A Nutritionist’s Top 5 Tips for Eating Well All Summer

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A Nutritionist’s Top 5 Tips for Eating Well All Summer

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Summer can unravel even the best intentions. Schedules loosen, meals get improvised, and the routines you spent all year building suddenly feel a lot harder to hold onto. That’s not a failure—it’s just the season doing what it does.

As a certified nutrition consultant and mom of two, I’ve learned to stop fighting it. Instead, I lean into a handful of meals and habits that work no matter what summer throws at me—whether that’s a spontaneous backyard barbecue, a week with the kids home, or a travel schedule that makes “eating well” feel like a distant memory. The questions I get most this time of year reflect exactly that tension: how do I stay consistent when nothing about my life is?

Pin it Woman eating pasta by the pool.

Below, I’m answering the questions that come up most—from simple, repeatable meals to blood sugar basics to portion control that doesn’t require an app. Think of it less as a rulebook and more as a summer survival guide for eating well on your own terms.

The Healthy Summer Meals Worth Putting on Repeat

What are some simple and healthy meals I can put on repeat this summer?

Breakfast

Morning is where blood sugar stability starts—and summer breakfast doesn’t need to be complicated to do that job well. These are the ones I come back to when I want something that actually holds me until lunch.

Greek yogurt mixed with a scoop of chocolate collagen peptides, frozen wild blueberries, chia seeds, and a spoonful of nut butter. Two hard-boiled eggs mashed with cottage cheese, dolloped on toasted sourdough with hot honey and sea salt. A smoothie bowl with frozen peaches, spinach, ground flaxseeds, vanilla protein powder, and a dash of cinnamon—blended with just enough milk, topped with pumpkin seeds and a drizzle of tahini.

Lunch

The best summer lunches are the ones you can pull together without turning on the stove. These are fast, protein-forward, and endlessly riffable based on what’s in your fridge.

A snack plate: deli turkey, sliced cucumber, cherry tomatoes, hummus, seedy crackers, and cornichons. Rotisserie chicken and smashed avocado on rice cakes, with sliced bell peppers, baby carrots, and olives on the side. Canned salmon mashed with avocado oil mayo or Greek yogurt, lemon, sea salt, and dill—served over arugula with Siete tortilla chips and fresh strawberries.

Dinner

Summer dinners should feel easy, not like a project. These three are on heavy rotation at my house. They’re simple enough for a weeknight, satisfying enough that no one’s reaching for snacks an hour later.

Chicken sausages with grilled zucchini and couscous cooked in bone broth. Crumbled feta, optional but encouraged. Egg noodles tossed with olive oil, cherry tomatoes, and canned tuna or white beans, finished with fresh basil and parmesan. Crispy sheet pan tofu with bell peppers, red onion, and broccoli, roasted at 425°F and served over rice with sriracha mayo.

How to Keep Blood Sugar Steady All Summer

What are some smart ways to manage blood sugar during the summer when routines, meals, and schedules are all over the place?

Summer is the season most likely to throw your blood sugar off: irregular meal times, spontaneous BBQs, late nights, and more alcohol than usual. But staying steady doesn’t mean missing out. These habits work no matter how unpredictable your schedule gets.

Eat in the right order. Start with vegetables (a green salad, cherry tomatoes, grilled zucchini), then protein and fat, and save starches or sweets for last. This sequence slows the post-meal glucose spike in a way that’s simple enough to do anywhere (even at a cookout).

Anchor every meal with protein. Aim for 20–30g per meal to slow carb absorption. If you’re at a BBQ and not sure what to choose, go for grilled protein, fresh fruit, and crudités as your base.

Go for a walk after eating. Even 10 minutes around the block can significantly blunt a post-meal glucose spike. It’s one of the most underrated tools for blood sugar management—and it’s free.

Don’t skip meals. Try not to go more than 4–5 hours without eating. Skipping leads to energy crashes, cravings, and overeating later—none of which make the rest of your day easier.

Keep balanced snacks on hand. Roasted chickpeas, a protein bar, or almonds with a piece of fruit in your bag means you’re never caught desperate. Blood sugar doesn’t care that you forgot to plan ahead.

Hydrate strategically. Plain water is great, but if you’re sweating more or drinking alcohol, add electrolytes—a pinch of sea salt and lemon works, or something like LMNT—to help keep things stable.

What You Actually Need to Know About Protein

What’s the real deal on how much protein we need—and is there solid science behind it?

Protein has been having a moment—and for good reason. It plays a critical role in blood sugar balance, muscle maintenance, hormone production, and satiety. But most women still aren’t getting enough, especially at breakfast.

While the RDA is set at 0.8g/kg of body weight, that’s the bare minimum to prevent deficiency—not to thrive. For optimal energy, hormone health, and body composition, most women benefit from 1.2–1.6g/kg daily, which works out to roughly 25–40g per meal.

But protein isn’t the only player. Fiber is equally essential and often overlooked. Where protein helps balance blood sugar, fiber helps blunt the rise by slowing digestion and feeding beneficial gut bacteria, which also impacts insulin sensitivity. Think of them as a team: pair your protein (eggs, chicken, Greek yogurt, tofu) with fiber-rich foods (leafy greens, berries, beans, chia seeds), and you’ve got meals that keep you full, energized, and metabolically supported for hours.

In practice, it’s simpler than it sounds. A smoothie with protein powder and chia seeds. Salmon over arugula. Greek yogurt with berries. The meals you’re already making can do double duty—you just have to know what to look for.

Portion Control Without an App

I’m trying to get better at portion control—are there any effective methods besides food-tracking apps?

Good news: you don’t need to log a single calorie to eat well. The simplest starting point is your own hand—a built-in portion guide you always have with you.

Protein: A fist-sized portion (think chicken breast, tofu, or fish) equates to roughly 20–40g per meal. Carbs: A cupped hand of brown rice, quinoa, or sweet potato. Vegetables: At least half your plate, non-starchy. Leafy greens, cauliflower, mushrooms, artichokes—eat freely. Fats: A thumb-sized portion of avocado, nuts, or olive oil to round out the meal.

Two habits that make a bigger difference than most people expect:

Slow down. Actually chew your food, and put your fork down between bites. It sounds small, but eating at a slower pace gives your body time to register fullness before you’ve overshot it. If you need a trick, try using chopsticks or switching to your non-dominant hand.

Pause before seconds. Before reaching for more, wait five minutes. Drink a glass of water, take a short walk around the room. Often, your body just needs a moment to catch up—and that pause is usually enough.

A Nutritionist’s Top 5 Tips for Eating Well All Summer

Summer doesn’t have to derail you—it just requires a slightly different playbook. Save these as your go-to reminders when the season has other plans.

Prep once, eat twice. Grill or roast extras and mix and match throughout the week. Hydrate like it’s your job. Add a pinch of sea salt and lemon for extra minerals. Anchor every meal with protein. Your blood sugar and hormones will thank you. Don’t skip breakfast. It sets the tone for your cortisol and everything that follows. Soak up sunshine and prioritize sleep. Both are powerful, free, and wildly underrated wellness tools.