The Busy Person’s Guide to Protein This Christmas

The Busy Person’s Guide to Protein This Christmas

Christmas is busy.
Between work, shopping, social plans and late nights, nutrition often becomes an afterthought — and protein is usually the first thing to slip.

That doesn’t mean you’re doing anything wrong.
It just means you need a simpler approach.

A gym backpack with gym essentials and a bodyfirst shaker and per4m protein bar

Here’s how to stay topped up on protein over Christmas without tracking, stressing or skipping the fun.


Why Protein Matters More Than Ever Right Now

Protein helps with:

  • Muscle recovery

  • Appetite control

  • Energy levels

  • Staying consistent when routines are off

When days are unpredictable, protein acts like an anchor.
You don’t need to be perfect — you just need to be intentional.


You Don’t Need to “Hit a Number” Every Day

At this time of year, obsessing over exact targets can backfire.

Instead, focus on this simple rule:

  • Include a solid protein source at most meals and snacks.

That’s it.

If you normally aim for 25–35g per meal, great — but don’t stress if some days look different. Consistency over the week matters far more than one day.


Easy Ways to Add Protein Without Extra Effort

1. Start Your Day With Protein

Breakfast sets the tone for the day.

Easy options:

  • Eggs with toast or wraps

  • Greek yoghurt with fruit

  • Protein oats

  • A ready-to-go protein shake

Even a small protein boost in the morning makes a difference later.

Toast with eggs

A Simple Christmas Protein Cheat Sheet

When days get messy, use this as a rough guide:

  • Breakfast: eggs, yoghurt, oats, shake

  • Lunch: chicken, turkey, tuna, tofu, protein wrap

  • Snack: bar, pudding, shake

  • Dinner: meat, fish, plant protein + carbs

  • Evening: yoghurt or protein dessert

No tracking. No stress. Just awareness.


2. Keep Portable Protein on Hand

Busy days call for grab-and-go options.

Keep these nearby:

  • Protein bars

  • Protein puddings

  • Ready-made shakes

  • Jerky or high-protein snacks

Having protein available is often the difference between staying on track and skipping it altogether.


3. Don’t Skip Protein Just Because You’re Eating Out

Christmas meals don’t need to be “perfect” — just balanced enough.

When eating out:

  • Choose a protein-forward main where possible

  • Add a side if needed

  • Don’t overthink the rest

One good protein-based meal can carry you through a busy day.

Casual restaurant plate with a visible protein source


4. Protein at Dinner Isn’t Enough

A common mistake is saving protein for the evening.

If dinner is your only decent protein hit:

  • Energy dips

  • Snacking increases

  • Hunger spikes late at night

Spread protein across the day — even in smaller amounts.


5. Think “Protein First”, Not “Diet First”

December isn’t the time for restriction.

It is a great time to:

  • Support recovery

  • Stay energised

  • Avoid the January crash

Protein helps you do that without taking anything away.


The Bodyfirst Approach to Christmas Nutrition

At Bodyfirst, we’re not about extremes — especially at Christmas.

We’re about:

  • Real food

  • Real life

  • Sustainable habits that carry into January

If you can keep protein simple and consistent over the next week, you’re already doing more than enough.

Common Protein Mistakes at Christmas

  • Skipping protein earlier in the day

  • Saving it all for dinner

  • Avoiding protein because “it’s Christmas”

  • Overthinking choices instead of keeping it simple

If you recognise yourself here — that’s normal. This time of year is about managing, not maximising.


The Bottom Line

You don’t need:
– Perfect meals
– Tracking apps
– “Starting again” in January

You do need:
– Protein most days
– Simple choices
– A bit of flexibility

Christmas nutrition isn’t about control — it’s about support.
Protein is one of the easiest ways to support your body when everything else is busy.

Keep it simple, keep it flexible, and trust that consistency over the week is what matters most.

That’s how progress survives Christmas — and shows up stronger in the new year.

Man with a gym bag walking along the clontarf coast at dusk