
If you’ve read any of the latest issues of People magazine, you may have noticed their weekly celebrity “What I Eat In A Day” feature.
While it’s always fun to get a glimpse into the real lives of our favorite celebrities, I think this particular column is not only misleading but also quite dangerous.
Many of the featured celebrities are listed as eating somewhere around 1200 calories per day, making it seem like this is what anyone who wants a body like theirs should also do.
In one feature where the celebrity actually did eat a higher amount of calories, the nutritionist recommended she scale her portions back—even though the celebrity in question leads a highly active lifestyle and is far from overweight!
By only showing one day in the life, with no disclaimers about how much these women are consuming on average in a week or month, I think the article unintentionally sends out a dangerous message, especially to impressionable kids and teenagers wishing to emulate their favorite celebs.
The featured women look healthy and vibrant, which most likely means they’re either eating more than they claim or are just not giving the full picture by mentioning occasional splurges on drinks, dinners out, or other indulgences to account for the extra calories keeping them properly fueled.
(While 1200 calories per day may be healthy for some individuals, the USDA lists a much higher number as the average caloric needs of a young and active woman not looking to lose weight.)
I wanted to publish today’s post as my answer to the “What I Eat In A Day” feature; to show an alternative to the Hollywood standard of eating. Not all healthy women are eating the way Hollywood would like you to believe, and no one should ever make you feel guilty for eating a less-than-“perfect” diet or indulging in dessert.
When I read the weekly features, I’m shocked at how clean these girls eat. Eating clean is great… but eating should also be fun. Unless you get enjoyment out of eating only steamed veggies and proteins every day (which is perfectly fine if you really do), you’re missing out on one of life’s greatest pleasures.
(For more on this topic, see my post on Orthorexia – The New Eating Disorder.)
*Disclaimer: As always, be sure to listen to your own body or ask a doctor or nutritionist if you’re concerned about how many calories and other nutrients you should be eating.
Just like the magazine feature shouldn’t be used as a guide for how much to eat for your own ideal health, today’s post is also just showing what works for one person.
So many people write to me and ask for meal plans, and it scares me because bloggers on the internet—unless they are also certified nutritionists or health professionals—should not be writing meal plans for people they’ve never met. This is an alarming way that some bloggers seem to be making money, so please be careful and trust your health only to a professional.
**To clarify: The photos in this post were taken either before or after eating. They were styled for food photography purposes and do not show the actual portions eaten.
What I Eat In A Day
As a teenager, I loved sleeping until noon. Now I somehow wake up naturally around 4 am, and I immediately go looking for food!
There really isn’t a typical day for me in terms of variety; but the amount I eat stays pretty constant. Exercise includes running once or twice a week (sometimes more, sometimes less) and walking quite a bit since I live in a city.
I enjoy being outside and am not really a gym person.
Morning:

I’ll usually grab a small handful of raw nuts, seeds, or some coconut butter.
Today my hand found the bag of cashews. If I’m going running, I might make a cup of coffee and eat a bit more. Otherwise, I just sip water as I make real breakfast.
Breakfast:

Breakfast this morning was a giant bowl of peanut butter oat bran.
I cooked 1.5 servings of oat bran with unsweetened cashewmilk then stirred in some peanut butter and melted a piece of a 95% chocolate bar.
If you happen to run into me at 9 am, I’ve probably already eaten chocolate at least once.
Lunch:

Lunch is usually comprised of whatever leftovers I can find in the fridge.
Some mornings are so busy that I have to pull something from the freezer. I often will make huge batches of recipes so I can keep the freezer well-stocked at all times.
And by well-stocked, I mean things may or may not fall out when you open it…
Lunch today was rice, white beans, and homemade Coconut Curry.
Snack:

Snack was one of my favorite things – I call them “Extra Melty Gooey Brownies.”
They are so fantastically delicious… but I’ve never posted the recipe because they are so gooey that they often fall apart! Plus, I know not everyone is as big a fan of super gooey brownies as I am.
*Edit: By popular request, the recipe can now be found in my brownie recipe archives: Healthy Brownies And Baked Goods
If it’s a baking day and I’ve eaten a lot of samples, I’ll sometimes just sample my way through snacktime and never actually sit down for a real snack.
Dinner:

Giant Monster Salad:
- 1 Large Avocado
- Raw Almonds
- Frozen Raspberries
- Raw Pumpkin Seeds
- Homemade Sesame Ginger Dressing
- Trader Joes Organic Kale
Tahini and a baked sweet potato, cooked extra long until it is all sweet and caramelized.
How To Cook Sweet Potatoes – 3 secret tricks
Night Snack:

2 servings of Creamy Pistachio Ice Cream – One of my top 5 favorite recipes from my new cookbook.
Surprise! For once, it’s not chocolate!

(Photo credit: Probably my mom, back in like 2005… I found this picture buried in a folder on my computer.)
Daily Total: 2,958 calories
(15g total added sugar for the day, and it easily meets the RDA for protein, calcium, and other nutrients vegans are always being asked about. I don’t worry about protein but do take daily Vitamins D, B12, and an Omega 3 supplement.)
Edit due to popular request: Link To Full Nutrition Facts
















Thanks for sharing, Katie! Absolutely love the idea of tahini on a roasted sweet potato – definitely going to give that a try. And that pistachio ice cream looks amazing! Your book is on my gift list, so hopefully I’ll have that recipe soon!
Looks like a great healthy day of eating, Thanks for sharing! I will say that I am completely upset that you are holding out on the Extra Melty Gooey Brownies recipe! I am a huge fan of fall apart desserts. I microwave almost all desserts before eating just to get that softness (even ice cream) Don’t judge me LOL! Just PLEASE share that recipe, who cares what others think. Put the fall apart warning in the recipe description and people who don’t like that kind of thing simply don’t have to make it. That brownie was the one thing you ate that I wanted to search for the recipe. Not because you didn’t share it (I hadn’t even read the comment yet) but because it looked so scrumptious!
Thanks Katie. Love your blog!
I had no idea there were so many gooey brownie fans out there! 🙂
Will work on a post… and hopefully be able to make the brownies look somewhat presentable for a photoshoot.
Definitely a fan of dark chocolate gooey goodness , and will look forward to the post.
Just throw them on top of your favorite ice cream like a topping and tell us “serving suggestion!” 😉 Nothing looks unpresentable when displayed on top of ice cream.
Well, almost nothing.
I do the same thing!! I love everything melty and warm. Lol people think I’m weird for microwaving my ice cream!
Thank you for sharing. I would love the recipe for the Extra Melty Gooey Brownies!! I’ve been looking for that type of brownie recipe FOREVER! I’m not a fan of super dry, cakey brownies. Please consider posting it! 🙂 Sending you lots of love and hugs!
Thank you for being such a good role model. I respect and appreciate you immensely. The world needs more people like you!
Please post that brownie recipe! It looks divine!
I think you may have missed the point of this post. As Katie mentions, calorie and nutrient needs vary and everyone has to listen to their own body or doctor/naturopath when the decide what to eat in a day. You cannot assess how many calories someone needs to eat just by looking at them.
Katie, thanks for another great, positive post! I’d love to see that brownie recipe – gooey brownies are the best kind 🙂
Wow… you must have a super-fast metabolism and I am envious… a gift of your genetics, perhaps, or maybe just youth. At nearly 59 years old, I try to keep my daily intake around 1200 calories (with 2 gym days and 2 Zumba days a week) for a slow weight loss with a weekly splurge or two. I’d love to see how your day breaks down nutritionally into fats, carbs, protein. Do you ever enter your food intake in myfitnesspal.com or another calculator? If so, showing us a true week (or more) of your eating would be even better than just one day! Thanks for sharing, even though, as you said, one size does NOT fit all!
Wow, that’s a ton of calories… how much do you exercise/how active are you on average? (If there’s already a post on this somewhere, please send me that way). Sorry to sound negative as I usually love your blog, but knowing what you eat and the associated calories/macros isn’t very useful without knowing activity levels. It can encourage unhealthy overeating just as much as the celebrity articles can encourage eating too little.
That really is NOT a TON of calories for any person who is relatively active day-to-day. It is in NO way overeating for most people, which is what (I believe) was the entire point of this post. What we are lead to believe is “normal” is absolutely not.
Exactly. People are trying to live and starve on way too few calories, and it’s sad.
I never said it was overeating for most people. I’m just saying both this post and the celebrity articles have the same downfall of not including the person’s activity level.
“Exercise includes running once or twice a week (sometimes more, sometimes less) and walking quite a bit since I live in a city. I enjoy being outside and am not really a gym person.”
Katie told you how much she exercises in THIS article Maggie.
Thank you so much for posting this. It’s so terrifying that magazines or other people on blogs would encourage a diet for ANYONE without knowing their situation or being a doctor or registered dietician. This reality check is wonderful and should be shared EVERYWHERE. You’re such a role model.
Can your next blog please be “Gooey Fall Apart Brownie Recipe By Popular Demand” – pretty please? 🙂