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An underreported phenomenon in modern culture is the slow degradation of our collective optimism about the future. Look no further than the delta between the 1962 Hanna-Barbera cartoon The Jetsons—which predicted a space-age utopia replete with flying cars, automated kitchens, and robot maids—and Ridley Scott’s 1982 dystopian sci-fi hallmark Blade Runner, which portrays Los Angeles as a dreary urban hellscape overrun with crime, pollution, and android slaves gone rogue. Throw in Gattaca, The Matrix, and Her and you’re presented with a fairly certain conclusion that the technology is making things worse, not better.
Alas, technocrats keep grinding away at products that aim to increase your quality of life by a few percentage points by cutting out friction and inconvenience. ZIRP-era luminaries “solved” problems like last-mile transit, the need for pesky humans to operate taxis, and the lack of true market influence on housing costs. And with liquid full-meal replacement products, they even solved the problem of cooking and chewing food!
While many of these time-saving products look like protein shakes at first glance, the key difference is the addition of vitamins, plant fiber, and other “proprietary nutrient blends” that will keep your body functioning while also making you un-hungry in the morning. Enjoying a bowl of cereal or a slice of avocado toast is a time-consuming and expensive endeavor that is now obsolete, so you can get back to coding without the fear of malnutrition hanging over your head. You’re welcome.
Be sure to check out our related guides, like the Best Greens Powders, Best Protein Powders, Best Energy Drinks, and Best Mushroom Coffee.
Best Overall
Huel
Black Edition RTD High-Protein Meal
FlavorTextureSatietyTOTAL 8.3 8.1 9.4 8.6 Before we even get to the product itself, the folks who run Huel deserve a fist bump for operating a website that’s easy to navigate, light on the pop-ups, and honest with its pricing. It’s a sad state of affairs when a commerce website is exemplary for simply allowing people to type in a URL, click a few buttons, and buy a thing without being bombarded with subscriptions, sign-up pages, and other chicanery, yet here we are.
If you drink Huel out of a glass like a weirdo (or someone who has to photograph the liquid in its naked state), then the first thing you’ll notice is that this drink is “dummy thicc,” as the kids would say. It’s only a tad less viscous than pancake batter, but the sip is shockingly smooth once you get over the impulse to chew on it as it slides past your tongue. The cocoa flavor is rich and delightful, with only a mild smack of “diet” flavor from the “steviol glycocides” hitting on the finish. Aside from the stevia aftertaste, I have zero complaints about the process of ingesting this product.
Around 11 am, some very gentle hunger pangs kicked in, but they were easy to shake off by refocusing on some rote Email Job tasks that required my full attention. No weird shakes or wobbles to speak of, and my head felt relatively clear during the mornings that were Fueled by Huel™ (this is not a real slogan yet, but it can be for the right price!).
Cost per serving: Around $4 Other flavors available: Vanilla, Iced Coffee, Strawberry Banana Allergens: Vegan, gluten-free, kosher certified, contains tree nuts Protein: 35 g Calories: 400 (16.9 oz read-to-drink bottle) Carbs: 30 g Fat: 17 g Caffeine: No Best Entry-Level
FlavorTextureSatietyTOTAL 8.1 7.8 9.2 8.4 Whenever we do one of these shootouts of ingestible products that come in weird flavors, we always try to suss out which tastes the least like anything. That way there’s something to recommend to squeamish noobies who are interested in dipping their toe in the waters. HLTH Code’s two-scoop dose packs in 400 calories and 27 grams of protein, and it tastes as close to nothing as you will find, which is a net positive in this context when you consider how wacky and off-putting some of the other entrants are. A fluffy mouthfeel with bits of cocoa hits on the front of the sip, and a subtle, inoffensive tickle of macadamia and diet flavor slides in from the light dusting of stevia and monk fruit on the finish.
The suggested dose calls for only 8 ounces of water, which seemed low the first time I dosed this in my BlenderBottle. HLTH Code consistently kept my hunger at bay until noon most days, making this one of the most reliable entrants in this list for accomplishing the thankless task of becoming un-hungry.
Cost per serving: Around $5 Other flavors available: Creamy Vanilla Allergens: Milk, eggs, coconut oil Protein: 27 g Calories: 400 Carbs: 13 g Fat: 27 g Caffeine: No
Best Value
FlavorTextureSatietyTOTAL 8 8.5 9.2 8.6 With its founding in 2013, Soylent blazed a trail in the protein drink and meal-replacement market by eschewing the target markets of gains-obsessed bros and geriatrics without teeth to focus on busy tech bros who were fed up with the cost and inconvenience associated with food you have to cook and chew. It was a brilliant pitch back then, and founder Rob Rhinehart’s predictions of a technocratic hellscape where worker drones grind too hard to be bothered with solid food for each meal have become all the more prescient in the decade since it hit the market.
The “original” recipe of Soylent is a bland, flavorless slime that appeals to no one except antisocial full-stack devs who only enjoyed eating paste as children. A plethora of flavors are now available, and it’s encouraging to report that the vanilla flavor is about as normal as it gets in terms of taste and texture. A rich, malty vanilla bean flavor gently blooms across the sip, and the viscous liquid goes down nice and smooth without even the subtlest hint of stevia, monk fruit, or other alternative sweeteners that are common in meal replacement drinks. If this liquid were any thicker it would be exhausting to consume, but Soylent really dialed this in over the decade-plus since it started as a nerdy science experiment with the explicit goal of eliminating the hassle of eating.
Soylent doesn’t contain the most protein, fat, or grams of fiber relative to other entrants, but it’s a well-rounded offering that gets the job done despite not putting up the highest stats. I thoroughly enjoyed sipping on this every morning, and the respectable fat and protein content did a fine job of keeping my hunger at bay until lunchtime. I ventured deep into the tank with some custom macros in Google Sheets one morning to see how far I could stretch myself with only Soylent in the tank, and I was able to keep grinding until 2:30 pm before my hand started wobbling. That’s about as close as I’ll ever get to going on a code bender, but it’s good to know Soylent is a quick and easy way to stay on my grind.
Cost per serving: Around $3 Other flavors available: Chocolate, Gingerbread, Pumpkin Spice, Strawberry Allergens: Soy Protein: 16 g Calories: 320 Carbs: 29 g Fat: 19 g Caffeine: No Best Low-Calorie Vegan Option
FlavorTextureSatietyTOTAL 6.5 8.3 6.9 7.2 Popular meme accounts that roast millennial fads would lead one to believe that the overpriced green smoothie trend is dead and buried. Likewise, though veganism lives on, its whole vibe and personality are as unpopular as ever in the current cultural climate. What can a cheugy tech bro (or bro-ette) reach for when they want a quick and easy plant-based solution to hunger and nutrient deprivation without feeling like that loser who showed up to the 6 pm hyperpop show in skinny jeans and a black band tee?
Happy Viking is here to save the day with a vegan protein shake that contains soluble fruit- and veggie-based fibers for “regularity,” 20 grams of protein for gains, and cute packaging with a cool font and a photo of the #girlboss hero/tennis pro Venus Williams on the side. The color and flavor of the liquid are callbacks to Yoo-hoo and Ovaltine, with a punchy dose of cocoa masking the grit and vegetal finish one would expect from a cup of $12 green glop from a boutique-y juice bar with a dumb name like Plant Zaddy or Loosey Juicy.
The paltry fat content in Happy Viking doesn’t exactly fill you up with rib-sticking goodness, but the fiber content and the commendable amount of protein mostly makes up for it for the first few hours. If you’re the kind of vegan who still finds a way to do terrible things to their body without the use of animal products, this is a nice morning-after atonement accessory that’ll get you going before lunch hits and it’s time to inhale another 2,000-calorie Cali burrito with soy curls and extra fries.
Cost per serving: Around $3 Other flavors available: Cookies and Cream, Strawberry Smoothie, Vanilla Allergens: Corn, sunflower oil Protein: 20 g Calories: 160 Carbs: 14 g Fat: 5 g Caffeine: No
Best Coffee Flavor
FlavorTextureSatietyTOTAL 7.1 6.4 6.8 6.8 OWYN stands for “only what you need,” which feels similar to the pitch Dozer gives Neo in The Matrix as he sets our hero up with a bowl of protein-rich slop for his first meal after being yanked back into what’s left of the real world. OWYN does offer a caffeinated version of its protein shakes, but this iteration merely references coffee in name and flavor. The liquid is thin and easy enough to put down, with a tingle of artificial sweetener on the finish that quickly gives way to a coffee flavor that’s not unlike something you’d taste at a janky ice cream stand that offers something like “Jim’s Jacked-Up Java” as the milkshake flavor of the month.
The slim stats in the protein and fat categories combined with the coffee-adjacent placebo had me feeling shaky and malnourished by 10 am most days when I replaced my breakfast with OWYN. This is not a great pick if you’re trying to go the distance without chewing or even thinking about procuring a proper meal, but it could be a nice post-lunch boost that does an OK job of scratching the itch for a sweet coffee treat. Top off your actual cold brew with this coffee-flavored glurp if you’re feeling naughty, or you can toss what’s left of your McDonald’s coffee from the drive to work into the fridge, then mix it around with a bottle of OWYN a few hours later if you’re feeling downright trashy.
Cost per serving: $33.29 per 12 pack = $2.75 Other flavors available: Cookies & Creamless, Dark Chocolate, Smooth Vanilla, Strawberry Banana Allergens: None; bottle alleges each batch is “independently tested for detection of the top nine allergens” Protein: 20 g Calories: 180 (12 oz RTD bottle) Carbs: 8 g Fat: 7 g Caffeine: No Best for Gains
FlavorTextureSatietyTOTAL 8.7 6.2 7.1 7.3 One can learn a lot about a health brand by its collab co-signs. Since its founding in 2016 by recovering addict/ex-con/ur-patriot Aaron Singerman, Redcon1 has hitched its star to Nascar and the US military, along with junk-food brands like Hostess and the newly revitalized soda brand Jolt Cola. This handily explains its expansive selection of kooky supplement flavors, which are essentially drinkable pastries that allege to help you get swole.
When prepared per the suggestion of its packaging, the combo of about 30 grams of cookies ’n’ cream powder mixed with 6 ounces of water yields a thick beige liquid that’s punctuated by little black clumps of cookie dust. It’s as weird as it is tasty, and if I weren’t already the type of person who thought a selfie in front of an Arby’s was a solid Tinder profile pic, I would probably be ashamed to like this as much as I did. Once you get used to the sweet and dusty bits of cookie that bust open when you chew them, this is a fun ride for anyone who can hang.
Redcon1’s MRE series is technically a protein powder, but it’s heavy on protein for its rather diminutive calorie count, making it a fine meal replacement assuming you have a salad or some other fibrous food item on deck for lunch or dinner. One 6-ounce glass of this candy-like slurry filled me right up in the morning, and I was good to go until salad time rolled around at noon.
Cost per serving: Around $1 Other flavors available: Banana Nut Bread, Blueberry Cobbler, Chocolate, Chocolate Mousse, Fudge Brownie, Oatmeal Chocolate Chip, Peanut Butter Cookie, Peanut Butter Chocolate Cheesecake, Snickerdoodle, Strawberry Shortcake, Vanilla Milkshake Allergens: Milk, egg, fish, tree nuts, wheat, soy Protein: 24 g Calories: 130 Carbs: 4 g Fat: 2 g Caffeine: No
Best for Gamers Looking to Get Bulked
FlavorTextureSatietyTOTAL 4.2 3.9 7.3 5.1 Marketing a new product in a crowded field is all about finding a niche and humping it relentlessly, so you have to admire the silly, youthful foil CTRL plays against the more stoic, grown-up flavors and packaging offered by the likes of Huel and Soylent. Similar to the vibes of Ghost Energy or Taco Bell, CTRL is a bold and quirky alternative to the boring and predictable products enjoyed by your normie friend with a stable job, health insurance, and a car with a properly functioning exhaust pipe.
“Quirky” is a generous description of the brand's Cookies ’n’ Cream flavor, which is best described as a mix between Yakult and the massive clouds of cookies ’n’ cream–flavored vape smoke I endured as I entered and exited various convention centers in the Pacific Northwest during my era as an aspiring Magic: the Gathering pro. Cereal-flavored vape juice is essentially banned, but you can still get your fix thanks to CTRL. It’ll even fill up your tum-tum so you don’t have to refill your tendies as often between MMORPG campaigns!
I’m not grinding Dota 2 or WoW all day long, but I am doing some serious emailing, and I need to be properly fueled up to stay on my grind every morning. As much as I disliked the flavor and the chunky bits of petrified cookie product that floated around in my glass, CTRL is no slouch at filling you up. A placebo sugar buzz derived from its uncanny flavor had my head spinning and my hands shaking on day one, but after that it was smooth sailing as far as being un-hungry for a few hours is concerned. I’m not against sucking this down again if I’m in a pinch and need sustenance, but I can’t promise I will enjoy any of it.
Cost per serving: Around $3 Other flavors available: Cinnamon Toast, Paradise Potion, Apple Smacks, Strawberries ‘N Cream Allergens: Milk, soy, wheat, and coconut Protein: 23 g Calories: 230 Carbs: 17 g Fat: 11 g Caffeine: No Best Aesthetic Vibe
FlavorTextureSatietyTOTAL 6.8 5.1 6.7 6.2 Ka’Chava brings soft earth tones and plant-friendly vibes to a space that’s lousy with broicism and startup-founder energy, which should appeal to folks who want a quick hit of protein in the morning without having to field questions from their swole coworkers about their stack. This is without a doubt the dustiest beverage I sampled, with sweet, chalky little bits spiking almost every sip throughout the entire cup. If you’ve ever enjoyed a proper chocolate malt that’s loaded with clumps of delicious malt powder, you’ll know what I mean, and you may even enjoy this as much as I did. I cheated and used a Ninja blender to see if it would get me closer to a dust-free sip, yet the granular gunk persisted.
The fill-up factor of Ka’Chava is right down the middle, making it the mama bear of vegan meal replacement drinks. It didn’t keep me full past 11 am, but I’ve been known to take a pair of Burger King breakfast sandwiches to the dome whenever they’re on a 2-for-1 sale (which is almost always in my area), so a more ascetic end user who thinks a handful of almonds and a Go-Gurt counts as breakfast could be well served by Ka’Chava.
Cost per serving: Around $5 Other flavors available: Chocolate, Coconut Açai, Matcha, Chai Allergens: Tree nuts Protein: 25 g Calories: 240 Carbs: 20 g Fat: 6 g Caffeine: No
Best for the Elderly
FlavorTextureSatietyTOTAL 4.2 3.8 5.1 4.4 Vegan food has come a long way since the ’90s when terms like “crunchy” and “Jerry” were popular pejoratives among Gen X. Gone are the days of kooky Bay Area idealists and their bland experiments with chia seeds and seitan, and in their place is a sassy new generation of punks and freaks who have yet to encounter a challenge of plant-based protein replacement they won’t accept. With the exception of marinated ham steak and the McDonald's McRib, most of them are actually pretty good! At the very least, they offer hope that a world in which lab-grown protein is the only option after tech oligarchs decimate the environment will still offer fun garbage food like Crunchwraps and buffalo wings.
Orgain looks and tastes like a relic of this bygone era of boomer hippie health fantasies. It’s inexpensive and widely available, making it a must-have in the bottom of every pensioner's cart on their Costco run. The appeal of this runny, nutty liquid runs out quickly after you consider the economics of it all. The texture is similar to oat-milk-based coffee creamer, and the flavor is a weak blend of watered-down vanilla, macadamia nuts, and diet sweetener. If you can suck down two of these while stuck in traffic in the morning, you might make it until lunch, but it’s not likely. What’s more, the flavor and texture are so disappointing that you’re twice as likely to splurge on DoorDash-ing a $25 smash burger than settling for a healthier, more economical choice when you finally allow yourself to consume a solid meal.
Cost per serving: Around $2 Other flavors available: Chocolate Allergens: Sunflower oil Protein: 16 g Calories: 230 Carbs: 28 g Fat: 6 g Caffeine: No Best Salad Replacement
FlavorTextureSatietyTOTAL 4.5 3.2 7.8 5.2 Even technocrats who are obsessed with maximizing every minute of their day need to eat their veggies, and products like Soylent and Huel are somewhat lacking in the greenery department. SaladPower offers a quick and relatively painless way to cram some greens down your gullet without spending hours on procuring salad fixins or close to $20 on a trip to Sweetgreen, all with the ease of slurping down a brown liquid from a minimalistic white and green pouch. If health is a linear spectrum, slamming a pouch of this in the morning is probably the polar opposite of ripping a shot of Malort while pregaming for a night of debauchery. It’s kinda gross and you kinda hate it, but it builds character!
The texture of putrid glurp is akin to applesauce, and the flavor is mildly savory with hints of lemon and carrot in the aftertaste. This is not at all enjoyable, but if you don’t take it out of the bag like I did, then you probably won’t have any issues getting it over with as quickly as possible. It does a fine job of filling you up, and more importantly, it helps your gut recalibrate if you’ve accepted the challenge of living off meal replacements indefinitely. An important part of being an adult is realizing you have to do things that suck now in service of better days ahead, so crack a packet of SaladPower and eat your dang veggies, OK?
Cost per serving: Around $9 Other flavors available: None Allergens: None Protein: 2 g Calories: 90 Carbs: 21 g Fat: 0 g Caffeine: No
I’m a busy millennial with a work-from-home email job, a dog that’s perpetually bored, and a wide variety of domestic tasks to juggle, so the prospect of saving 15 to 30 minutes a day by eschewing breakfast for a meal replacement was quite appealing to me at the onset of this experiment. I actually enjoy cooking and tasting my food, so I opted for a less severe approach than the legions of weirdos who consume nothing but Huel or Soylent and post about it on Reddit.
Each weekday at 8 am, I consumed one of the meal replacements listed above, sticking with the same item in a weeklong period before moving on to the next the following Monday. I used water and a blender bottle to prepare the powdered options per the suggested serving on the back of the bag or canister. I did not use milk as the base, nor did I mix the shakes with a blender, because neither of those things will exist when The Event leaves society in a ruinous state with no oats to milk and no electricity to power our Ninjas. I graded each entrant on taste, texture, and satiety, which is a fancy word that describes how full a foodstuff makes you feel. If you plan on taking this experiment seriously on your own time, be sure to eat an orange every now and then to avoid scurvy, and you may want to opt for Amazon rather than the brand's website, as most of them are some form of headache-inducing, pop-up-laden, subscription-bait hell.
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