Getting enough fiber sounds simple in theory – just eat more plants, right? But in reality, it’s often a struggle. Fresh produce goes off fast, is easy to forget about and cooking them can take too much time and effort. If you’ve found yourself reaching for supplements just to hit your fiber target, you’re not alone. But it is possible to meet your daily needs with food AND without spending time chopping, cooking or washing up.
Why is fiber good for you?
Fiber keeps your gut happy and working smoothly. It can also help with weight loss by stabilizing blood sugar levels and keeping you feeling fuller longer.
Research shows that adding just 8 grams more per day can reduce your risk of heart disease events and deaths, type 2 diabetes and colorectal cancer by up to 25%. Source: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lancet/article/PIIS0140-6736(18)31809-9/fulltext
But what if you don’t have the energy or the time to cook fancy meals? Can you still get enough fibre without spending hours in the kitchen? Absolutely. Below is a no cook, no chop, minimal wash up, one day high fibre meal plan that takes the fuss out of fiber.
One Day No Cook, High Fiber Menu
Features:
Balanced mix of protein, fats and complex carbs
No chopping or peeling of ingredients
Quick assembly
No red meat
Pescatarian
No kitchen needed, just a microwave
| Meal | What to eat | Fibre (g) | Energy (kJ / kcal) |
| Breakfast | 150 g Greek yoghurt + half a cup raspberries + 2 slices of wholemeal bread or toast with 100g cottage cheese | 9 | ~2385 kJ / 570 kcal |
| Snacks | Medium apple (with skin), 1 tbsp peanut butter, 40g popcorn, small tub of low fat fruit yoghurt, can of chicken noodle soup | 6 | ~2196 kJ / 525 kcal |
| Lunch | 95 g tinned salmon + 70g tinned chickpeas, banana | 6 | ~1380 kJ / 330 kcal |
| Dinner | Microwave pouch basmati rice 125g + 1 cup frozen peas + 100g cooked prawns | 8 | ~1695 kJ / 405 kcal |
| Daily total | 29.5 | ~7657 kJ / 1830 kcal |
Total fat: 55 g (20g sat fat)
Carbs: 243 g
Fiber 29.5 g
Protein 97 g
Can You Have Too Much Fiber?
Problems usually arise when you suddenly start eating a lot of fiber after not having much. Common issues include bloating, loose stools, or even constipation, especially if you’re not drinking enough fluids.
Over time, excessive fiber intake could interfere with the absorption of some nutrients like iron, zinc, or calcium. But in most cases, eating too much fiber is rare unless you’re relying heavily on fiber supplements.
Can you have fiber without carbs?
No – dietary fibre is a type of carbohydrate. It’s the non digestible part of plant carbs, so it always counts under “total carbs” on nutrition panels. However, because your body can’t break down fibre into sugars, it doesn’t raise blood glucose. That’s why you’ll sometimes see:
• Total carbs: 5 g
• Fibre: 5 g
• “Net carbs”: 0 g
In the above example (e.g. a pure psyllium-husk supplement), all 5 g of carbohydrate is fibre, and none of it is digestible. So while you can’t technically have fibre outside the carb family, you can have supplements that are 100 % fibre, giving you zero net digestible carbs.
Try this plan as is, or mix and match based on what you’ve got on hand. And if it works for you, save it, share it, or pin it for next time your spoons are low but your gut needs a boost.




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