
Audio By Carbonatix
If you love starting your morning with a bowl of Raisin Bran or another healthy-sounding cereal, we have some bad news: The majority of cereals are packed with sugar and really aren't the best way to kickstart your day.
To drive home the point that crunchy and sweet flakes shouldn't be your go-to breakfast, one nutritionist suggested a surprising replacement for your daily dose of Kellogg's: a slice of pizza.
Chelsey Amer, MS, RDN, CDN, a nutritionist based in New York, told The Daily Meal that "a slice of pizza contains more fat and much less sugar than most cold cereals, so you will not experience a quick sugar crash."
One cup of Raisin Bran, for example, has 18 grams of sugar (close to the 25-gram daily limit recommended for women) and zero healthy fats.
Amer also noted that pizza has more protein than a typical bowl of cereal, so it can satisfy your appetite for longer and prevent snacking between meals.
But before you order a personal pie for your breakfast table, it's important to remember that pizza still isn't particularly healthy, and you shouldn't reach for that cheesy goodness on a regular basis.
All things considered, it's just a more balanced option, explained Amer.
If you want a truly nutritious way to start the day, try Greek yoghurt with fruit (you'll score a calcium and protein boost) or oatmeal with cinnamon and fruit, which offers fibre and antioxidants.
"Even a second helping of dinner set aside from the previous night can make a healthy breakfast if it's chock full of veggies and balanced—for example, a generous portion of veggies sauteed in EVOO with herbs tossed with a lean protein, or chicken breast or lentils with a small scoop of quinoa," suggests Cynthia Sass, MPH, RD, Health's contributing nutrition editor.
Still interested in a little 'za for breakfast? To make your slice more, well, breakfast-y, try Health's recipe for breakfast skillet pizza.
It includes high-protein ingredients like eggs and bacon, plus fontina cheese, and then spinach for those vitamin-packed leafy greens. The video above shows you how easy it is to make.
Not interested in parting with your a.m. cereal bowl? Sass says you can still incorporate it into a healthy diet—if you choose the right type of cereal.
"A cereal made with whole grains, nuts or seeds, and fruit with organic grass-fed milk or plant-based milk is a better choice over a grease-laden pizza made with processed meat like pepperoni on a white flour crust," she says.
Latest Stories
-
A restored banking license difficult to resume operation; once collapsed ends its story
16 minutes -
Kojo Mensa-Wilmot – a Molecular Biologist and Parasitologist
24 minutes -
THE LAW 101: The burden of proof and the presumption of innocence – Lessons from London
30 minutes -
UN says it will evacuate sailors stranded in Strait of Hormuz, as Rubio warns against tolls
31 minutes -
Police arrest 186 suspects in major crackdown on human trafficking, organised crime in Ashanti Region
40 minutes -
Nations do not industrialise by accident—they industrialise by procurement design
41 minutes -
Nandom Community Bank records GH₵81.8m asset growth as stakeholders rally for urgent recapitalisation
50 minutes -
GIZ, Guinness Ghana sign MoU to boost sorghum output, target 30,000 farmers, 150 jobs in northern Ghana
59 minutes -
Partey, Inaki Williams start as Queiroz makes four changes for England clash
1 hour -
LUV FACT-CHECK: NPP did not demand retraction from Kennedy Agyapong over Afari Hospital criticism
1 hour -
80 children, 1 room: Bugbelle gets room for hope
2 hours -
VRA warns public over recruitment scam, says it does not charge fees
2 hours -
Accra dons national colours as fans rally behind Black Stars ahead of England clash
2 hours -
UMB rallies support for Black Stars with Kumasi float as part of 2026 FIFA World Cup campaign
2 hours -
Three former Hohoe E.P. SHS students arrested over the destruction of school property
2 hours