Making healthy snacks a habit when afternoon energy slumps strike at
work
[July 11, 2025]
By CATHY BUSSEWITZ
NEW YORK (AP) — When Claire Paré was a classroom teacher, working in a
setting where every minute, down to the bathroom breaks, was scheduled,
she brought granola bars, fruit and protein shakes to school so she’d be
prepared when hunger hits.
Then she transitioned to a job at education publisher McGraw Hill.
Working remotely at home in New Hampshire, her children’s cheddar bunny
crackers and Fruit Roll-Ups lured her to the pantry, confounding her
commitment to healthy snacking.
“I have the opportunity to be judicious, but I choose not to most of the
time,” Paré said. “I really do enjoy being able to put the time into
making something, but oftentimes convenience just has to win out.”
Eating healthy snacks during the workday can be challenging. Many people
find themselves facing down a mid-afternoon slump and accompanying
sugar, caffeine or carbohydrate cravings after lunch. Busy adults racing
from back-to-back meetings to family commitments often reach for what’s
easy, whether it's a candy bar from the office vending machine or potato
chips from a kitchen cupboard.
The problem with eating packaged sugary or salty snacks to get through
the afternoon is they may spike blood sugar levels but don't give a
sustained second wind, according to Beth Czerwony, a registered
dietitian at Cleveland Clinic.
“It’s going to burn off really fast, so you’re going to get that boost
of energy and then all of a sudden you’re going to get another crash,”
Czerwony said. "Some people just chase that for a while, and they’re
drinking coffee or their energy drinks and they're eating their candy,
and it just sets you up for these spikes and these drops."
Here are some ideas for maintaining healthy snacking habits at work.

Peppering in protein
Foods that are high in protein, such as Greek yogurt, hard-boiled eggs,
cottage cheese and beef or turkey jerky, can help people feel full for
longer periods of time than snacks without protein, said Caroline Susie,
a Dallas-based registered dietitian and spokesperson for the Academy of
Nutrition and Dietetics.
Eating a snack consisting of refined carbohydrates such as a bagel
causes blood sugar to rise rapidly and then drop, so teaming it up with
another source of nutrition is preferable, Susie said.
“When you pair that carbohydrate with lean protein or have a
protein-forward choice, it contributes to satiety. So you’re just going
to stay fuller longer,” she added.
Czerwony recommends snacks that combine lean proteins with complex
carbohydrates such as crackers, rice cakes or fruit. The combination
works because carbohydrates raise blood sugar, giving you a boost, while
the protein takes longer to digest, helping to sustain you for longer,
she said.
“The carbohydrates are like the kindling on the fire, and then the
proteins are the logs,” Czerwony said. “You’re going to get the slow
burn from the protein, but you need that sudden start, so you have the
carbohydrates to get you going."
The crunch you crave
Many people find it hard to resist crunchy foods. For a satisfying
munch, the American Heart Association recommends sliced apples with a
tablespoon of low-sodium peanut butter, pears dipped in reduced-fat
cottage cheese, vegetables such as carrots, celery, bell peppers,
cucumber or zucchini paired with hummus or tzatziki sauce, popcorn, rice
cakes or unsalted nuts and seeds. You can also roast chickpeas, which
provide both protein and carbohydrates.

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(AP Illustration / Peter Hamlin)
 For a packaged snack, read the
nutrition label to check how much added sugar and sodium it
contains, the association suggests.
The Cleveland Clinic recommends whole fruit, edamame, seeds, a
handful of nuts or a single-serving package of tuna that you can eat
with a fork.
Pack ahead
Bringing your own snacks to work can help you control the quality
and quantity of what you eat, Czerwony said. Try slicing vegetables,
cheese or low-fat meats on weekends to last through the week, she
said.
“If you have all that stuff already made, then it’s easy in the
morning to just grab it and go,” she said.
Take along a small, soft-sided cooler to help keep snacks like
yogurt, sliced veggies or hummus fresh. “Get cute little bento
boxes, get little containers, make it fun if that’s something that
you want to do, because we’ll eat things that are more attractive
instead of just being in a Ziploc,” Czerwony said.
Petra Durnin, a Los Angeles-based senior director at commercial real
estate firm JLL, blends greens, nuts, berries, avocado, banana and
chia or flax seeds into homemade smoothies, which she makes in large
batches. At night, she moves one jar to the fridge to thaw for the
next day. An afternoon smoothie keeps her full until dinnertime and
less likely to reach for chips, chocolate and sugar, she said.
“I feel like I have better brain clarity,” Durnin said. “I’m able to
push through the afternoon and work more efficiently. I don’t feel
bloated, bogged down. It just feels better.”'
Occasionally indulge
Adopting healthy snacking habits doesn't mean you have to deprive
yourself entirely of treats. If a coworker is celebrating a
birthday, an occasional slice of cake won't completely derail
healthy habits.
“Let’s not demonize food,” Susie said.
Before dipping into a bag of chips, eat a meal that includes lean
protein, complex carbohydrates and healthy fat, and then add
something healthy to the snack while keeping an eye on portion size,
Susie said.
“There’s not going to be a perfect substitute for chips. You can eat
carrots all you want, but you can’t trick your body with thinking
that they’re chips,” Czerwony said. “If you want a chip, have the
stinking chip and just be done with it."

However, a constant hankering for chips could be a sign of a dietary
deficiency, and it's worth figuring that out so “those types of
things are more treats than something that’s in the routine mix of
what you’re eating throughout the day," Czerwony said.
Gisela Marx, 53, rarely gets a chance to sit or eat while working as
deputy front of house manager at the Auditorium Theater in Chicago.
On event days, she works from 3 p.m. until 11 p.m. or later. She
packs healthy snacks such as watermelon and nuts.
She also keeps an emergency stash of Reese’s Pieces, which her boss
has to replenish if he eats the last one.
“Just having it there is a comfort. I can always have it if I want
it,” Marx said.
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