Sentences with phrase «do about your lunch»

Think about breakfast foods the way you do about your lunch or dinner.

Not exact matches

Although Fiasco Gelato has regular meetings, huddles and lunches with the intent of igniting collective creativity and innovation, Boettcher doesn't watch when his employees come and go, and has never denied a vacation request: «You don't track the time people spend thinking about how the business is going to get to the next level, so, why would I track their time off?»
A common complaint about work - related email usually has less to do with real work and more to do with organizing messages and ease in making, say, lunch plans.
If you're meeting someone for lunch on Wednesday and you're telling them about your shenanigans last night and why you're not feeling 100 %, do you think that they'll be impressed?
If you are generous with vacation time, requests for days and afternoons off or lenient during longer lunch hours for mid-day sales, your employees will feel less anxious about having to get everything done for the season, which helps ensure their time on the clock is productive.
The same people who once criticized millennials for tweeting about our lunches (which none of us actually did, by the way) now get that hashtags are a big business: Some 73 % of Canadians use social media.
As a suggestion, you can host «lunch and learns» to train different groups within your organization on the buyer personas and how what you've learned about your buyers specifically relates to them and what they do.
We may not know the portion size Taft enjoyed for his lunch and dinner steaks as precisely as we do his breakfast beef (he was often a three - times - a-day steak eater), but there's concrete evidence about his preferred preparation.
If I have a sensitive issue to talk to a colleague about, I will take them for lunch or a coffee — a change of scenery never does any harm after all.
The school doesn't want you spreading your poison and you want to cry about not getting free money; just another example of the religious groups in this country wanting a free lunch while being able to hate on whoever they want.
Any true athiest wouldn't waste their «free lunch» lives (as Stephen Hawkings teaches) taking hours of their lives to argue about something they profess to know with all certainty doesn't exist.
Don't know much about «therapeutic Christianity», if that's the term, although there are certain flavours of «Christian counselling» that make me want to lose my lunch.
We continue to ask for daily bread but with less anxiety about how much we must do first before accepting any «free lunch
Why don't you just sit here and think about the damage you just did to your brother's open honest soul, to his innocence, to his respect and love for you, and when you are ready to make amends to him, do so, and we will have lunch.
I sat there on the bed for a while, and then I did seek out my brother and apologize to him, and we all sat down quietly for lunch, and nothing else was ever said about this, until now, in this small essay; but the thought occurs to me that in a lot of ways I have been sitting on that bed ever since, pondering the way lies come so easily to our lips and spin so easily out of our ostensible control, and stab the innocent, and dilute respect, and poison love, and tear at what we so much wish to be, which is honest and gracious and reverent.
Even if we don't go out and shoot kids for fun, when we allow the images in the media to perpetuate the idea that young black men are violent, when our own speech (I don't want to talk about the conversation I had to have at lunch today) perpetuates an idea of black Americans as criminals, especially young black American men, we are accessories to murder.
Make one batch of this soup and you don't have to worry about making a lunch — quick and cheap!
The other plus side: Even while I was sick and had just gotten back home a few days before, I didn't have to worry at all about what Draz was going to take for lunch or anything like that!
I'm not sure I'm the best person to ask about this sort of thing, but I do think that you would get a lot of FiDi lunch people foot traffic.
Unfortunately while they don't complain about having veggies with our nightly dinner, they rarely ever eat them for breakfast or lunch.
Each morning I don't even have to think about what to make for lunch.
I had chicken strips needing used up today, I do nt know the weight as I used some at lunch time, I guessed it was just about half so halved the other ingredients and it worked out great!
I brought a loaf to school to share with my friends at lunch (which they all raved about and had no idea that it was Paleo banana bread that they were eating) but the people who didn't get any but were in the classes before lunch were searching around the room trying to figure out where the scent was aerating from.
I don't know about you, but I find packing lunch one of the hardest parts of staying keto.
Tomatoes have never looked more beautiful to me than they did in this salad, which was served on a hot July day as part of our lunch at the Torres family's Mas Rabell restaurant in the Penedès wine region of Spain (about an hour south of Barcelona).
And I sure as heck don't even think twice about splurging on an ungodly priced lunch of lobster spaghetti if a local cabbie tells me to do so.
But what about once you've made it, and you want to use it to make your family's back - to - school lunches — How do you store that homemade gluten free bread?
A quick and healthy lunch or dinner you'll feel good about eating doesn't have to take time when you're making this Asian Brussels Sprout Salad with Grilled Salmon!
What I love about salads is that they are easy to make, can be made - ahead of time to pack in a lunch or wait in the fridge until I get done running.
My husband called at lunch — as he always does — and as we were chatting about the mornings events he mentioned that one of his buddies from work had some extra sweet corn.
I brought it to work (with a little bag of crushed peanuts, I don't like them heated) for lunch and everyone raved about how wonderful it smelled!
A typical full day of eating for me looks like: Breakfast: Spinach, Mushroom, Onion and Tomato Frittata... sometimes with bacon or homemade sausage Iced Coffee with coconut milk Lunch (this is usually my largest meal of the day): 4 - 5 ounces of protein (turkey burger, pulled pork, chicken thighs, ground buffalo), roasted veggies and sometimes a sweet potato or butternut squash Snack: apple with almond butter or a handful of macadamia nuts Dinner: A large salad with all kinds of raw veggies (cucumber, celery, carrots, cauliflower), avocado or olives, usually a lighter protein like grilled chicken breast, salmon or shrimp This would represent a full menu... I would say I hit this about 4 - 5 days a week, other days I may omit the snack or keep the snack and omit a meal, if i do that though I would add a bit of protein with it.
I liked that the 4 main meals weren't scheduled for specific days so I didn't have to worry about wasting food if other plans came up for lunch or dinner.
Thanks so much for posting this in time for Passover, I've been scratching my head about second day lunch and this will do the trick.
Also what about those days when you just don't fancy having the same thing for dinner and then for lunch the next day?
I wasn't able to spend a lot of time in the food area, it was way past lunch and nap time and the kids were super cranky, but I did pick up a few things that were recommended to me by my friend that was along for the shopping trip (who just happened to have lived in Sweden and knew a lot about the goodies I was looking at!).
It's so nice to eat freshly made food instead of pulling everything out of the freezer... and trying to remember to do that about an hour before lunch to bake on time... So here is another audience who would appreciate this book: stay at home parents who are having lunch alone at home or a parent plus one or two small appetites for the second portion.
I am planning on simple tuna patties so I don't need to worry about lunch for tomorrow.
I know I talk about meal planning all the time, but it really does help me to stay accountable, makes for less chaotic mornings when I go to pack my lunch, saves money each week (since I go on ONE big grocery haul making sure to only get what I need for that week) and I'm staying healthy in the process.
I actually didn't have any other recipes up my sleeve to give her — but it got me to thinking about how when I go to the self - serve buffet at Whole Foods Market for lunch, I will typically get a scoop of hummus and then I always garnish it with some of their chickpea salad.
I whipped this up in about ten minutes (this doesn't really take into account the five or ten minutes where I stand and stare blankly into my cupboards trying to figure out what to make)... Delicious the day after (hot or cold) for lunch.
There's an unwritten rule of food blogging that says, «When you don't have anything else to write about, blog your lunch
And whether you decide to make these eggs cooked in sauce for breakfast, lunch or dinner, it's totally your call and if others say it's wrong, I don't care about it being right and neither should you, for that matter.
That way you at least don't have to think about lunch as an entirely separate meal; you'll have something to start with.
They were addictive, and since I'd made them a bit healthier along the way, I didn't have to fret about the fact that they became my go - to for breakfast, snacks, and once even lunch.
Lunch: My boyfriend's mother gave me a box of heirloom beans for Christmas (what does it say about me that I was really, really excited when I opened that box?)
I didn't measure and weigh this lunch, and the bread came from the bakery, so I'd have to guess about the nutritional content of everything, but to be honest, I'm not as concerned about the numbers with fresh whole foods.
If it didn't happen right after lunch, it happened at about 2:00 — Prime time for my dad's break from fieldwork and chores.
Their father told them to wait, and wait they did, entertaining 76er Center Darryl Dawkins with a kindergarten joke about a boy who recited the alphabet and omitted the letter «p.» Finally, Erving was finished and took the boys to lunch — at Wendy's.
Kids love having their parents for a lunch visit, so don't worry about embarrassing them.
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