thoughts. For example, she gave the Kind bars a good review and when I checked them out, I agreed. Pretty tasty with a limited ingredient list that is basically fruit and nuts. In general, you want to watch for the calorie content - many don’t count as a snack – they pack as many calories as a meal. And don’t be fooled by “grams of protein” or other label tricks. The more ingredients you recognize and can pronounce, the healthier the choice likely is.
… and that old childhood standby, peanut butter and jelly, makes a sandwich that travels easily if you’re going to be at the airport around meal time and can’t bear the thought of another fast food meal.
At airports, I can pretty consistently find a few healthy snacks; most have someplace that offers cut up vegetables – typically carrots and celery with maybe some broccoli. Go easy on the ranch dressing that typically comes with them and you’ve got yourself a healthy snack. Whole fruit is almost always available at at least one restaurant. Some even have cut up melon and grapes together. Of course, some of that stuff may have been sitting around for a while or be pretty bleak looking – which is why the dried fruit always comes in handy! That said, some research does exist that suggests pre-cut and packaged produce holds nutritional content reasonably well.
I haven’t been to an airport newsstand in ages that doesn’t have dried fruit and nuts if you didn’t get a chance to bring yours from home. I always try to have something in my bag before I get on a plane these days since delays are increasingly common and increasing in length.
As for the meal options – the rules you use when eating out while at home are the same here. Low fat dairy is hard to come by in this environment so I usually look for sandwiches without cheese or I remove the cheese if all the prepackaged sandwiches have them. I also look for sandwiches that don’t have mayonnaise on them or mixed in (like in tuna and chicken salad). Choose water over soda or juice to watch your overall calorie intake. In fact, while you can’t bring a full water bottle through security, you can bring an empty one – so I’ve started tossing my empty reusable water bottle in my bag and filling it up at a water fountain after I clear screening. If my flight gets delayed and I have time for a sit down meal, I look for salads that aren’t full of cheese, fried chicken or fried toppings like tortilla strips, croutons and the like.
Really, it’s all pretty simple once you get the hang of it. So while our carry-ons may all be overstuffed in this era of checked-baggage charges, we don’t need feel that way.
This got me thinking about the things I’ve learned about healthy eating while making my way from concourse to concourse on trip after trip. I don’t have all the answers, but I used to travel by plane weekly and I continue to travel with some frequency, so I at least bring some hard fought experience.
Travel can be physically and psychologically draining so when I’m on the road, I try to make healthy choices as much as possible. Doing so also helps alleviate guilt I might feel indulging in a local specialty that might not make a healthy choice list, like I did on a recent trip to Chicago when I got to dig into one of my all time favorites - Sweet Mandy B's red velvet cupcakes. (As a New Yorker, I don't get excited about Chicago-style pizza.)
Making healthy choices on the road actually begins at home. Airports are full of junk food so I try to pack things at home that I can toss in my carry-on bag. Here are a few of my favorites
Nuts – I usually toss a bunch in a Ziploc bag and then I have them as a snack in my hotel room too. The other option I recently discovered are packaged mini-bags of roasted almonds that Trader Joe’s sells. I love these for when I’m running late and don’t have time to assemble a whole snack pack. They’re also great in my desk drawer when I’m in the office and to keep in the car – they’ve saved me from grabbing a candy bar or a fatty spongy blueberry muffin a few times!
Dried fruit – on its own or mixed in a baggie with the dried nuts.
Packets of plain instant oatmeal. Sure, steel cut is better, but this is a much better option than a fat and calorie laden Danish or muffin. The dried fruit does double duty here as a mix-in.
Recently, food companies have begun to make some healthier pre-packaged snacks targeted to kids. The great news for those of us over 8 is that the “anything in a shiny package” concept that appeals to kids often means a travel friendly food for us. This is a danger zone as well so tread carefully. Yogurt is a great snack but many yogurt-containing foods (including the organic kind) have as much sugar as a candy bar! One recent favorite of mine are squeezable applesauce and carrot-applesauce. I’ve found them at Trader Joes and Whole Foods.
I have mixed feelings about snack bars – in a pinch, many make better choices than a traditional candy bar or certainly the cookies and cakes sold in airport coffee shops. But they nearly universally aren’t a healthy food the way that nuts, fruit and plain yogurt can be. The best source I’ve found for reviews and evaluations of these is the Snack Girl website – so rather than reinventing the wheel, I suggest you head over there for her thoughts. For example, she gave the Kind bars a good review and when I checked them out, I agreed. Pretty tasty with a limited ingredient list that is basically fruit and nuts. In general, you want to watch for the calorie content - many don’t count as a snack – they pack as many calories as a meal. And don’t be fooled by “grams of protein” or other label tricks. The more ingredients you recognize and can pronounce, the healthier the choice likely is.
… and that old childhood standby, peanut butter and jelly, makes a sandwich that travels easily if you’re going to be at the airport around meal time and can’t bear the thought of another fast food meal.
At airports, I can pretty consistently find a few healthy snacks; most have someplace that offers cut up vegetables – typically carrots and celery with maybe some broccoli. Go easy on the ranch dressing that typically comes with them and you’ve got yourself a healthy snack. Whole fruit is almost always available at at least one restaurant. Some even have cut up melon and grapes together. Of course, some of that stuff may have been sitting around for a while or be pretty bleak looking – which is why the dried fruit always comes in handy! That said, some research does exist that suggests pre-cut and packaged produce holds nutritional content reasonably well.
I haven’t been to an airport newsstand in ages that doesn’t have dried fruit and nuts if you didn’t get a chance to bring yours from home. I always try to have something in my bag before I get on a plane these days since delays are increasingly common and increasing in length.
As for the meal options – the rules you use when eating out while at home are the same here. Low fat dairy is hard to come by in this environment so I usually look for sandwiches without cheese or I remove the cheese if all the prepackaged sandwiches have them. I also look for sandwiches that don’t have mayonnaise on them or mixed in (like in tuna and chicken salad). Choose water over soda or juice to watch your overall calorie intake. In fact, while you can’t bring a full water bottle through security, you can bring an empty one – so I’ve started tossing my empty reusable water bottle in my bag and filling it up at a water fountain after I clear screening. If my flight gets delayed and I have time for a sit down meal, I look for salads that aren’t full of cheese, fried chicken or fried toppings like tortilla strips, croutons and the like.
Really, it’s all pretty simple once you get the hang of it. So while our carry-ons may all be overstuffed in this era of checked-baggage charges, we don’t need feel that way.
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