N Nicholas · Health
Go-To Staples & Recipes

My Favorite Meals, Batch-Cooked

The staples I actually reach for, turned into real recipes — each one makes two or more meals so there's always something healthy ready. Built around one goal: hit the fiber every day.

The Daily Goal

What Gets You Your Fiber for the Day

Target: ~38 g of fiber a day. Bars show each food's fiber as a share of that full day. Beans do the heavy lifting — a two-cup bean lunch is most of your day in one bowl.

Black beans 2 cups cooked
30
Lentils 1 cup cooked
15
Chickpeas 1 cup cooked
12
High-fiber tortilla 1 large
12
Avocado 1 whole
10
Chia seeds 2 tbsp
10
Raspberries 1 cup
8
Dates 3 medjool
5
Oats ½ cup dry
4
Walnuts 1 oz
2
010 g19 g28 g38 g target

Easy 40 g day: chia pudding at breakfast (10) + a two-cup bean lunch bowl (30) already clears the target — the avocado, berries, and dates are all bonus.

The Menu

Tap a Recipe

Click any name to jump straight to it. Everything here batches to two or more meals.

Breakfast

Freezer Breakfast Sandwiches

↑ Menu
Makes 615 min prep~24 g protein eachFreezer-friendly

Ingredients

  • 6 whole-wheat sourdough English muffins or slices, split
  • 8 eggs (use 4 whole + 4 whites to cut cholesterol)
  • 6 slices microwave bacon or turkey bacon
  • 3 slices American cheese, halved
  • Salt, pepper, splash of milk
  • Primal Kitchen mayo, optional

Method

  1. Whisk eggs, whites, splash of milk, salt and pepper. Pour into a greased square dish.
  2. Microwave 4–5 min (or bake 400°F ~12 min) until just set; cut into 6 squares.
  3. Cook the bacon between paper towels in the microwave until crisp.
  4. Toast the muffins. Layer egg, bacon, cheese; a swipe of mayo if you like.
  5. Wrap each in parchment, then foil. Freeze up to 1 month.
  6. Reheat: unwrap, microwave 1–1.5 min (flip halfway).
Generated recipe. Whole-wheat sourdough adds fiber; the half-whites swap keeps protein high while dropping ~180 mg cholesterol vs. all-whole-egg.

Avocado Toast — Your Go-To

↑ Menu
1 serving~500 cal5 minEat avos first

Ingredients

  • 1 thick slice real sourdough (check it's fermented, not just "sourdough-flavored")
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • 1 medium avocado
  • Finishing salt + cracked pepper

Method

  1. Toast the sourdough dark and crisp.
  2. Spread the butter while it's hot so it melts in.
  3. Slice or smash the avocado on top.
  4. Finish with flaky salt and pepper. ~500 cal total.
From your notes. This is the "eat the avocados before they go bad" move. Add a runny egg or red pepper flakes to turn it into a fuller meal.

Overnight Chia Pudding

↑ Menu
Makes 4 jars10 min + overnight~10 g fiber each

Ingredients

  • ¾ cup chia seeds
  • 4 cups shelf-stable milk (coconut, oat, or soy)
  • 2 tbsp maple syrup or honey (optional)
  • Frozen raspberry & mango
  • Thrive coconut chips, to top

Method

  1. Whisk chia, milk, and sweetener in a big bowl or jar.
  2. Wait 10 min, whisk again to break up clumps.
  3. Divide into 4 jars; chill overnight until thick and spoonable.
  4. Top with frozen fruit (it thaws into a syrup) and coconut chips before eating.
Built from your notes. A 3:16 chia-to-milk ratio (per jar) gives the pudding texture. Keeps 5 days — a grab-and-go fiber + omega-3 breakfast.

Creamy Oatmeal + Fruit Compote

↑ Menu
Makes 415 minLDL-lowering oats

Ingredients

  • 2 cups old-fashioned oats
  • ¼ cup oats blended to oat flour (the smoothness trick)
  • 4 cups water or shelf-stable milk + pinch salt
  • Compote: 2 cups frozen berries + splash water + 1 tsp chia
  • Scoop of Greek yogurt or milk to stir in

Method

  1. Simmer oats, oat flour, liquid, and salt, stirring, 6–8 min until creamy.
  2. Meanwhile simmer frozen berries with a splash of water; stir in chia to thicken into compote.
  3. Stir a little yogurt or milk into the oats off heat for a "London-creamy" finish.
  4. Bowl it, spoon compote over, refrigerate the rest (reheat with a splash of water).
Generated per your GPT note. Blending part of the oats to flour is what makes it as creamy as Malt-O-Meal — but oats' beta-glucan actively lowers LDL/ApoB, so it's the healthier swap.

High-Fiber Yogurt Bowl

↑ Menu
1 bowl3 min~12 g fiberHigh protein

Ingredients

  • 1 cup plain Greek yogurt
  • 1 tbsp hemp seeds + 1 tbsp chia (or a scoop of inulin)
  • Small handful walnuts
  • ½ cup frozen berries (blueberries or mixed)

Method

  1. Spoon yogurt into a bowl.
  2. Scatter hemp, chia, walnuts, and frozen berries on top.
  3. Let it sit 5 min so the berries soften and the chia plumps.
From your notes. The hemp + chia + inulin stack is where the fiber comes from; walnuts add omega-3s. Frozen berries thaw into their own sauce.

Microwave Runny Egg

↑ Menu
1 egg1 minYour favorite

Ingredients

  • 1 egg
  • ⅓ cup water
  • Primal Kitchen mayo, salt, pepper

Method

  1. Crack the egg into a mug and cover with the water (poaching method).
  2. Gently pierce the yolk membrane once with a toothpick so it won't burst.
  3. Microwave 45–60 sec — start at 45 and add 5-sec bursts until the white sets but the yolk stays runny.
  4. Lift out with a slotted spoon; top with a dab of mayo, salt, pepper.
From your notes. The water method poaches it and keeps the yolk runny — your favorite. Piercing the yolk is the trick that stops the microwave "pop."

Silky Steamed Egg Pudding

↑ Menu
Makes 215 minSavory & light

Ingredients

  • 3 eggs
  • 1.5× the egg volume in warm low-sodium broth or water
  • 1 tsp soy sauce + few drops sesame oil
  • Chopped green onion; optional 2 chopped hard-boiled eggs folded in

Method

  1. Beat eggs gently, whisk in the warm broth and soy sauce (don't foam it).
  2. Strain into 2 bowls for a glassy texture; skim bubbles.
  3. Cover with foil; steam over low ~10 min until just set and jiggly.
  4. Finish with sesame oil and green onion. Serve warm or chilled.
Generated — Chinese steamed-egg reading of your "egg pudding." Silky, high-protein, low-effort. Fold in chopped hard-boiled eggs if you want to use up a batch.
Beans & Fiber — the daily lunch engine

Big-Batch Seasoned Beans

↑ Menu
Makes ~7 cups25 min~15 g fiber / cupFreezes well

Ingredients

  • 3 cans black or pinto beans (or 1 lb dry, cooked)
  • 1 onion, diced; 3 cloves garlic
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 1.5 tsp cumin, 1 tsp smoked paprika, 1 bay leaf
  • 1 cup low-sodium broth; salt, squeeze of lime

Method

  1. Soften onion in olive oil 5 min; add garlic and spices, 1 min.
  2. Add beans (drained), broth, and bay leaf. Simmer 15 min.
  3. Mash a quarter of them against the pot for creaminess.
  4. Season with salt and lime. Cool; portion into containers (fridge 5 days, freeze 3 months).
Generated — your fiber cornerstone. This is the base for a daily two-cup bean lunch (~30 g fiber). Make it Sunday; it powers the bean bowl and the burritos.

Daily Bean Lunch Bowl

↑ Menu
1 bowl5 min assembly~2 cups beans~30 g fiber

Ingredients

  • 2 cups batch beans, warmed
  • ½ cup cooked rice or quinoa (a ready-rice pouch works)
  • ½ avocado, salsa, a squeeze of lime
  • Handful of greens or bagged lettuce
  • Optional: ready chicken, cotija, hot sauce

Method

  1. Warm the beans and rice.
  2. Build the bowl: greens, rice, beans, avocado, salsa.
  3. Finish with lime and hot sauce; add chicken if you want more protein.
Your "bean meal for lunch daily" goal. Two cups of beans here is nearly a full day of fiber on its own. Rotate the toppings so it never feels repetitive.

Mediterranean Chickpea Salad

↑ Menu
Makes 415 minNo cookingKeeps 4 days

Ingredients

  • 2 cans chickpeas, drained
  • 1 cucumber + 1 pint cherry tomatoes, chopped
  • ½ red onion, minced; ½ cup parsley
  • ½ cup feta
  • Dressing: 3 tbsp olive oil, juice of 1 lemon, 1 tsp oregano, salt

Method

  1. Toss chickpeas, cucumber, tomato, onion, and parsley in a big bowl.
  2. Whisk the dressing; pour over and fold in the feta.
  3. Rest 20 min for the flavors to marry. Divide into 4 containers.
Generated — your "chickpea salad for fiber." A cold, no-cook high-fiber lunch that gets better on day 2. Add a can of tuna for extra protein.

Cold Beet & Feta Salad

↑ Menu
Makes 410 minUses pre-cooked beets

Ingredients

  • 1 pack pre-cooked beets, cubed
  • ½ cup feta or goat cheese
  • ½ cup walnuts, toasted
  • Arugula; 1 orange, segmented
  • Dressing: 2 tbsp olive oil, 1 tbsp balsamic, salt, pepper

Method

  1. Toast the walnuts in a dry pan until fragrant; cool.
  2. Toss beets with the dressing.
  3. Layer arugula, beets, orange, cheese, and walnuts. Keeps 3 days (dress per-serving to keep greens crisp).
Generated — your "look into a cold beet salad." Pre-cooked beets make it 10-minute easy; walnuts and orange keep it heart-healthy.

Chia Applesauce

↑ Menu
Makes 35 min + chillFiber snack

Ingredients

  • 1.5 cups unsweetened applesauce
  • 3 tbsp chia seeds
  • Cinnamon; optional splash of shelf-stable milk

Method

  1. Stir applesauce, chia, and cinnamon together.
  2. Chill 30 min+ until thickened to pudding.
  3. Portion into 3 cups. Great grab-and-go fiber hit.
From your notes. Two-ingredient fiber snack; the chia turns thin applesauce into a spoonable pudding.
Lunch & Salads

Greek-Yogurt Tuna Salad

↑ Menu
Makes 3–410 minHigh protein

Ingredients

  • 3 cans tuna, drained
  • ⅓ cup plain Greek yogurt + 1 tbsp mayo
  • 2 celery stalks + ¼ red onion, diced
  • 1 tsp dijon, squeeze of lemon, dill, pepper

Method

  1. Flake the tuna in a bowl.
  2. Fold in yogurt, mayo, dijon, lemon, celery, and onion.
  3. Season with dill and pepper. Keeps 3 days — great on sourdough or over greens.
From your notes. Greek yogurt does most of the "creamy" work so it's higher protein and lower fat than an all-mayo version.

Greek-Yogurt Chicken Salad

↑ Menu
Makes 3–410 minCanned or rotisserie

Ingredients

  • 2 cans chicken (or 2 cups shredded)
  • ⅓ cup Greek yogurt + 1 tbsp mayo
  • Handful grapes halved or diced apple
  • 2 celery stalks + ¼ cup walnuts
  • Lemon, salt, pepper

Method

  1. Combine chicken, yogurt, and mayo.
  2. Fold in grapes/apple, celery, and walnuts.
  3. Brighten with lemon; season. Keeps 3 days.
From your notes. The apple/grape + walnut combo adds crunch and a little fiber. Freeze Costco chicken salad portions if you buy it pre-made.

Egg Salad

↑ Menu
Makes 410 minUses a batch of eggs

Ingredients

  • 8 hard-boiled eggs, chopped
  • ¼ cup Greek yogurt + 1 tbsp mayo
  • 1 tsp dijon, chives, salt, pepper, paprika

Method

  1. Chop the eggs (a pastry cutter is fast).
  2. Fold in yogurt, mayo, dijon, and chives.
  3. Season; dust with paprika. Pile on sourdough.
From your notes. Drop a couple of yolks and add an extra white to lighten it for the ApoB goal without losing the classic taste.

Deconstructed Deviled Eggs

↑ Menu
Snack2 minNo piping

Ingredients

  • Hard-boiled eggs, halved
  • Small dab of mayo or sun-dried tomato spread on each
  • Paprika, flaky salt, pepper

Method

  1. Halve the eggs.
  2. Top each with a dab of mayo or sun-dried tomato spread.
  3. Dust with paprika and salt. All the deviled-egg flavor, none of the piping.
From your notes. The sun-dried tomato spread version is the more interesting one — keep a jar on hand.

Weekly Guacamole

↑ Menu
Big bowl10 minEat with sardines

Ingredients

  • 4 ripe avocados (a bag's worth)
  • ½ onion + 1 tomato, finely diced
  • ¼ cup cilantro; 1 jalapeño, minced
  • Juice of 2 limes, salt

Method

  1. Mash the avocados to your texture.
  2. Fold in onion, tomato, cilantro, jalapeño, lime, and salt.
  3. Press plastic wrap directly on the surface to keep it green (5 days).
From your notes. Your "make guac weekly from a bag of avocados" plan — and yes, guac + sardines is a legit high-omega-3, high-fiber snack.

Viral Creamy Tuna Pasta

↑ Menu
Makes 3–420 minHigh protein

Ingredients

  • 12 oz whole-wheat pasta (for fiber)
  • 2 cans tuna in olive oil
  • ⅓ cup Greek yogurt or light cream cheese
  • 2 cloves garlic, lemon zest + juice
  • 1 cup frozen peas; parmesan, chili flakes

Method

  1. Boil pasta; add peas for the last 2 min. Save 1 cup pasta water.
  2. In the pot, warm tuna (with its oil) and garlic 1 min.
  3. Off heat, stir in yogurt/cream cheese, lemon, and splashes of pasta water to a silky sauce.
  4. Toss pasta + peas through; finish with parm, chili flakes, salt. Reheats well with a splash of water.
Generated — the TikTok tuna pasta, made healthier. Whole-wheat pasta + Greek yogurt instead of heavy cream keeps it high-fiber and high-protein.

Mediterranean Kale Pasta Salad

↑ Menu
Makes 4–620 minSam's copycatKeeps 4 days

Ingredients

  • 12 oz whole-wheat fusilli or penne
  • 1 bunch kale, thinly sliced
  • ½ cup sun-dried tomatoes + ½ cup kalamata olives
  • 1 can chickpeas; ½ cup feta
  • Dressing: ⅓ cup olive oil, 2 tbsp red wine vinegar, 1 tsp oregano, garlic, lemon, salt

Method

  1. Cook and cool the pasta.
  2. Massage the sliced kale with a spoon of the dressing for 1 min to soften it.
  3. Toss everything with the rest of the dressing; fold in feta last.
  4. Best after an hour in the fridge. Holds 4 days.
Generated — copycat of the Sam's Mediterranean kale pasta salad. Chickpeas + whole-wheat pasta + kale push the fiber well past the store version.
Dinners & Prep

Freezer Chicken Burritos

↑ Menu
Makes 625 minYour #1 go-toFreezer-friendly

Ingredients

Method

  1. Warm tortillas so they roll without cracking.
  2. Line each with rice, beans, chicken, peppers, cheese — don't overfill.
  3. Fold sides in and roll tight.
  4. Wrap in foil; freeze. Reheat: microwave 2–3 min, or oven 375°F for 20 min for crisp edges.
Your defining go-to, upgraded. Adding beans turns a plain chicken-rice burrito into a fiber powerhouse. Add avocado or guac fresh when you eat it (don't freeze the avocado).

Batch Ground Beef, 3 Ways

↑ Menu
~6 servings15 min3 meals from 1 cook

Ingredients

  • 1.5–2 lb lean ground beef (93%)
  • 1 onion + 3 cloves garlic
  • Salt, pepper, cumin or Italian seasoning

Method

  1. Brown the beef with onion and garlic; drain excess fat; season.
  2. Meal 1: stir a couple cups into organic pasta sauce for pasta.
  3. Meal 2: spoon into a high-fiber wrap with lettuce and cheese.
  4. Meal 3: over rice with beans and salsa as a taco bowl. Freeze what you don't use.
From your notes (plain / in pasta sauce / in a wrap). One 15-minute cook covers three different dinners. Lean 93% keeps saturated fat down.

Teriyaki Chicken Rice Bowl

↑ Menu
1 bowl10 minUses Sam's teriyaki

Ingredients

  • Sam's teriyaki chicken, warmed
  • Cooked rice (ready pouch)
  • Steamed broccoli + shelled edamame
  • Sesame seeds, green onion, sriracha

Method

  1. Warm the chicken and rice; steam the broccoli and edamame.
  2. Build the bowl: rice, chicken, vegetables.
  3. Top with sesame, green onion, and a little sriracha.
From your notes. Edamame adds ~8 g fiber and protein, turning the pre-made teriyaki into a balanced meal. The butter chicken from Sam's works the same way over rice + peas.

Healthier Chicken Wrap

↑ Menu
Makes 210 minUses leftover chicken

Ingredients

  • 2 high-fiber wraps
  • Shredded cooked chicken (great with your smoked thighs)
  • Hummus or mashed avocado
  • Bagged slaw or lettuce, tomato
  • Lemon, hot sauce, salt

Method

  1. Spread hummus/avocado across each wrap (glue + healthy fat).
  2. Layer chicken, slaw, and tomato down the center.
  3. Season, roll tight, halve. Griddle 2 min for a crisp panini-style wrap.
Generated — your "make a better, healthier wrap from smoked chicken." Hummus instead of ranch, high-fiber wrap, and slaw make it lean but still rich.

Tomato-Cream Soup

↑ Menu
Makes 415 minPasta-sauce trick

Ingredients

  • 1 jar organic pasta sauce
  • 2 cups low-sodium broth
  • ¼ cup heavy cream (or shelf-stable coconut/oat milk)
  • Optional: 1 can white beans, blended in, for fiber + body
  • Basil, black pepper

Method

  1. Simmer pasta sauce + broth (+ white beans if using) 10 min.
  2. Blend smooth if you added beans.
  3. Stir in the cream off heat; finish with basil and pepper. Serve with sourdough.
Generated — your "pasta sauce + heavy cream soup trick." Blending in a can of white beans is the upgrade: same creamy soup, but now with real fiber and protein.

Miso Soup + Frozen Dumplings

↑ Menu
Makes 210 minPantry dinner

Ingredients

  • 4 cups water or dashi
  • 2 tbsp miso paste
  • 6–8 frozen dumplings
  • Cubed tofu, green onion, a sheet of nori, spinach

Method

  1. Simmer the dumplings in the water/dashi until they float and cook through.
  2. Add tofu and spinach for the last minute.
  3. Off heat, whisk the miso into a ladle of broth, then stir back in (don't boil miso).
  4. Top with green onion and torn nori.
From your notes. Keeping miso off the boil preserves its flavor and probiotics. Frozen dumplings make it a real meal in 10 minutes.

Fried Plantains

↑ Menu
Side10 minPotato substitute

Ingredients

  • 2 ripe (yellow-black) plantains
  • Avocado or olive oil
  • Salt

Method

  1. Peel and slice on the diagonal, ~½ inch thick.
  2. Pan-fry in a thin layer of oil, 2–3 min per side, until golden and caramelized.
  3. Drain on a paper towel; salt while hot.
From your notes. A riper (spottier) plantain fries sweeter and softer. Nice starchy side in place of potato alongside beans or eggs.

Freezer Sautéed Onions & Peppers

↑ Menu
6+ portions15 minPrep staple

Ingredients

  • 3 bell peppers, sliced
  • 2 onions, sliced
  • 2 tbsp olive oil, salt

Method

  1. Sauté peppers and onions over medium-high until soft and lightly charred, ~12 min.
  2. Cool completely.
  3. Freeze flat in a bag or in portions. Drop frozen straight into burritos, eggs, or fajitas.
From your notes. Your "freeze sautéed onions and peppers for burritos" prep — one pan saves you five minutes on every future burrito or scramble.