Tag Archives: Meal plan

menu monday: what I actually ate

Another easy week because we are headed for sun next weekend. I can’t wait to spend a few days in 80+ degree weather with the hubs. But first we have a week of work to get through and this is how I plan on fueling. I’m experimenting with offal a lot lately – definitely a menu monday dedicated to it in the near future!

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The paleo meals are pre made meals I purchased thinking they would keep us from eating take out. The meals are tasty IF they are defrosted in the fridge then heated in a pan. They are kinda gross and soggy if they go from frozen to ready via the microwave. Which unfortunately defeats the purpose of getting them so we have them on hand to eat in a pinch. Since they are tasty though I’m eating them when it’s just me for dinner in an attempt to win back some freezer space.

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Cauliflower Soup: Excited to try another soup from Mel for breakfast and increase my Well Fed 2 count by one more this week. I bought mason jars for transporting my morning soup, hopefully it’s a little easier than the containers I’ve been using.

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Spaghetti Squash Bolognese: I doubled this recipe from Balanced Bites and swapped out the ground veal/beef for ground beef heart. Already looking forward to my weekday lunches. Alfred was hanging out in the kitchen all morning while this was cooking.

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Meatloaf: Greg and I both love meatloaf so I was excited to come across this; I subbed lamb kidney for the liver because it’s what I had on hand. What, doesn’t everyone have lamb kidney on hand? It was delicious, I don’t think Greg actually looked up at me while he ate it.

What I Actually Ate

From Monday – Friday last week I documented my meals via my iPhone. I wanted to show that meal planning doesn’t have to be rigid. I doubt there is a single week that I eat food exactly how I’ve planned it out but (after some experience) I don’t waste much food either.weekoffood

  • Monday went according to plan.
  • Tuesday I forgot my lunch. The cafeteria had fish over rice with mixed veggies and spicy thai chili sauce – so good.
  • On Wednesday the chicken wasn’t defrosted yet so I swapped to salmon that I can defrost in under 20 minutes. Also realized at lunch that mixing my citrus cauli rice with my chicken is so good.
  • Greg had a last minute client dinner on Thursday so instead of roasting a chicken I ate a paleo meal from the freezer.
  • Forgot to defrost breakfast soup on Friday so went with an extra egg, most of a mango, and a little sauerkraut. We had dinner with friends but I didn’t take a picture of my meal (we went to a fancy pizza place so they put sausage on a salad w/ anchovy dressing for me and it was amazing). My cocktail was quite tasty as well.

menu monday: more veggies

Lately I’ve been really hungry all the time. In analyzing what I’ve been eating, I realized I’ve gotten lazy with making veggies for my meals. A lot of times I’m heating up an already cooked protein and added fat, but skipping out on carbs almost every meal. It’s leading me to snack a lot in the afternoons and snacking at work is never healthy.

Screen Shot 2014-02-09 at 11.03.36 AMThis week as I menu planned I made sure to include two veggies with every lunch and dinner and incorporated one into breakfast (you gotta start somewhere). It is all veg I can prep and cook on the weekend or will cook very quickly and easily during the week. My NTP work is proving to be as intense as I thought, so quick and healthy weeknight meals are even more key now than they were before. I also planned for a weekday snack. Hopefully I won’t always need it, but I’d rather have it then succumb to the cheese popcorn at work. NOT that I’ve been doing that lately.

This is one of those weeks where a bunch of WF2 recipes are online – yay!

Round Roast (from The Domestic Man)
Salty Sweet Broccoli Salad
Silky Gingered Zucchini Soup

5 tips for eating more veggies

1. Add veggies to your breakfast. My favorite ways to do this are to have soup for breakfast (my fave), eat egg salad over baby spinach, or make a breakfast casserole and include veggies (I add spinach and skip the cheese in this one). A small side of sauerkraut is another great option.

2. Prep a few veggies before you need them. I am way more likely to throw a tray of beets into the oven after work if it’s already been washed, peeled, and chopped. While you’re already in the kitchen sometime during the weekend, spend a few minutes to prep one or two veggies for later in the week. If you don’t have time to prep, buy a few prepped veggies to make sure you get them in. I tend to buy pre-cut butternut squash from time to time because I know it’ll get eaten quickly on a busy week. I almost always buy pre-washed baby spinach as well. 2 minutes sautéed with butter or ghee and you have a delicious veggie ready to go.

3. Make more than you need. Anytime I cook root veggies or squash (veg that is hearty and won’t get mushy), I cook more thank I need to ensure I have leftovers. The same goes for prep – if I’ve already got my food processer dirty by shredding sweet potatoes, I’ll do a few more and freeze them in 1 cup bags (the perfect amount to make the two of us hash to go with our eggs for breakfast).

4. Make your smacks mini meals. Rather than snack on something in a package, if you need something between meals have a small meal. You’ll feel way more satiated if you include protein, fat, and carbs. I love cherry tomatoes and bell pepper slices for easy afternoon snacking, but my goal is to not snack if I don’t need to.  For tips on getting the right protein, fat, and veg balance in your meals, I like the Whole 30 Meal Template.

5. Try something new. Do your research (Melissa’s veg recipe index or Nom Nom Paleo’s site) for a new way to cook one of your usual suspects or an entirely new veggie to try. I’m planning to get my eggplant on this year… I’ve already bought one and let it go to mush because I didn’t have a plan for it. Make a plan first. Also, be realistic and don’t try 10 new veggie recipes in one week.

5 veggies that take less than 5 minutes to prep

1. Roast broccoli. Preheat your oven to 350 and toss 1 TBS coconut oil in the microwave to melt. Rinse and chop the broccoli head(s), then toss with coconut oil. Add salt and pepper, throw in oven for 20-ish minutes.

2. Buy a bag of coleslaw mix (just veggies, not the kind with dressing). Dump in bowl, mix with a 2:1 ratio of apple cider vinegar and olive oil. Toss will salt, pepper, and poppy seeds. Throw in the fridge and let it chill for 15 minutes or so (it is fine to eat it right away, too).

3. Poke a sweet potato with a fork to create holes all over it. Wrap it with a damp paper towel. Throw it in the microwave for 8-10 minutes. Add butter, eat.

4. Let ghee or butter melt over med high heat in a larger-sized pan. Toss in large handfuls of spinach. Add a little sea salt. Cook until your desired tenderness (usually 2 – 3 minutes). Note that it takes a LOT of raw spinach to get a decent portion of cooked spinach.

5. Buy a bag of broccoli slaw and add it to ground beef. A few spices and you’ll have an easy one pan dish that takes on any flavor that sounds good.

Well Fed 2 Update

I’ve made several more WF2 recipes lately and need to get another round up post together. I’m still loving nearly every recipe I try in the book.

menu monday: prepping for your week

Screen Shot 2014-01-16 at 9.18.50 PMI’m really excited for this week’s menu. I broke one of my own rules and every recipe is new to me. But, I was really reasonable about timing (the bulk will be made over the weekend / on a day off from work) and they all are quick prep plus longer cook time recipes. I rarely stick to my meal plan exactly, but if I do it will be five recipes from Well Fed 2 in one week, plus a sixth I’ve made before (the kebab sauce).

This is a happy week where a bunch of the WF2 recipes are available online, but for those that aren’t page numbers from WF2 listed in picture.

  • Pork Roast – slightly different from recipe, but very close; I’m planning to do the Middle Eastern variation listed in the cookbook
  • Lamb gyro salad + kebab sauce
  • West African Stew – slightly adapted from the original recipe; I’ll be making it with a turkey breast I need to use but hoping it still works out well
  • Ham hock soup – I’ll probably do a combo of these two recipes with whatever veggies I have on hand (1, 2)

I’ve been prepping food on the weekends for the week ahead probably for about two years. I go in spurts with how much effort I put in, but I can say for sure that the more prep I do on the weekend the healthier we eat during the week and getting meals on the table (or counter / desk / couch) is that much easier.

Prepping (for me) is all about setting myself up the best I can to make the decision to eat a healthy, tasty, homemade meal versus calling for take-out. Considering I have to make this decision 21 times every week, the more work that’s done in advance the more likely I am to choose well.

Here’s a somewhat random list of what I’ve found to be helpful for me.

1. Any prep is better than no prep. Seriously. If you have only 10 or 15 minutes, brown some ground meat to make a very quick meal one night. While the meat’s browning, cut up a veggie to cook later in the week. I find prepped veggies speak to me after work whereas unprepped veggies find themselves in the compost bin at the end of a busy week. Also, prep doesn’t have to be done all at once. Sometimes I set aside a few hours on Sunday but more often than not I do a little prep each time I’m in the kitchen over the weekend.

2. Start with a clean kitchen. I do not start prepping until the kitchen is clean and the dishwasher is unloaded, especially if I’m doing a big prep session. This ensures prepping food doesn’t require a two hour cleaning session.

3. Have multiples of common kitchen gadgets. Because I do the bulk of my cooking at one time, I find it helps to  have several of a few key items. I have two sets of measuring cups and three sets of measuring spoons. I have several chefs knives (and use one for meat, one for non-meat). I have three of four cutting boards. Not having to stop and clean a meat filled cutting board and knife before moving on to veggies keeps me in my cooking groove.

4. Have a compost bowl out on the counter. We are required to compost in Seattle, but even if you don’t have to or want to, keeping a bowl for all your scraps on the counter is much more efficient than going into the trash can every few minutes. It also helps contain the mess. I have big plastic IKEA bowls that work great. I’ve also used plastic bags from veggies, but I like that the bowls don’t have to be opened each time I want to throw more peels in. Once it’s filled Greg takes it out to the compost for me and brings it back in.

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5. Have a defrost bowl in the fridge + start defrosting early. My meat is all wrapped in plastic with paper from the butcher, which means it drips as it defrosts. To keep messes in the fridge to a minimum, all my meat defrosts in a bowl that I can change out regularly to clean. As soon as you know what you are going to cook, put it in the fridge. It’s annoying when you find yourself with a few minutes to prep something and frozen meat.

6. Don’t cook too far in advance. I’ve made the mistake of cooking all my veggies on Sunday. Opening my lunch on Thursday at work with veggies that were roasted five days ago is only going to have me tossing my lunch and buying something instead. Prep veggies (wash, peel, cut) early, but I try to cook them no more than three days in advance.

7. Store by serving (and stock up on storage!). If there’s a meal already packaged in the fridge with meat + veggies, I’m that much more likely to go for it. Instead of storing 4 meals worth of chili in a big container, I’m more likely to store 4 individual chili servings because I know it works better for me. When I need to make my lunch, it is so much easier to grab the chili plus two veggies than it is to portion out each item into a new container. We have tons of two cup glass containers and a few LunchBots. I also save good sized glass jars and we have a few plastic containers I’ve picked up here and there.

8. Do something now that will help you later. A few nights ago I realized I didn’t have breakfast for the next morning. I’m currently working on bringing my breakfast to work every day, so I hard boiled eggs way later than I wanted to. At first I only wanted to peel three for my breakfast the next day. But I was already there, peeling the other six would only take 2 minutes tops and would save me the hassle for two more breakfasts. Finish the job if it’s going to make your life easier in a day or two. (Says the girl who drove by three gas stations today with the tank on empty but 21 more miles in range…)

I kept track of how my prep went for this coming week. Every week is a little different, but here’s the run down:

Thursday

  • ~1 hour to meal plan and defrost meat
  • 5 minutes to start bone broth in the crockpot

Friday

  • 20 minutes at lunchtime to walk and grab groceries (I realize that because I “shop” my chest freeze and have a CSA deliver most of my veggies my shopping time is really minimal)
  • 5 minutes to swap out half the bone broth (and strain and bottle it) with fresh water

Saturday

  • 10 minutes to make mayo
  • 20 minutes to prep the southwest frittata and cut/wrap in foil once it finished baking
  • 20 minutes to prep veggies (wash and cut a head of lettuce, peel and chop a pound of beets and a turnip)
  • 10 minutes to strain and bottle the bone broth
  • 5 minutes to prep the pork roast and toss it in the crockpot to cook overnight

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Sunday

  • 10 minutes to shred the pork roast and toss it in the fridge for dinner

I made meals as well to eat (lunch and dinner Saturday, dinner Sunday) but I don’t really count those as prepping food for future use since we’re eating them once they are ready.

Happy cooking! Any good prep tips for me? Leave ’em in the comments.

menu monday: meal planning 101

I’m bringing back Menu Monday and adding a new series of posts with it. A big part of my goal over the next ten weeks is to get a good handle on food, especially coming out of the holidays and some stressful times. I LOVE planning, routine, and process, but I know not everyone else does. I thought if I can share some of what I do to make healthy eating work for me I’ll both keep my self accountable to my goals and help friends and family as well. I frequently get questions about what I eat and how I manage cooking, so here’s the beginning of a look into my meal planning and prepping OCD.

I’m starting with Meal Planning 101. Keep in mind, this is what works for me and I change things up when I find it’s not working. Take what you want from it but make it fit your life.

1. Figure out how your week works. In my family, there are two adults and a puppy who doesn’t eat people food. My husband travels frequently during the week and we often have social plans on the weekend. We both organize our weeks Monday through Sunday, but I’ve learned that doesn’t work for me for menu planning and instead I use Saturday though Friday. I find that I waste less food because I usually know our weekend plans better if I’m planning just a few days before, not the weekend before.

2. Plan early. I try to plan my menu on Wednesday or Thursday. It doesn’t always happen, but when it does it gives me ample time to get shopping done before the menu kicks in. ANY planning is better than no planning, so work with what you have on any given week.

3. Think about the individual week. This is what my menu plan looks like when I start (I recently switched from paper to a GoogleDoc – we’ll see how it goes). I highlight the nights it’s just me eating in blue (this is made up for this example, I’m smart enough not to post that I’ll be home alone on the internet) and the nights we’re going out in yellow. Normally I wouldn’t do the yellow, but since my current goal is to eat dinner out no more than twice a week, it makes it easier. For this week I also added that I want to make brunch on my birthday and try something fun. Include social events or make note when you might need to feed extra people.

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4. Know what you have on hand. I have an inventory of meat in my chest freezer so I know what’s available. I also start with adding the veggies that I have on hand. I add both ones leftover from the previous week and what I know will be delivered in my CSA on Friday morning. Screen Shot 2014-01-09 at 5.15.41 PM

5. Be reasonable. As you start to add meals, be reasonable. This is the number one thing that will make you successful or not. I will cook longer, fun meals on the weekend, but if I’m cooking on a weeknight I have a twenty, maybe thirty minute max. If I get home and find I have 45 minutes of prep with another 30 minutes of cook time, I’m totally calling for Indian.

6. Mix it up. Try to add a little variety, without going crazy. I try to make sure I’m using different meats as well as mixing the leftovers throughout the week so I don’t end up eating the same thing for lunch and dinner one day. Also include a mix of new recipes and tried and true ones. I generally plug in my breakfasts first as they are the easiest – something on the weekend then I eat the same meal all week at work. Next I do my big meals on the weekend, then fill in leftovers for lunch and weeknight dinners. Last I include easy meals to fill in any empty lunches or dinners. I delete the veggies as I add them to meals. Ideally I use them all, but if I don’t I leave the heartiest ones (beets, yams, onions) until the next week. Screen Shot 2014-01-09 at 5.21.45 PM

7. Set yourself up for prepping. Once I’m done with my plan (I suppose you could do it as you go, I just don’t), I set myself up to be successful. First, I write down the cookbook and page number of every recipe or save a link in my bookmark bar if it’s online. Then I list out what days any items needing to defrost should be moved from the freezer to the fridge (another reason you want to start a few days earlier than your plan starts if you can). Last I make a prep list. I do as much as I possibly can over the weekend.

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8. Make a shopping list and keep it with you. Now that I’ve gotten in the habit of mid-week meal planning, I have a few options for when I can go grocery shopping. As I’m adding each recipe to my list, I add the ingredients I don’t have to the Groceries Reminders list on my computer. This syncs with my phone, so if I find myself with a few extra minutes I can go do my shopping. Typically I do it Friday after work, but sometimes I manage to get it done earlier since I have the list on me.

And that’s how someone who loves to plan creates a weekly menu. I’ll be posting mine again on Mondays, so feel free to just steal it if you’d rather. This might seem overwhelming, but on a week where I don’t have much time to deal with this, it takes maybe 15 minutes. On a week where I have a lot of time, I love to sit with a cup of coffee and browse recipes for as long as I can.

Coming up over the next several Mondays:

  • How I prep food for the week
  • Crockpot meals
  • Easy weeknight meals
  • Meals that freeze well
  • Portable breakfast and lunch ideas

Recipes listed above that are available online (for the rest, get yourself a copy of Well Fed and Well Fed 2):

 

Mini Meal plan

I took a few weeks off from menu planning and tried a new system where I listed out all my cooked and defrosted meat and available veggies. It worked the first week (probably just because I love new systems) but since then its been a major flop. In fact, aside from Monday dinner last week I bought every single meal I ate.

And that made me feel super great in a bathing suit in Phoenix all weekend.

So back to my regularly scheduled meal plans. I am switching things up to go Saturday – Friday. Weekend plans pop up during the week so planning weekend meals almost a full week before usually leads to wasted food.

Monday: I’m having dinner with a friend and Greg is fending for himself
Tuesday: Baked Chicken Thighs with salad and roasted broccoli
Wednesday: Greg has a client dinner so I’m making turkey taco salad to last two nights
Thursday: See above (Greg has another work event)
Friday: Salmon, sautéed spinach, and kale salad

I’m making more Southwest Frittata for breakfast after a few weeks of spicy egg salads over spinach. No clue what I’ll eat for lunch but hoping I find leftovers in the freezer tonight! No recipes this week since I’m already behind with being out of town. Just simple meals I can make without following directions.

I have a few new cookbooks on my shelf (and more arriving this week if I’m honest). I’m hoping to try some new recipes soon and pass along anything good.