Meet Meredith Mann of The Peachie Spoon!
If you're not following Meredith Mann and The Peachie Spoon yet, you will be after reading this delicious interview. She's dishing on her food struggles, busting a few myths, and sharing tips for feeling your best this year.
Meredith Mann had an icky relationship with food and exercise. Her unexplained blood sugar issues left her fainting, craving carbs, and baffled that she didnβt feel good no matter what she ate. Discovering easy, high-protein meals changed her life AND her professional trajectory.
This spunky Birmingham, AL, mom is now devoted to demystifying the whole blood sugar thing. (Psst! Itβs not just for the diabetics!) Her website, The Peachie Spoon, and 300k-strong Instagram are filled with easy, restriction-free nutrition tools like healthier copycat recipes, Trader Joeβs hauls, exercise snacks, and more. Read on for Meredithβs story and advice on feeling your best this year.

What led you to a career in holistic nutrition?
When I was a newlywed in 2005, I was diagnosed with hypoglycemia. I was having fainting episodes, or Iβd shake if a meal were delayed. Iβd have panicky cravings for carbs. My doctor told me I needed a lot of protein before I had any sugar. That was the first time I heard that, and that was way before protein was cool.
We had kids back to back, so I was pregnant or nursing for five years, and I didnβt prioritize protein. I was in survival mode and went on these 4 p.m. pantry raids. I tried Whole 30 and ate healthily but still didnβt feel great.

Healthy food wasnβt the missing key for me, it was that I wasnβt having enough protein at breakfast. Then, Iβd have an unbalanced lunch and have a big blood sugar crash in the afternoon. That, on top of having little kids, was like a trifecta of having no self-control with food.
Then, I started making these loaded, full-meal smoothies every morning with plenty of fiber and fat. It set the tone for my blood sugar for the day, and I reversed my insulin resistance and hypoglycemia.

Whatβs a common misconception people have about blood sugar?
People think that if they donβt have diabetes, this doesnβt affect them. Many will see my page or cookbooks and say, βOh, my mom is pre-diabetic. Or my dad has diabetes. This is a great resource for them.β But this knowledge is for everyone! These are not diet meals. Thereβs nothing super restrictive; it just keeps your blood sugar happy, which makes you a healthier person and reduces inflammation.
In the same breath, our obsessive diet culture is prone to be scared of blood sugar spikes or crashes. Enjoying cake at a party and having a spike and crash is no big deal. I donβt want people to be scared of that. But knowledge is power. I wear a glucose monitor to test my ideas and confidently share balanced recipes with my community.
Can you offer a few simple tactics for staying sane about nutrition heading into a new year?
The main thing is that it doesnβt get easier. People love to say, βDiet starts in January!β but thereβs always a reason to celebrate and to enjoy food. Thereβs a baby shower, a wedding, the Super Bowl. But there are 21 meals in a week where you can make better decisions.
So if you think about it like that, Friday night Mexican is just one meal. There are many opportunities toΒ lean on some go-to balanced meals that taste good to you.

Whatβs your current favorite thing to make for an event?
I love to bring a fancy salad. My dressings usually donβt have much olive oil, so theyβre even lower in fat than most. I also love to bring dips like spinach dip, buffalo chicken dip, or whipped feta dip. I also have sweet ones like cookie dough yogurt dip, which is really fun to bring with fruit.
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Whatβs something that people are surprised to learn about you?
That I donβt actually enjoy cooking. Itβs not very fun to me. Yet Iβve written two cookbooks. So, the recipes are easy. Sometimes, I donβt even want to cut an onion. I donβt love to cook, but I like how I feel when I eat healthy, and I do like to feed my family.
I have teenagers now, but cooking still feels like part of my job title. I want to nourish my kids and have dinner on the table when we get home from sports.
How does your role as a mom play into your food philosophy?
My kids were picky when they were young. They were nugget kids, and they didnβt eat many vegetables. But they all grew out of it and eat great now, and itβs no big deal. So, donβt stress if your kids are super picky and eat only certain things. Keep trying to give them other things, and theyβll outgrow it.
I care a lot about wellness without obsession. I try to create a life-giving house for my kids so they have a healthy relationship with food. When my middle was younger, I always found candy wrappers in the dryer. Now, I realize they donβt go to the neighborsβ and binge in their pantry if I have all the foods available.

Whatβs the best advice youβve ever received?
βBe where your feet are.β My husband says this a lot, and sometimes, it goes in one ear and out the other. I need to put the phone down more often and be thankful for the mess in my house and the people around me. Itβs easy to be distracted and always try to make things perfect. Your kids are the ages they are today. Youβre the age you are today. You might not be healthy another day. I try to take hold of that.
What advice would you give someone who wants to embark on a healthier 2025 but might be overwhelmed?
It can definitely be overwhelming. To simplify, ask: What sparks joy for you? For example, Iβm never going to kickboxing, and I donβt want to do Zumba, but I like long walks, Yoga, and running (sometimes).
I would also add this: major in the minors. What is super important? Maybe itβs getting more protein and veggies on your plate. That, to me, is better than not eating until noon every day. That will backfire. Youβre gonna be starving. What can you feasibly do? Donβt focus on all the things at once. Drink more water for a week, work on your sleep, and prioritize protein.

LIGHTNING ROUND!
Three things you canβt live without: My smoothie bowls (and cauli bowls) I make every day. Vuori Performance Joggers. Coffee.
Kitchen tool you canβt without? A powerful, quality blender
Bucket list vacation destination? Anywhere in Europe! Iβve never been.
Favorite βhidden gemβ in the South? Fairhope, AL
Go-to birthday present to give? My current favorite lip gloss. Right now, itβs the Sephora Glossed.
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Zoe Yarborough
Zoe is a StyleBlueprint staff writer, Charlotte native, Washington & Lee graduate, and Nashville transplant of eleven years. She teaches Pilates, helps manage recording artists, and likes to "research" Germantown's food scene.