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Spatula Diaries: Four crazy fast and easy weekday breakfast ideas


The weekday breakfast is like paying taxes—required, but a big pain to get over the finish line. Despite its nutritional and social importance, it’s often a fleeting and unsatisfying moment at households in which food is unceremoniously forced onto the plates (or into the hands) of young people as their parents suck down coffee and shoo everyone out the door. And now, the daily sprint across south Louisiana is compounded by a post-flood reality with epic traffic, upended schedules and temporary housing.

This week, I’m offering four easy breakfast dishes that are intended to provide some inspired calm. Yummy and healthy, they intentionally use minimal ingredients, and part or all of them can be put together the night before.

Yogurt popsicle
Fruit and yogurt popsicle

Fruit and yogurt popsicles
Yes, kids, popsicles for breakfast! Combine 1 ½ cups Greek yogurt, 1 ½ cups frozen fruit, 2 cups orange juice and 1 tablespoon honey in a blender and process until smooth. Consistency should be slightly thinner than a homemade smoothie. Fill popsicle molds and freeze for 5 hours or overnight. Makes 12.

Cheese and apple melt
Cheese and apple melt

Cheese and apple melt
Lightly toast two halves of a whole-grain English muffin. On each, layer thin slices of a crisp, tart apple. Drizzle honey on top, then add slices of your favorite cheese. Broil until the cheese melts.

Protein pack
Protein pack

Protein pack
This is a nod to those overpriced boxes of deconstructed ingredients on airlines that my kids love. Assemble a combination of protein-rich nibbles like a spoonful of peanut butter with whole grain bread, nuts, cheese and bits of Canadian bacon or turkey. Add fresh or dried fruit for something sweet.

Bird's nest
Bird’s nest

Bird’s nest
Small servings of shoestring hash browns take no time to heat in a skillet. They can also be prepared the night before and warmed in the microwave. Top each potato “nest” with a sunny-side-up egg. Add fresh orange slices for a bright and cheery plate ready in about five minutes.


Maggie Heyn Richardson is a regular 225 contributor and the author of Hungry for Louisiana, An Omnivore’s Journey. Reach her at hungryforlouisiana.com.