Eating a balanced breakfast

The reason why breakfast is considered the most important meal of the day is because the body hasn’t had any energy or fluids over a period of several hours.  A good breakfast is important to start the day well. It supplies the body with nutrients and improves performance, all the while reducing cravings. For a balanced breakfast, enjoy foods that are easy to digest like kefir or natural yoghurt – mix with some fresh fruit and oats or spelt cereal and voilà!

 

What makes a healthy breakfast?

Putting it together

 

This week, learn how to optimise your breakfast, which is often considered the most important meal of the day. If it ‘s put together correctly, it can provide loads of nutrients and energy, setting you up for the day ahead. Ideally, breakfast is not a meal that should be skipped.

 

Let’s take a look at what makes a good breakfast.

 

Your breakfast plate

3 main components

 

The 3 main components of breakfast should include: a high-protein food, a good quality, starchy food and fruit or vegetables. Each component should take up a third of the plate. These guidelines don ‘t refer to the weight, but the volume of these ingredients. What ‘s important is the proportions.

 

The proportions don ‘t need to be exact, but give an idea of how much space each component should take up on the plate

 

High-protein foods

 

About a third of breakfast should include high-protein foods. This includes milk and dairy products like cheese, yoghurt, low-fat quark, cream cheese and cottage cheese, as well as turkey, chicken breast and cooked ham. Other sources of protein are eggs, fish and tofu.

 

Proteins keep you feeling full for longer

 

High quality starchy foods

Less complicated than it sounds

 

Starchy products should also make up about a third of the ideal breakfast plate. Have wholegrain products like wholewheat bread, oats and other wholegrain flakes. These foods offer valuable fibre that keeps us feeling fuller for longer. They ‘re also hard to beat when it comes to vitamins and minerals.  Be careful when choosing granola and other breakfast cereals – they can be real sugar traps! Have unsweetened flakes and brighten up muesli with fresh fruit and nuts.

 

Fruit and vegetables

Make things colourful

 

The final third of an ideal breakfast plate should include fruit or vegetables. They bring variety to our diet, are fresh and crisp, and packed with vitamins and minerals. They also have a low calorie count which makes them an essential part of every meal. Try fruit in muesli, tomato or cucumber slices on bread, fruit salad or a glass of unsweetened fruit or vegetable juice.

 

As a rule of thumb, fill up a third of your plate with fruit and vegetables.