⚕️ A quick note:
This post shares general nutritional information for informational purposes only. It is not medical advice. Individual dietary needs vary — please speak with a healthcare professional if you have specific health conditions. Also, this post contains affiliate links. If you purchase through these links, I may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend products I genuinely use and believe in.
Easy lunches for work? The lunch problem is real!
You leave the house with good intentions. By 12:30pm you’re either staring into a sad desk drawer for a cereal bar, spending 12 buks on something forgettable from the café downstairs, or eating whatever was easiest to grab — which is rarely the thing that makes the afternoon feel good.
The solution isn’t complicated. It just requires about twenty minutes on a Sunday and the right containers.
These five easy lunches for work are designed to be genuinely satisfying, nutritionally solid, and — most importantly — actually feasible for real working weeks. No elaborate prep. No ingredients that require a specialist shop. Just lunches worth eating.
Why What You Eat at Lunch Matters More Than You Think
Before the recipes, a quick note on why this is worth thinking about at all.
Research consistently shows that higher protein intake enhances fullness, reduces cravings, and stabilises energy. Paired with low glycemic carbohydrates such as leafy greens and vegetables, this combination avoids the post-meal crashes common with higher carbohydrate meals. St-aug
The 3pm slump most people experience isn’t inevitable — it’s often a direct consequence of what was eaten at lunch. A high-carbohydrate, low-protein meal produces a blood sugar spike followed by a drop. That drop is what makes the afternoon feel difficult.
The lunches below are built to avoid this. Each one has a meaningful protein source, plenty of fibre, and healthy fat — the three things that produce sustained energy rather than a peak and crash.
What You Need Before You Start
Two things make work lunches genuinely sustainable:
Good containers — This sounds trivial but it isn’t. Leaking containers, flimsy lids, and non-microwave-safe plastics are genuinely why most people give up on meal prep. I use glass meal prep containers with locking lids — they seal properly, go in the microwave, and look considerably nicer than the alternative.
Mason jars for layered lunches — Wide-mouth mason jars are perfect for layered salads and quinoa bowls. The dressing goes at the bottom, greens at the top, and nothing goes soggy. Ball wide-mouth mason jars are the ones I use and recommend.
Lunch 1: The Quinoa Mason Jar Bowl
This is the one that converted me to meal prep. It takes fifteen minutes on Sunday and stays fresh in the fridge for four days.
Quinoa protein is classified as a complete protein due to the presence of essential amino acids. It is also a plentiful source of dietary fibre, promoting a healthy digestive system and a sense of fullness. Springer
Quinoa has a protein biological value of 73%, which is comparable to that of beef at 74% — significantly higher than white rice at 56% or wheat at 49%. Rupa Health
In practical terms: quinoa keeps you full longer than most other grain bases, which is exactly what you want from a work lunch.

Recipe
Makes 4 jars | Prep: 15 min
LAYER 1 (bottom):
→ 2 tbsp lemon-tahini dressing (tahini, lemon juice, garlic, water)
LAYER 2:
→ ½ cup cooked quinoa per jar
→ Season with olive oil and salt
LAYER 3:
→ Roasted vegetables(courgette, red pepper, red onion — roast at 200°C for 20 min)
LAYER 4:
→ Handful of cherry tomatoes, halved
→ ¼ cucumber, diced
→ 2 tbsp chickpeas
LAYER 5 (top):
→ Large handful of rocket or spinach
→ Optional: crumbled feta
TO SERVE:
→ Shake the jar to distribute dressing
→ Eat straight from the jar or tip into a bowl
Keeps: 4 days in the fridge ✅
Protein: ~18g per jar
Lunch 2: High Protein Chicken Wrap
Fast to assemble, travels well, and genuinely satisfying. The key is making a batch of spiced chicken on Sunday and keeping it in the fridge ready to use throughout the week.

Recipe
Makes 4 wraps | Prep: 5 min
(+ 20 min chicken on Sunday)
CHICKEN (prep Sunday):
→ 2 chicken breasts, sliced thin
→ 1 tsp each: cumin, smoked paprika, garlic powder, olive oil, salt
→ Pan-fry or bake at 200°C for 18-20 min
→ Store in sealed container: 4 days
TO ASSEMBLE:
→ 1 large wholegrain wrap
→ 2 tbsp hummus spread across wrap
→ Handful of spinach
→ Sliced chicken (cold is fine)
→ ½ avocado, sliced
→ Sliced cucumber
→ Squeeze of lemon
WRAP TIGHTLY:
→ Cut in half
→ Wrap in foil or beeswax paper for transport
Keeps: 1 day assembled
(make in the morning, or wrap the night before without avocado)
Protein: ~35g per wrap
Lunch 3: The Cold Pasta Salad That Actually Works
Cold pasta salad has a bad reputation — usually for good reason. The versions that sit in cafés all day in watery dressing are genuinely sad. This one is different because the dressing goes on warm pasta, which absorbs it properly, and the whole thing tastes better on day two.
Recipe
Makes 4 portions | Prep: 15 min
BASE:
→ 300g short pasta (penne or fusilli)
→ Cook al dente, drain
→ Immediately toss with dressing while still warm
DRESSING:
→ 4 tbsp olive oil
→ 2 tbsp red wine vinegar
→ 1 tsp Dijon mustard
→ 1 tsp dried oregano
→ Salt and black pepper
ADD-INS:
→ 1 tin tuna, drained OR 1 tin chickpeas
→ 200g cherry tomatoes, halved
→ ½ cucumber, diced
→ Large handful of rocket
→ 80g feta, crumbled
→ Handful of kalamata olives
FINISH:
→ Mix thoroughly
→ Taste and adjust seasoning
→ Refrigerate
Keeps: 3 days
Add rocket fresh each day for best texture
Protein: ~28g (tuna version)
Lunch 4: The 5-Minute Morning Assembly Lunch
For the mornings when Sunday prep didn’t happen. This comes together in five minutes if you keep the right things in your fridge and cupboard.
Recipe
WHAT TO KEEP STOCKED:
FRIDGE:
→ Pre-washed spinach / rocket
→ Cherry tomatoes
→ Block of feta
→ Hummus
→ Hard-boiled eggs (batch boil
Sunday: keeps 5 days)
CUPBOARD:
→ Tinned chickpeas or tuna
→ Seed mix (pumpkin, sunflower)
→ Olive oil and lemon
MORNING ASSEMBLY (5 min):
→ Greens in container
→ Halved cherry tomatoes
→ 2 hard-boiled eggs, halved
→ Crumbled feta
→ Spoonful of chickpeas
→ Handful of seeds
→ Dressing: olive oil, lemon, salt — in small jar separately
Keeps: 1 day assembled
Protein: ~22g

Lunch 5: Savoury Overnight Oats
This one surprises people. Overnight oats don’t have to be sweet. The savoury version — with spinach, a soft-boiled egg, and olive oil — is considerably more satisfying as a lunch than it sounds.
Oats contain a type of soluble fibre called beta-glucan, which is associated with lower blood glucose and cholesterol levels, and promotes healthy gut bacteria and intestinal health. Their fibre and protein content contribute to feeling full longer and slowing the release of blood glucose. Mayo Clinic Health System
Recipe
Makes 2 jars | Prep: 5 min
(night before)
THE BASE (night before):
→ ½ cup rolled oats per jar
→ ½ cup warm vegetable stock
→ Pinch of salt, black pepper
→ ½ tsp olive oil
→ Stir and refrigerate overnight
IN THE MORNING (2 min):
→ Top with a soft-boiled egg, halved
→ Handful of fresh spinach
→ Cherry tomatoes, halved
→ Drizzle of olive oil
→ Pinch of chilli flakes
→ Optional: spoonful of
Greek yogurt for creaminess
Keeps: Base keeps 2 days in fridge
Protein: ~18g with egg
Work lunches don’t need to be complicated or expensive. They need to be planned once — and that planning takes less than an hour on a Sunday.
A protein source, plenty of vegetables, a good dressing, and the right container. That’s the formula. Everything above fits it.
The quinoa mason jar bowl is where I’d start if you haven’t tried it. It looks considerably more impressive than the effort involved, and it genuinely tastes better on day three than day one.
What’s your current work lunch situation? I’m always collecting new ideas — driftlyblog@gmail.com




