Recently, I wanted a white board to have a physical list of homemade healthy food available at home. We didn’t have the money for one so we bought some dry-erase markers and taped old paper bags onto the back of the glass of our rarely used china cabinet. I like having a big visible list in the kitchen so my husband and I could refrain from opening the fridge several times a day. I also like planning a day before or on the day of so I can gouge what we’re craving for and which ingredients we have available that day.

Forgive the handwriting but I listed down several foods and recipes that we enjoy and have been repeats in our diet. We also wanted it to be relatively cheap so we process and prep meals at home to save food. All of the meals and food items listed are vegan. So far, we’ve been saving up great and feeling better with relatively healthier eating :D

How do you plan your meals?

image description: A china cabinet with its glass doors used like a white board. Brown paper bags are taped behind the glass to make the text visible.

  • My gf and I got a little magnetic whiteboard with each day of the week on it. We split the work up a bit. On Sundays I plan out the week’s meals, and check if we have all the ingredients for them. I’ll write it out on the white board, and put a star next to an entry if we need to get something from the store for it.

    We both use the app paprika to manage our grocery list and recipes.

    She will do the shopping usually, and then I am the cook throughout the week.

    We both used to be way more chill about things and ate a lot of frozen food but changed a lot when covid started

    •  marin♡   ( @marin@beehaw.org ) OP
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      31 year ago

      I checked out the app but I saw it was paid (we don’t even have money for that lol). All of our recipes are written down on paper so that we can put it on a mounted clip and read it quick. I should probably look into digitizing our grocery and recipe lists.

      How did things change during covid?

      • Yeah it was paid. Unfortunately it was a while ago so I can’t quite remember how it was set up, but I believe it’s only a single $5 purchase, no recurring fees. And we just made one account and have it logged in on each of our devices. So in total I think it was just $5

        Covid for us just meant more time at home to try new things mostly. It was also partially spurred on by a doctor’s visit for me where I had slightly high cholesterol and was told to cut back on frozen foods. So the combination of the two got us into cooking more and it cleared all that up thankfully

  • I wrote my own app that I use to enter all my recipes. In the app, I then select which meals to prepare for any given day of the week, along with number of servings I need to prepare for my wife, kids and myself. The app lets me create a shopping list from the selected meals with the correct amounts that I need to buy. I then take this shopping list (copied to the Notes App) to the grocery store and buy everything I need. The app even lets me store preparation instructions, so I use it again while cooking. If you want to try it out yourself: it’s available on the Google Play Store: Shop&Cook

      • For about 50 people 3 meals per day.

        There isn’t oven, and we mostly cook on wood stove in 50l pots. So we are little bit limited in what we can cook. It is usually pasta, potatoes, rice, bulgur, couscous and sauces.

        But favourite meal is some India with flatbread (translated don’t know if it makes sense). You wouldn’t believe how quickly it disappears.

    •  marin♡   ( @marin@beehaw.org ) OP
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      21 year ago

      Pretty much everything written on the photo are the mainstays. I get a lot of inspiration from different vegan recipe sites but I adjust the recipe for our budget and taste later on. I could try linking some of them if you’d like. Just reply which ones intrigue you

  • I’m a single university student with a small budget (maybe $60 per week). When I do meal plan I try to make a dinner that will last me a few days but it’s not always easy. For one, it gets boring, and two, some days I’m just hungrier than others so there are weeks where I go past my budget.

    I’d be curious to hear how other university students do it.

    •  marin♡   ( @marin@beehaw.org ) OP
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      21 year ago

      If you’re not very fond of repeating meals, you can try experimenting on new recipes that depend on the same base ingredients and vary on its toppings and flavorings. I remember I’d always have rice as a base and add different veggies and seasonings like soy sauce and chili flakes to make a quick fried rice. It takes time to develop your home cooking mainstays but if you do have some spare time, you can try figuring it out.

  • My girlfriend and I have a recipe box that we write out recipe cards for any meals we like enough to want to make more in the future. On the weekends, we decide which ones we want for the week and do the grocery shopping accordingly for the week. Every week also consists of some amount of food prep for lunches to take into work so that can be in the fridge so we can be ahead of the game a little bit at least.

  • I copy & paste recipes I like into a doc in my google drive. Then I sort each doc in a folder (Greek, slow cooker, freezer meal, Mexican, etc). I can use the search bar if I know what recipe I want, or if I have a vague craving for Italian food I can poke through the whole folder to see if anything jumps out.

    When I set the meals for the week I add events to my online calendar: “DINNER: enchilada casserole, Spanish rice” and I include links to the saved recipe in the event description. My calendar is shared online with everyone in the house, so I no longer get “what’s for dinner?” questions all the time.

    I can use my phone or laptop while I cook to access the recipe. I can make changes to the saved recipe easily while I cook, too.

    It’s relatively simple and there are no additional costs once you have internet & a phone/computer.

  • My wife and I hate having our entire weeks meals planned out. We love to be a little spontaneous so we have generally do less meal prep. We typically cook daily and gives us a change to make what we feel like each day.

    We have a few standards that we always have ingredients for which we generally make. For these we just make them whenever we feel like it. We have a few staples that we can make using multiple different sets of vegetables like stir fry and pasta that we whip up with whatever we have around. For other recipes we just go to the store to get things just for that meal. We really try to avoid having too much in our fridge since it goes bad quickly with just two of us. Its more about general techniques or vague recipes.

  • I use an online service called CopyMeThat (not linking because I’m not shilling, you can look it up yourself). It lets me save online recipes and make a meal plan with them (and also a shopping list, but I generally do that by hand because I know what I have in stock already). I have more than 400 recipes saved and we’ve tried more than 300 of them, from cuisines all over the world.

  •  howrar   ( @howrar@lemmy.ca ) 
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    21 year ago

    I keep a food inventory in Notion. The planning part involves going through that list and coming up with ideas for how to use each item. Those then get sorted into another list of either proteins, vegetables, or a full meal. Then we just mix and match from this list, add a carb if desired, and you have your meals.

    A few key points to my system:

    • Everything is sorted by how long they’ll keep, so you know what to prioritize, and if you don’t know what you want to eat, you just go with whatever’s the top of the list.
    • Keep meal ideas that can easily be made with non-perishable pantry staples and frozen foods. The idea is that these will always be available.
  • I love the frugality and cleverness on display here with the glass, well done!

    I just saw this today and I’m going to give it a try: https://www.snapcalorie.com/ Supposedly you take a picture of your food and it will tell you how many calories, portion, etc. I’m pretty skeptical that it’ll work, but it’s intriguing, regardless. Though, it has a monthly price of $29, which is nuts.

    Unrelated: I just saw your username is “Marin,” and I got so excited by that! I’m a traditionally published author (I write horror, you can even find at least one of the books my work is in at your local book store), and the main character in almost all of my stories is Marin. It’s never the same ‘person,’ but the character always has pieces of me in every story, if that makes sense. The gender might change, or the age, or where they’re from, etc., but I always put some dash of myself in Marin, so it kind of feels like a way for me to carry the character through different stories.

    Anyway, super cool to see someone with that username :)