• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

Robyn Spurr

Personalized Coaching for Health, Habits, and Lasting Change

  • Robyn Spurr
  • Home
  • About Robyn
  • Health-Centered Weight Loss Coaching for Women
  • Personalized GLP-1 Nutrition Support and Coaching
  • Blog
  • Client Love Notes
  • Contact Me

December 28, 2025 By Robyn@dmin

What to Eat on GLP-1s (Like Zepbound) When Nothing Sounds Good

If you’re staring into the fridge thinking,
“I know I should eat… but absolutely nothing sounds good,”
—you’re definitely not alone.

This comes up a lot for women on GLP-1 medications. Appetite can go quiet — especially after a dose increase. Food can feel unappealing. And yet, your body still needs fuel.

So let’s talk about how to eat when desire is low but nourishment still matters.


First: Reframe the Goal

When nothing sounds good, the goal is not:

  • a perfect meal
  • a balanced plate
  • a “normal” appetite

The goal is simply:
👉 Gentle nourishment that your body will accept.

Think minimum effective dose.


🥣 Soft Foods + Easy Wins

These foods tend to work well when appetite is low, digestion is slower, or nausea is hovering nearby.

Soft, Neutral, Easy-to-Digest

  • Greek or Icelandic yogurt (plain or lightly sweetened)
  • Cottage cheese
  • Oatmeal (savory or sweet)
  • Soups (lentil, corn, chicken & rice, butternut squash)
  • Bone broth with a few crackers (Kettle & Fire is easy to find, high quality, and a brand I often recommend.)
  • Mashed sweet potatoes
  • Scrambled or soft-boiled eggs
  • Applesauce (unsweetened or cinnamon)

Warm + soft + simple often beats cold or crunchy when nothing feels appealing.


🥟 Carb + Protein Combos (Low Effort, High Return)

When appetite is low, pairing something starchy with something protein-rich often goes down easier than a full meal.

  • Toast + peanut butter
  • Half a bagel + cream cheese
  • Deli turkey + crackers
  • Banana + yogurt
  • Applesauce + protein shake
  • Black bean burger (I really like Dr. Praeger’s brand)
  • Cottage cheese protein pancakes
  • Frozen dumplings (a few favorites: Laoban ginger chicken, Cali Dumpling pork, shiitake & bok choy, Trader Joe’s pork or chicken gyoza)

If you manage a carb + a protein, you’re doing great.


🥨 When Barely-There Food Is All You Can Manage

These are often tolerable even with nausea or total disinterest:

  • Plain toast with butter
  • Dry cereal (All-Bran, Fiber One, Kashi Go-Lean, Cheerios, Raisin Bran)
  • Graham crackers
  • Saltines or pretzels
  • Plain rice or rice cakes

Sometimes the body just needs something neutral to get started.


🫐 When Cold Food Sounds Better Than Warm

(Very common on GLP-1s.)

  • Cottage cheese with a few berries
  • Yogurt drink
  • Chia pudding
  • Smoothie popsicles
  • Cold pasta or chickpea pasta (higher in protein and fiber)
  • String cheese

Cold foods tend to have less smell, which helps when food aversion is strong.


🍵 Liquid Nutrition Counts (Yes, Really)

When chewing feels like too much, liquids are fair game — and often very effective.

  • Smoothie with yogurt or protein powder
  • Milk, soy milk, oat milk, almond milk
  • Kefir
  • Matcha latte with oat milk (especially helpful when you need gentle energy but little appetite)
  • Soup with added protein (collagen, shredded chicken)

One of my personal favorites when a client’s appetite is low:
👉 A chocolate Orgain protein shake blended with frozen raspberries + blueberries.

Cold, creamy, lightly sweet, and easy to sip — with protein, fiber, and antioxidants in one low-effort blend. It often goes down even when solid food feels like a hard no. Pro tip: a steel straw often makes this go down more easily and helps when you don’t want big gulps.

Liquid calories are not cheating — they’re strategic.


🍪 When Sweet Is All You Can Tolerate

  • Banana with peanut butter
  • Toast with honey
  • Protein waffles
  • Chocolate milk
  • Rice pudding
  • Cottage cheese with jam
  • Protein pudding
  • Homemade banana carrot cookies

You can always add more balance later. Eating something comes first.


✏️ A Note for GLP-1 Users

Appetite suppression is part of how GLP-1 medications work — but consistently under-eating can backfire, leading to:

  • fatigue
  • nausea
  • constipation
  • muscle loss

Eating something, even when appetite is quiet, often helps symptoms improve, not worsen.

If food aversion or nausea is persistent or severe, that’s a conversation to have with your prescribing provider.


🥰 Gentle Reminder

You don’t need to:

  • wait until you’re hungry
  • force a salad
  • make it perfect

You do need:

  • compassion
  • flexibility
  • enough fuel to support your body

Progress doesn’t always look like a full plate. Sometimes it looks like toast, soup, a matcha latte, or a protein shake — and that absolutely counts. 💛


🌼 A Quick, Important Note

Everything shared here is educational and supportive, based on current research, clinical experience, and what I see work well for many women — especially in midlife.

This is not medical advice, and it’s not meant to replace guidance from your healthcare provider.

If you’re taking a GLP-1 medication (or considering one), please talk with your prescribing provider about medical questions, side effects, or medication changes.

💛 Robyn

Interested in a one-on-one health coaching relationship with me? It would be an honor to work with you if and when the time feels right.

To learn more about GLP-1 Coaching click HERE. 

To schedule a Discovery Session click HERE

Filed Under: GLP-1, Nutrition, Semaglutide, Zepbound

Primary Sidebar

Post Categories

  • Anxiety
  • Awareness
  • Books
  • Coaching Tools
  • Exercise
  • Favorite Posts
  • Featured
  • Fun
  • GLP-1
  • Habits
  • Menopause
  • Nutrition
  • Recipes
  • Research
  • Self Acceptance
  • Self Care
  • Semaglutide
  • Simplify
  • Therapy
  • Tirzepatide
  • Trauma
  • Uncategorized
  • Weight Loss Coaching
  • Zepbound

Recent Posts

  • How to Prepare Before Starting a GLP-1 for Weight Loss
  • GLP-1 Medications for Menopausal Weight Gain: What the Research Says
  • What to Expect in Your First Few Weeks on a GLP-1
  • High-Protein Foods You’re Probably Overlooking
  • Why Protein Matters on GLP-1 Medications (and How Much You Actually Need)

Footer

What Clients are Saying:

Thank you for doing this work, Robyn. I can’t tell you how important you have been to me. Always remember that you’re not just a weight loss coach – you help people end their suffering. It’s a very. big. deal.
~Sheila, California

Find Me On Social Media!

  • Facebook
  • Instagram

Copyright © 2026 Robyn Spurr