By Libby Jenkinson, medical review by Dr. Andreas Eenfeldt, MD
- Tea or coffee
- Low-carb snacks
- Reheat leftovers
- Minimal cooking
- Slow cooking
- Intermittent fasting
- Meal plan
How do you stay low carb or keto when you don’t want to cook? What do you do when you come home late, tired, or you’re simply unprepared?
Below, find our best ideas for how to stay low carb when you don’t feel like cooking at all or don’t have much time to cook.
1. Drink tea or coffee
A soothing cup of tea or coffee may be just enough to curb your appetite, especially if you add some heavy cream or melted butter.1 This may take you to your next planned meal, with no cooking.
2. Eat low-carb snacks
Low-carb tapas
Fill your pantry and fridge with low-carb essentials so you can quickly make a platter with one or more of these low-carb snacks instead of cooking. Be sure to include at least one protein source.
- Canned fish (tuna, salmon, sardines)
- Variety of cheeses
- Deli meat or cold cuts 2
- Avocado
- Nuts (Which are the best? Check out our guide.)
- Frozen berries or other low-carb fruits
- Cream
- Pate
- Beef jerky orpork rinds (with no sugars or wheat)
- Full-fat yogurt
- Olives
- Mayonnaise
- Healthy fats – like olive oil – to drizzle over snacks such as mozzarella or veggies
3. Reheat leftovers
Keto pizza
Keto pesto chicken casserole with feta cheese and olives
Keto hamburger patties with creamy tomato sauce and fried cabbage
Keto Tex-Mex casserole
Get in the habit of making double or even triple meals and vegetables. Freeze the leftovers. A meal is waiting, ready to reheat, when you don’t want to cook. Leftovers are superb for lunches too. Check out our planned leftovers worksheet for ideas.
4. Do minimal cooking
Boiled eggs with mayonnaise
Boil an egg.3 Fry a steak or buy a hot cooked chicken (without bread stuffing or sweet sauces). Add a bag of salad, a selection of cheeses and homemade mayonnaise. Dinner can be ready in 10 minutes. Get creative with salads and use your low-carb pantry essentials.
You can also use our simple keto plates. Here’s some inspiration:
- Keto fried salmon with green beans
- Keto fried salmon with asparagus
- Italian plate
- Keto fried chicken with broccoli
- Keto Tex-Mex burger plate
- Keto bacon and eggs plate
- Keto chicken and feta cheese plate
- Keto fried chicken with cabbage
- Keto mackerel and egg plate
5. Learn to love your slow cooker
If you know you’ll be home late but have time in the morning (or even the night before), use your slow cooker. Slow cookers are a fabulous way to transform cheaper cuts of meat into satisfying comfort meals. This is easy ‘set and forget’ cooking.
What can you prepare in your slow cooker? Here are some great ideas to cook up:
- Creamy venison stew
- Old fashioned beef stew
- Keto pulled pork with roasted tomato salad
- Keto carnitas
- Low carb Indian lamb stew
- Low carb goulash with butter-fried cabbage
- Oxtail Stifado
- Keto BBQ ribs with creamy squash salad
- Slow-cooked keto pork roast with creamy gravy
6. Fast intermittently
Are you really hungry? Learn to understand your appetite and eat only when hungry. This may not be an option for a family but is great for individuals. And there is no faster (pun intended!) or simpler option.
Find out everything you need to know in our complete guide,Intermittent fasting for beginners.
Summary
Try to be prepared so you’re not in this position too often: planning meals for the week or even a few days at a time will help a lot. Try to set time aside each evening to cook, or batch cook once a week.
Low-carb recipes
Keto recipes
/ Libby Jenkinson
More guides
Breakfast guide
Dining out
Instead of potatoes, pasta and rice
Low-carb bread
Snacks and desserts guide
Low carb when traveling
Guidelines in 31 languages
Visual low-carb guides
Vegetables
Fruits
Nuts
Snacks
Alcohol
Are you concerned that butter, cream, cheese and other foods foods high in saturated fat are unhealthy? In all likelihood, you don’t need to be.
Although still considered controversial by some experts, several large systematic reviews of clinical trials have found no evidence that eating foods high in saturated fat increases the risk of heart disease, early death, or other health problems:
British Medical Journal 2016: Re-evaluation of the traditional diet-heart hypothesis: analysis of recovered data from Minnesota Coronary Experiment (1968-73) [systematic review of randomized trials; strongevidence]
Learn more: A user guide to saturated fat ↩
Meat is a high-quality source of protein and other essential nutrients. The evidence linking it to heart disease, cancer, and other health issues is very weak:Guide to red meat: is it healthy? ↩
Eggs are an excellent source of protein. Although they’re high in cholesterol, eggs don’t seem to raise cholesterol levels much in most people, and they may even reduce some heart disease risk factors:
The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2018: Effect of a high-egg diet on cardiometabolic risk factors in people with type 2 diabetes: the Diabetes and Egg (DIABEGG) Study—randomized weight-loss and follow-up phase [randomized trial; moderate evidence]
Nutrients 2017: Consuming two eggs per day, as compared to an oatmeal breakfast, decreases plasma ghrelin while maintaining the LDL/HDL ratio [moderate evidence]
Current Opinion in Clinical Nutrition and Metabolic Care 2006: Dietary cholesterol provided by eggs and plasma lipoproteins in healthy populations [overviewarticle; ungraded] ↩