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10 Ways to Eat Quick, Healthy and Green Breakfasts

Resist the trend to eat the most important meal of the day at the drive-through. These creative and quick breakfast options will get you going and keep you healthy. Include superfoods for a bigger health boost.

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By Dan Shapley

Shop NightEating FruitSmoothie BreakfastGranola Bars BreakfastHard-Boiled EggsBrewing Coffee at HomePeanut Butter SandwichBreakfast Cereal at Your DeskCarpool With CoworkersWhole Wheat Bagel

Stop at night, instead of the morning

A quick stop at the grocery store on the way home is roughly equivalent to sitting in a line of smog-coughing SUVs in the queue at the drive-through, so make the stop at night to stock up on a week's worth of breakfasts and shed one facet of morning stress.

5 Tips for Saving Money on Food

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Stock up on fruit

Nothing is more portable and easy to eat on the go than an apple or pear. No packaging is more green than a banana's. Full of antioxidants, vitamins (and even those addictive breakfast sugars), fruit is an easy option. Check The Daily Green's guide to the dirty dozen foods you should try to buy organic (and the "clean 15" foods unlikely to carry a pesticide residue.

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Mix up a fruit salad, a yogurt parfait or even a smoothie

Slice and dice your fruit the night before, pack in a reusable container and sample an assortment of fresh fruits in the car or at the office. Or, try mixing your favorite fruits or berries with organic yogurt (it's a superfood!) and granola for a simple parfait you can enjoy at your desk. A few minutes of preparation at night lets you avoid all the hassle in the morning. Making smoothies, too, can be surprisingly quick if you've prepared the fruit the night before. After blending the ingredients, give the blender a good rinse and then set aside for a thorough cleaning after work.

Getty Images/ Ciaran Griffin

Bake your own breakfast bars

Try our recipe for delicious Fruit and Oat Granola Bars (or try this gluten-free granola bar recipe). Spend less than an hour in the kitchen, and you'll have breakfast (or part of a breakfast) for a week or more.

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Consider the incredible edible (and portable) egg

Hard-boiled eggs are easy to make, easy to carry and easy to eat. Set aside a few minutes twice a week to boil eggs, and you'll have a high-protein breakfast waiting for you each morning. Find a neighbor who raises chickens and buy local, organic eggs if possible -- it's not only good for the environment and local economy, but will turn a stressful trip to the supermarket into a relaxing visit to the farm. (See why you should be skeptical of the free-range label.)

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Brew your own coffee

Get a reusable travel mug and make coffee at home. It will help you resist the temptation to eat a sweet, sticky something at the coffee counter. Can't manage the hassle of measuring coffee in the morning? At least have your coffee shop refill your mug to save on disposable cup waste. (Oh, and look for fair trade, rainforest and organic coffee roasts whenever possible.)

Istock/ James Klotz

Reconsider the breakfast sandwich

Why not take the cue from lunch and "brown bag" a sandwich? (Better yet, green bag it.) Natural peanut butter and honey on whole wheat bread is about as simple a meal as there is to prepare, and it's loaded with vitamins, minerals, protein and all the health benefits of honey. (Want to get a little more fancy? Try this peanut butter banana bread recipe and enjoy a slice each morning for a week.) The scare seems to be over, but before you spread, check your cabinets against the FDA peanut recall list first!

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Eat hot or cold cereal at your desk

Take advantage of that hot water spigot on the company water cooler, and treat yourself to some hot oatmeal in the office. Buying a tub of oats is among the cheapest ways to eat breakfast, most any cubicle can find space to store one, and the meal can be spiced up with dried fruit. Or, if your office has a refrigerator, there's no reason you can't bring a bowl and a box of cereal and eat breakfast while skimming through the morning e-mail. Because they're fortified, cereals can be among the most nutrient-rich sources of Vitamin B12, Vitamin B6 and iron.

Thomas M Perkins/ Getty Images

Get creative with your carpool and co-workers

If you share a car to get to work (it's a great recession-busting money-saver!), or sit a cubicle wall away from your best office buddy, why not designate one person each week to be responsible for breakfast for the group? Set some ground rules about health parameters, and then let the creative spirit lead you to new discoveries.

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If you must eat on the go, eat smart

If the day gets away from you before it's begun, think twice before you eat. Stop at the grocery store for some oatmeal from the breakfast bar before you pull into the drive-through lane. Consider a whole wheat bagel. And choose options with the least amount of packaging, so at least the problem of empty calories won't be compounded by overstuffed landfills. See more tips for greening your diet.

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