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This delicious power bowl recipe is customizable and will help you get in the habit of optimizing your meals for metabolic health.

The 5 elements of a metabolically healthy meal in one delicious power bowl

This delicious power bowl recipe is customizable and will help you get in the habit of optimizing your meals for metabolic health.

The Levels Team
WRITTEN BY
The Levels Team
UPDATED: 21 Sep 2024
PUBLISHED: 15 Nov 2022
🕗 4 MIN READ

Eating for metabolic health doesn’t have to mean eating the same thing every day. On the contrary, more variety in your diet means more nutrients to bolster your health and well-being.

“There are endless ways of satisfying the body’s nutritional needs,” says Levels Co-Founder and Chief Medical Officer Dr. Casey Means. “So instead of memorizing a narrow list of approved foods, I like to think about components of a metabolically optimal meal.”

According to Casey, an optimized meal should include these five elements:

To get all these components in one easy-to-prep dish, Casey recommends trying a “metabolic power bowl,” a recipe that, she says, you can customize according to what you have access to and what’s in season.

“The key to a successful bowl is knowing which types of foods fit each category, and then mixing and matching to find out what tastes delicious to you,” she says. “It ends up being a really versatile meal because once you’ve got the five components down, you have hundreds of ingredients to choose from.”

In addition to generating exciting flavors, the combination of different ingredients can improve the body’s ability to absorb their nutrients. Cooking your cherry tomatoes in olive oil, for example, helps the body to absorb lycopene, an antioxidant in tomatoes that may lower your risk of cancer. Similarly, the combination of black pepper and turmeric may increase the body’s access to curcumin, which has anti-inflammatory and antioxidant properties.

In case you’re overwhelmed by the task of finding and preparing five different components, Casey notes that power bowls can actually be a very low-effort meal.

“The beautiful thing is that you can prep a lot of your components ahead of time—or buy them pre-chopped or frozen—and then the only thing you have to do on the day of is maybe cook your base,” she says.

Regularly making these bowls, Casey adds, can also help you cultivate an intuition around cooking for metabolic health.

“Every time you build a power bowl, you’re also building the habit of getting those five components into your meal,” she says. “In time, you start to automatically recognize, ‘Oh, this dish needs some omega-3s!’ Or ‘I have to throw some probiotics on my lunch!’ It becomes instinctive—and fun.”

Want to create your own power bowl recipe? Select one ingredient (or a few!) from each of the below categories. Alternatively, keep scrolling for Casey’s recipe from the video up top.

1. Metabolically-stable bases

2. Omega-3s

3. Fiber

*Note: Beans can cause glucose spikes in some people, though this effect varies from bean to bean and can be lessened when balanced with fat, protein, and additional fiber.

4. Colorful micronutrients and antioxidants

5. Probiotics

Optional: Top your bowl with a sauce that will tie the flavors together and fill any nutritional gaps. E.g.:

Casey’s saucy salmon power bowl

Ingredients 

Bowl

Sauce

(from by I am Grateful: Recipes and Lifestyle of Cafe Gratitude)

Recipe

Brussels sprouts

Salmon

Cauliflower rice base

Sauce

Assembly


Click here to download a PDF of all four Levels Kitchen recipes!

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