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Free 7 Day Healthy Meal Plan (June 22-28)


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A free 7-day, flexible weight loss meal plan including breakfast, lunch and dinner ideas and a shopping list. All recipes include macros and Weight Watchers points.

Skinnytaste High Protein cookbook protein

Free 7 Day Healthy Meal Plan (June 22-28)

Summer is officially here! There’s something so refreshing about sunny days, warm breezes, and an abundance of fresh fruits and vegetables. This time of year always inspires me to spend more time outdoors and keep meals simple, fresh, and flavorful. When temperatures rise, I especially love lighter dinners and hearty salads like this Salmon Caesar Salad and BBQ Chicken Salad. They’re satisfying and packed with seasonal ingredients, perfect for summer nights!

If you’re new to my meal plans, I’ve been sharing these free, 7-day flexible healthy meal plans (you can see my previous meal plans here) that are meant as a guide, with plenty of wiggle room for you to add more food, coffee, beverages, fruits, snacks, dessert, wine, etc. or swap recipes out for meals you prefer, you can search for recipes by course in the index. Depending on your goals, you should aim for at least 1500 calories* per day. There’s no one size fits all, this will range by your goals, your age, weight, etc.

There’s also a precise, organized grocery list that will make grocery shopping so much easier and much less stressful. Save you money and time. You’ll dine out less often, waste less food and you’ll have everything you need on hand to help keep you on track.

Lastly, if you’re on Facebook join my Skinnytaste Facebook Community where everyone’s sharing photos of recipes they are making, you can join here. I’m loving all the ideas everyone’s sharing! If you wish to get on the email list, you can subscribe here so you never miss a meal plan!

Ultimate Skinnytaste Meal Planner

Get the Skinnytaste Ultimate Meal Planner! The 52 week spiral bound meal planner has weekly meal planning grids you can tear out and put on your fridge if you wish, a 12-week meal plan, 30 (15 new) recipes, and tear-out grocery lists. I love starting my week with gratitude, affirmations and intentions, so I included a space for that as well. I hope you will love this as much as I do!

Skinnytaste Ultimate Meal Planner

Buy the Skinnytaste meal planner here:

With grocery prices soaring, many of us are having to adjust, scale back and/or get more creative with our meals. One of the absolute BEST ways to stay within a budget and maintain healthy eating habits is to MEAL PLAN. You can get more 5-day Budget Friendly Meal Plans by signing up for Relish+ (get a 14-day free trial here!)

Meal Plan:

Breakfast and lunch Monday-Friday, are designed to serve 1 while dinners and all meals on Saturday and Sunday are designed to serve a family of 4. Some recipes make enough leftovers for two nights or lunch the next day. The grocery list is comprehensive and includes everything you need to make all meals on the plan.

MONDAY (6/22)
B: Chorizo Egg Bites with 1 cup strawberries
L: Grilled Chicken Salad with Strawberries, Avocado and Citrus Dressing
D: Vegan Quinoa Bowl (recipe x 2)

Total Calories: 1,277*

TUESDAY (6/23)
B: Chorizo Egg Bites with 1 cup strawberries
L: Grilled Chicken Salad with Strawberries, Avocado and Citrus Dressing
D: Tzatziki Fish Tacos with Mediterranean Bean Salad

Total Calories: 1,250*

WEDNESDAY (6/24)
B: Chorizo Egg Bites with 1 cup cantaloupe
L: 3 ounces tuna with LEFTOVER Mediterranean Bean Salad and 6 Triscuits
D: Giant Chicken Milanese with Broccoli and Orzo

Total Calories: 1,196*

THURSDAY (6/25)
B: Chorizo Egg Bites with 1 cup cantaloupe
L: 3 ounces tuna with LEFTOVER Mediterranean Bean Salad and 6 Triscuits
D: Beef and Cabbage Stir Fry with ¾ cup brown rice**

Total Calories: 1,100*

FRIDAY (6/26)
B: Protein PB & J Smoothie Bowl drizzled with 1 tablespoon melted peanut butter
L: Chicken Club Lettuce Wrap Sandwich with an apple
D: Bang Bang Shrimp Skewers with Fried Brown Rice and Perfectly Grilled Zucchini

Total Calories: 1,165*

SATURDAY (6/27)
B: Protein PB & J Smoothie Bowl (recipe x 4) drizzled with 1 tablespoon melted peanut butter
L: 1 ¼ cup White Bean Salad
D: DINNER OUT

Total Calories: 809*

SUNDAY (6/28)
B: Pancake Muffins with 1/2 cup mixed berries and 2 teaspoons maple syrup
L: Chicken Club Lettuce Wrap Sandwich (recipe x 4) with 1 cup watermelon
D: Peruvian Grilled Chicken Skewers with ½ cup white rice and Grilled Corn Salad with Feta

Total Calories: 1,188*

*This is just a guide, women should aim for around 1500 calories per day. Here’s a helpful calculator to estimate your calorie needs. I’ve left plenty of wiggle room for you to add more food such as coffee, beverages, fruits, snacks, dessert, wine, etc.
** Make an extra 3 cups brown rice for dinner Friday.

*Google doc

The Summer Ingredient That Makes Everything Better


The Summer Ingredient That Makes Everything Better

Spoiler alert: it’s corn.

A bowl filled with white rice, topped with slices of grilled steak, arugula, and a mix of black beans, corn, red onion, and peppers. A small bowl of sliced red onions is in the background. The dish is garnished with herbs.

Corn is the true MVP of summer produce!

cookbook author erin clarke of well plated

This is not a collection of corn recipes like Grilled Corn, Creamed Corn, and Corn Chowder. Nope! Instead, I’m sharing some recipes where corn is the supporting player that makes things POP.

While you can get fresh corn year-round, those shrink-wrapped packages at the grocery store pale in comparison to locally grown sweet corn—and corn season is upon us soon! I always try to cook with it as much as I possibly can, and yet every year as summer winds down, I feel like I could have used it even more.

The thing about corn is that, unlike a lot of vegetables, it’s pretty versatile. It’s equally good raw, grilled, roasted, sautéed, or stirred into soups. And everywhere it goes, it adds a little sweetness, some sunny color, and juicy little bites of deliciousness. It truly does make everything better!

Black bean corn salad with feta and tomatoes

Black Bean Corn Salad

This is one of those recipes that shows off everything corn does well. The kernels add sweetness, crunch, and color while balancing the earthiness of the beans. It's equally good as a side dish, taco topping, or light lunch.

Check out this recipe

A bowl of creamy salmon chowder soup with chunks of salmon, bacon, corn, potatoes, and green onions, with spoons beside it.

Salmon Chowder

Corn and seafood have been friends for a long time. Here, the corn adds sweetness that balances the richness of the salmon while giving the chowder extra texture and substance.

Check out this recipe

BLT Chopped Salad with Feta and Sweet Corn. Everyone’s favorite sandwich turned into an easy, delicious salad that’s perfect for parties and potlucks! Tastes great at room temperature and can last for days in the refrigerator, so it’s great for healthy meal planning too. The ultimate summer salad recipe! Recipe at wellplated.com | @wellplated

BLT Chopped Salad

A BLT already has plenty going for it, but corn makes it even better. The sweetness pairs beautifully with smoky bacon and juicy tomatoes, adding another layer of summer flavor.

Check out this recipe

A bowl filled with white rice, topped with slices of grilled steak, arugula, and a mix of black beans, corn, red onion, and peppers. A small bowl of sliced red onions is in the background. The dish is garnished with herbs.

Steak Bowls

Corn brings freshness and texture to these hearty bowls. Alongside steak, grains, and vegetables, it helps keep every bite balanced rather than overly rich.

Check out this recipe

the best easy and healthy taco salad in a large bowl

Healthy Taco Salad

Corn belongs in taco salad. It adds sweetness that plays well with bold Mexican-inspired flavors while making the salad more colorful and satisfying.

Check out this recipe

A blue skillet with Mexican quinoa

Mexican Quinoa

This is one of my favorite examples of how corn can transform a simple pantry meal. The quinoa provides protein and substance while the corn adds texture, sweetness, and a little bit of sunshine.

Check out this recipe

Related Recipes

Fritos being dipped in a bowl of Mexican corn dip

Mexican Corn Dip

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A cast iron skillet filled with Mexican street corn salad, with a wooden spoon resting in the pan.

Mexican Street Corn Salad

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Corn casserole in baking dish

Corn Casserole

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Importance of Healthy Foods For Your Body | Diet Tips #healthyeating #ytshorts #teluguhealthtips

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Importance of Healthy Foods For Your Body | Diet Tips | Socialpost Healthcare

#HealthyFood #DietTips #Nutrition #HealthyLifestyle #EatClean #Wellness #healthtipstelugu #socialpost #socialposthealthcare

Eating healthy foods is the key to maintaining good health and overall well-being. In this video, we explore the importance of nutritious foods for your body, how they improve energy, boost immunity, and prevent diseases. Learn the best diet tips for a balanced lifestyle, including what foods to eat more of and what to avoid. By making simple dietary changes, you can improve your physical health, mental wellness, and long-term fitness.

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Spinach Quinoa Lasagna Casserole (No Precooking!)


This Spinach Quinoa Lasagna Casserole is a no-hassle, protein-packed dinner that’s gluten-free and filled with so much flavor!

Made all in one casserole dish, this healthy spin on the classic comfort food is excellent for easy meal prep and busy nights when you’re hangry and want the oven to do all the work for you.

Overhead view of spinach quinoa lasagna casserole cut into squares in a baking dish

“Loooove this casserole! Such great flavors and also great for meal prepping! I like to add a little extra marinara when I reheat the leftovers too. So much yum! Thank you!” – Larissa

This quinoa lasagna casserole was one of the first quinoa casseroles I ever posted on Fit Foodie Finds (2016, omg!). Honestly, it’s what made me fall in love with quinoa in the first place. I love this easy vegetarian meal because there’s no precooking involved. Ain’t nobody got time to precook quinoa for a casserole — I don’t, anyway! The tomato sauce in this casserole rocks, and it tastes even better the next day! I mixed marinara with cottage cheese and ricotta cheese to make it cheesy, rich, and flavorful.

What You Need for This Quinoa Lasagna Casserole

  • White quinoa: I’ve tested this recipe with both white and red quinoa and I prefer white. I find that red quinoa has more of a “bite.”
  • Veggies: I use a mix of bella mushrooms, fresh spinach, and yellow onion to add a ton of flavor and nutrients to this lasagna dish.
  • Marinara sauce: For my lazy girl lasagna, I use store-bought pasta sauce. It’s easy and delicious! You could also make your own if you’re feeling ambitious.
  • Cheese: I lightened up the cheese sauce by using part 1% cottage cheese. I went for the full-fat ricotta because the nonfat kind tastes really bad, and that just isn’t the point! (My personal opinion.) If you don’t mind non-fat ricotta, go for it!
  • Fresh tomatoes, sliced: I love adding fresh tomatoes to this lasagna for extra color and texture. Optional, but highly recommended!

This vegetarian lasagna can be easily customized to your liking. For instance, you can omit or use any other veggie of your choice. Zucchini slices, bell peppers, and eggplant would all be delicious options!

You can also top the casserole with fresh basil, fresh mozzarella cheese, or parmesan cheese if preferred.

Lifting a slice of spinach quinoa lasagna casserole from the baking dish with a spatula

FAQ for Quinoa Lasagna Casserole

Does the quinoa have to be cooked before going into a casserole dish?

Nope! I use uncooked quinoa in this recipe, making it an easy one-dish meal. The quinoa cooks perfectly while baking in the oven.

How do you know when quinoa is done?

You’ll know when the quinoa is done when it becomes translucent and the white spiral-like germ separates from each grain. It should also be soft and not crunchy.

Can you make this recipe with regular quinoa?

I haven’t tested this recipe with regular quinoa, so try it at your own risk! The cooking time may vary. I highly recommend using sprouted quinoa for the best flavor and texture.

How to Store + Freeze

Close-up of spinach quinoa lasagna casserole slices in a white baking dish topped with melted cheese and basil

  • Preheat oven to 375ºF and spray your casserole dish with cooking spray.

  • Add the spinach, mushrooms, onion, and quinoa to the casserole dish. Mix to combine.

  • Add the marinara sauce, broth, cottage cheese, ricotta cheese, Italian seasoning, garlic powder, sea salt, and ground pepper. Mix to combine.

  • Add the marinara mixture to the casserole dish. Use a large spoon to mix all ingredients together.

  • Cover with tin foil and bake for 30 minutes. Remove and stir. It will still be a little soupy, but don’t worry this is how it’s supposed to be! Place back in oven, covered, for 30 minutes.

  • Remove from the oven and top with mozzarella and parmesan cheese. Turn the oven to broil and broil the casserole until melted and golden brown.

  • Remove and let cool for 10 minutes before serving. Serve with fresh basil.

  • The flavor of the casserole is dependent on what type of marinara sauce is used.

Calories: 323 kcal, Carbohydrates: 31 g, Protein: 20 g, Fat: 14 g, Fiber: 5 g, Sugar: 5 g

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Photography by: The Wooden Skillet



How the Fight to Ban Trans Fat Was Won

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What was the secret to the public health community’s triumph when past attempts to regulate the food industry failed?

There are three broad approaches to mediating the ruin of risky choices: inform people (like using labeling), nudge people (for example, by offering financial incentives), or directly intervene to make the activity less harmful. Which do you think prevented more car fatalities: mandating driver education, labeling cars about crash risk, or removing the human element altogether by just making sure airbags are installed? There are public education nutrition campaigns, ranging from “sugar pack” ads on public transit that inform consumers about the amount of sugar in soft drinks to “Hot Dogs Cause Butt Cancer” billboards that educate about the link between processed meat and colorectal cancer, as shown here and at 0:52 in my video How We Won the Fight to Ban Trans Fat.

But is there a way to make products nutritionally safer in the first place?

The ban on trans fats offers a useful lesson. In 1993, the Harvard Nurses’ Study found that high intake of trans fat may increase the risk of heart disease by 50%. That’s where the trans fat story started in Denmark, and it ended there a decade later with a ban on added trans fats in 2003. It took another 10 years, though, before the United States even started considering a ban. All the while, trans fats were killing an estimated tens of thousands of Americans every year, resulting in as many years of healthy life lost to conditions like meningitis, cervical cancer, and multiple sclerosis. If so many people were suffering and dying, why did it take so long for the United States to even suggest taking action?

One can look at the fight over New York City’s trans fat ban for a microcosm of the national debate. Opposition came down hard from the food industry, complaining about “government intrusion,” likening the city to a “nanny state.” Since trans fats can be naturally found in meat and dairy, the livestock industry echoed the Institute of Shortening and Edible Oils’ argument that everything should be eaten in moderation. Critics styled such proposals as the “rise of food fascism.” But it was the restaurant and food industry that limited consumer choice by so broadly fouling the food supply with these dangerous fats.

If “food zealots” get their wish in banning added trans fats, another argument went, what’s next? Vested corporate interests tend to rally around these kinds of “slippery slope” arguments to try to distract from the very real fact that people are dying. I mean, what if the government tries to make us eat broccoli?! This actually came up in a Supreme Court case over Obamacare. Chief Justice John Roberts suggested Congress could start “ordering everyone to buy vegetables,” a fear Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg dubbed “the broccoli horror.” Technically, Congress could compel the American public to eat more plant-based food, Justice Ginsburg wrote, yet one can’t “offer the ‘hypothetical and unreal possibility’…of a vegetarian state as a credible reason.” As one legal scholar put it, “Judges and lawyers live on the slippery slope of analogies; they are not supposed to ski it to the bottom.”

New York City finally won its trans-fat fight, preserving its status as a public health leader. For example, New York banned lead paint 18 years before federal action was taken, despite decades of unequivocal evidence of its harm. Comparing stroke and heart attack rates before and after the rollout of the trans-fat ban in different New York counties, researchers estimate it successfully reduced cardiovascular death rates by about 5%. This then became the model for the nationwide ban years later. How was the public health community able to triumph when attempts in the past to regulate the food industry failed? If you had asked me about the odds of a national trans-fat ban, I would have said, “Fat chance.”

In Denmark, as a leading Danish cardiologist put it, “Instead of warning consumers about trans fats and telling them what they are, we’ve [the Danes] simply removed them.” But we’re Americans! “As they say in North America: ‘You can put poison in food if you label it properly.’” If people know the risks, the argument goes, they should be able to eat whatever they want. But that’s assuming they’re given all the facts, which isn’t always the case given the food industry’s “model of systemic dishonesty,” as one health ethics professor put it. Given the predilection for predatory deception and manipulation, government intervention was deemed necessary, but how was it going to get passed?

First, there was a labeling requirement. Manufacturers had to start adding trans-fat content to products’ nutrition facts labeling. This was ostensibly to influence consumers, but it may have had a bigger impact on producers. Now that they had to divulge the truth, companies scrambled to reformulate their products to gain a “no trans fat” competitive edge.

Within years of the mandatory disclosure, more than 5,000 products were introduced touting low or zero trans fats on their labels. Kentucky Fried Chicken went from being sued for having some of the highest trans-fat levels to running an ad campaign where mom tells dad in front of kids that KFC now has zero grams of trans fat, and the father yells, “Yeah baby! Whoooo!!” and begins eating fried chicken by the bucketful. That was the secret to passing the ban. Once the major food industry players had already reformulated their products and bragged about it—once there wasn’t so much money at stake—then there was insufficient political will to block the ban, and added trans fats were taken off the playing field.

Doctor’s Note

It’s important to note that the ban on trans fats didn’t affect the trans fats found in meat and dairy. See Banning Trans Fat in Processed Foods but Not Animal Fat.

If you missed it, in the video Do Healthy Fast Food Options Lead to Healthier Choices?, I discussed how listing calories on menus doesn’t actually get people to choose healthier options.

Stay tuned for Ultra-Processed Junk Food Put to the Test.