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Originally Posted by tornado60
(Post 19460292)
My main concern is that at times it might have to survive a couple hours on my bike in hot weather.
Sometimes I bring leftovers for lunch, and I intentionally leave them out on my desk all morning so when I nukrowave them for lunch it's quicker. Never gotten sick. Heard a good perspective on food safety once from Alton Brown. Bottom line, cooked food is a lot hardier than raw food. |
I use a smaller insulated lunch cooler when I ride and usually take more food when I ride.
The real question here is not how you get lunch to work, but how you get coffee to work. This is usually produces more discussion and more interesting answers. |
Originally Posted by no motor?
(Post 19460796)
I use a smaller insulated lunch cooler when I ride and usually take more food when I ride.
The real question here is not how you get lunch to work, but how you get coffee to work. This is usually produces more discussion and more interesting answers. The Arundel Looney Bin cage works great with my Thermos 14 oz travel mug. |
I have a Nissan Thermos tumbler that fits in a standard bottle cage. Not perfectly, but securely enough.
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I carry a normal lunch packed in a insulated wax cotton lunch bag that looks like a brown paper bag, and carry it in my Ortlieb office bag on the bike, then in the cab of my tractor.
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Originally Posted by no motor?
(Post 19460796)
The real question here is not how you get lunch to work, but how you get coffee to work.
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Originally Posted by no motor?
(Post 19460796)
I use a smaller insulated lunch cooler when I ride and usually take more food when I ride.
The real question here is not how you get lunch to work, but how you get coffee to work. This is usually produces more discussion and more interesting answers. |
Originally Posted by noobinsf
(Post 19460981)
I have a Contigo locking thermos (sold in pairs at Costco) that I throw into my pannier. Has never leaked. Mine is a short ride, so I don't mind being without coffee while I'm on the bike...
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As others have said, you're overthinking this. Put your food in a bag (insulated or not), put that bag inside a backpack/pannier/trunk bag, get on your bike and go
My typical lunch is some fruit, a cup of yogurt, and some sort of protein leftovers (chicken, pork chops, brats, whatever else is laying around). Easily enough to get me through the day and with the energy to ride home. |
Get a thermos that you can store soup in to store other foods like rice, pasta, chicken, or basically a stirfry of all 3 lol . . . that way you can take it with you on your rides . . . otherwise aluminum wrap fresh sandwiches :)
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My mom always packs my lunch.
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I rock something similar to what Snuts showed (minus teh foldout panniers) and i include a freezer doogie like what rumrunn6 showed.
i typically have some nuts in a small snapseal container, a greek yogurt, an apple, a Premier Nutrition protein shake, and a small container of leftover whatever i can find - soup, casserole etc. This is a great question and it took me several months to figure out how much to bring, how to keep it cool enough to avoid spilling, and how to eat (several small meals throughout the day - almost like repeated snacking) Packing a lunch for a cycle commuter is much different than packing a lunch for a car commuter in my experience. |
Boiled veggies in Ziploc bag.
Bag in jersey pocket. |
Originally Posted by noobinsf
(Post 19460981)
I have a Contigo locking thermos (sold in pairs at Costco) that I throw into my pannier. Has never leaked. Mine is a short ride, so I don't mind being without coffee while I'm on the bike...
Lately though I've been drinking everything at work out of a Silipint which I got as a freebie from an exhibition booth at a conference. |
Originally Posted by ItsJustMe
(Post 19459153)
I must be misunderstanding the question, because I don't know how this could be something to question. Is the asker someone who goes out to lunch everyday and has never packed a lunch anywhere before?
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Originally Posted by mcours2006
(Post 19459146)
Tupperware container. Usually a salad with some protein, in a plastic bag in my backpack. Ride is less than an hour (20 km).
As for the food, it's always leftovers from dinner. I don't like sandwiches. If I drive, I will cart in a whole week of lunches (which I always like because then I don't have to huck a couple of extra pounds of food to work on the bike). If I drive I can also bring soft fruit like peaches and pears. I found out a long time ago that soft fruit is a very poor choice for lunchtime if it has to come in on the back of a bike. Apples and oranges travel very well but peaches, pears and plums get icky quickly. |
Originally Posted by no motor?
(Post 19460796)
The real question here is not how you get lunch to work, but how you get coffee to work. This is usually produces more discussion and more interesting answers.
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I drive Monday Am and Friday pm, so I stock up for the week. Coffee? French press every AM, iced or hot. 1/2 in the mug and 1/2 in the thermos every day. Thermos fits nicely in the frame bag.
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Originally Posted by Wittyname
(Post 19461160)
As others have said, you're overthinking this.
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Peanut butter and jelly sandwich. (Like for the last 57 years) plus a banana, a ziplock sandwich bag of celery, red pepper, and carrot sticks, a small bag of mixed nuts, sometimes also an apple, or fresh raw green beans. I cram all but the banana on top of my rolled up clothes in my carradice barely. The banana goes in my jersey or vest pocket so it won't get smushed.
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Originally Posted by I-Like-To-Bike
(Post 19462272)
Or not thinking at all, and asking a bunch of strangers on the Internet how to do the simplest task that is easily accomplished by any six grader or his mommy.
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Originally Posted by ItsJustMe
(Post 19460545)
Ah OK.
My feeling is that Americans (at least) are ridiculous nervous Nellies about food spoilage. I just don't worry about it, and have not had a problem yet. Maybe I've built up an iron stomach from decades of eating the oldest thing in the fridge before my wife got a chance to "waste it" by throwing it out - month old lunchmeat? Not a problem. I just throw whatever in my panniers, milk, cereal, leftovers, yogurt... the only tricky part is making sure it doesn't spill, but I have glass tupperware containers for that which seal well - heavy but whatever, I'm only 5 mi from work (I guess the jar trick is fine too). |
Originally Posted by Darth Lefty
(Post 19462457)
If you don't like reading it, you could always get yourself banned again.
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Originally Posted by PatrickGSR94
(Post 19461991)
You would think that packing a lunch is pretty elementary. Yet with these types of threads you always have EVERYONE chiming in with their methods. :)
For those looking for a foolproof way to transport a meal or two without any worries about spoilage or breakage there are always MRE's. Stock up now, no more worries! :p https://images-na.ssl-images-amazon....1CzhHEBLtL.jpg https://www.amazon.com/Meals-Ready-G.../dp/B005I5ML36 |
Originally Posted by mtb_addict
(Post 19462916)
I'm surprised it's not expensive.
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