
- This article is for education and should be interpreted with your own clinical context.
- Clinical claims are checked against trusted nutrition and diabetes guidance where relevant.
- Medication, insulin, diet, and monitoring changes should be discussed with your healthcare team.
Sumac Chicken Cucumber Crunch Bowls can be a practical diabetes-friendly lunch. It uses chicken, vegetables, yogurt, and a measured chickpea portion instead of relying on a large wrap or rice-heavy base.
Quick summary
A lunch bowl with crunch, protein, and measured carbs instead of a heavy wrap.
Key takeaways
- Built for 4 servings.
- Uses measured carbohydrate portions rather than removing all carbohydrate.
- Includes protein, fiber, or both to support a more balanced plate.
- Nutrition values are estimates and will vary by brand and portion.
Ingredients
- 12 ounces cooked chicken breast or thigh, sliced
- 2 teaspoons sumac
- 1 tablespoon olive oil
- 2 large cucumbers, chopped or ribboned
- 1 cup cherry tomatoes, halved
- 1 cup canned chickpeas, rinsed and drained
- 2 cups chopped romaine or mixed salad leaves
- 1/2 cup plain yogurt
- 1 tablespoon lemon juice
- 1 small garlic clove, grated
- 2 tablespoons chopped parsley or mint
How to make it
- Toss warm or cold chicken with sumac and olive oil.
- Divide salad leaves, cucumber, tomatoes, and chickpeas between 4 bowls.
- Whisk yogurt, lemon juice, garlic, and herbs.
- Add chicken to each bowl and spoon yogurt dressing over the top.
- Finish with extra sumac if desired.
Diabetes-friendly serving notes
This bowl uses chickpeas as a measured carbohydrate source instead of making them the whole meal.
The vegetables add volume, and the chicken and yogurt make the bowl more filling.
Count the chickpeas and any bread, pita, or grain side you add.
Use lower-sodium canned chickpeas or rinse well if sodium matters for you.
Practical takeaway
This recipe works best as part of a balanced plate. Check your own glucose patterns, medication plan, and appetite rather than treating any recipe as a one-size-fits-all answer.
Safety note
If you use insulin or medicines that can cause low blood glucose, count the carbohydrate in this bowl within your usual plan. Use lower-sodium canned chickpeas or rinse well if you are limiting sodium. If you have kidney disease or another condition that changes protein, potassium, or sodium targets, personalize the portion with your care team. Keep cooked chicken refrigerated and use safe food handling.
What to ask your care team
- Does this chickpea portion fit my usual carbohydrate target for lunch?
- Should I adjust the bowl if I use insulin or medicines that can cause low blood glucose?
- Do protein, sodium, or potassium limits change which ingredients or portions make sense for me?
Related reading
Source summary
- Healthy Eating, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Accessed 2026-06-24.
- Food and Nutrition, American Diabetes Association. Accessed 2026-06-24.
- Healthy Living With Diabetes, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases. Accessed 2026-06-24.