This post is brought to you by Almond Breeze
My daughter is mildly amused with the return to my teenage fascination with rainbows.
Chalk it up to reliving the memories of my eighth grade year as she makes her way through hers. Or it may be thanks to my continuing countdown of the quickly fading days of this age of innocence for my lil’ baby. Or maybe it’s thanks to the ’80s boomerang of denim overalls, scrunchies, boom boxes, Polaroid cameras, casseroles, mom jeans and new remakes of Full House, CHiPs and Roseanne.
This easy, veg-heavy Thai-flavored lunch wrap represents all the things right with eating the rainbow. You’ve heard it a hundred times. At least I hope you have: Eating the rainbow is one of the best ways to ensure you’re getting all the right nutrients in one fell swoop. And it’s just one more reason that eating a healthy wrap for an easy lunch or quick dinner is a good idea.
In This Post
A more appropriate question might be which veggies AREN’T in this wrap. It’s loaded with crunchy flavor from a bunch of different veggies and then sweetened up with sliced mango, sliced chicken breast and flavor drizzled with a Thai-inspired almond butter sauce.
Here’s the list of veg (+ 1 fruit) that made my rainbow rock and roll. Or rap and roll? Or more like wrap and roll…Ugh…here’s the list:
Of course this is just the starting line up. Add whatever veggies you have a hankering for or that are languishing in the fridge crisper.
Another thing I love about wraps are they’re easy to meal prep for the week. At the beginning of the week, simply slice your veggies thin and store in airtight containers to prepare your wraps as your week progresses. I like to use my handheld mandoline or the super cool veggie shredding tool I picked up in Vietnam and that I cannot find ANYWHERE online. It’s the little orangey-red tool in the photo above. If you have a source, please let me know because I only have one back-up and I’m not sure when I’ll be back to the markets of Hoi An!
To all of those rainbow rolls of veggies I added baked chicken breast I had meal prepped like most every week and drizzled it all with all the flavors of my lightened-up Thai almond master dipping sauce.
I subbed in creamy almond butter for the peanut butter often found in Thai or Vietnamese sauces because almond butter is actually 25% higher in monounsaturated fat than peanut butter, the type of fat linked to a reduction in heart disease and better blood sugar control, compared to the same amount of peanut butter. Every little bit counts.
But where my real nutritional savings came to play was substituting Almond Breeze almondmilk Unsweetened Coconut for full fat coconut milk in this sauce. Almond Breeze almondmilk lends the coconut flavor with just 80 calories in 1 cup and only 7 grams of fat, a far cry from what is found in in regular coconut milk, that averages among brands at 360 calories per cup and 36 grams of fat.
Not that I don’t love coconut milk, because I do, but it bears repeating that every little bit counts. Plus, Almond Breeze is available in shelf-stable containers I keep in the pantry for convenience sake.
While making a wrap is indeed very easy to do, there definitely is a trick to getting your wrap to stay together and not fall apart at the seams. You’ll want to work quickly so you don’t lose the filling and so your wrapper doesn’t split or break. It’s all in the motion of the ocean…
If you have extra ingredients prepped but don’t feel like a wrap one day, turn the ingredients into a salad, or use a rice paper wrap with cellophane noodles to make spring rolls. Or add it all to pasta noodles for a healthy pasta salad.
There’s loads you can create once you have the batch cooking basics.