Of the many practical
things I learned from my mom, I am most grateful that she taught me to cook,
plan meals, and make a decent grocery list.
I don’t recall her ever sitting me down and outright teaching me these
skills; I just learned by watching and occasionally helping. And it’s an ongoing lesson – I still call her
for meal ideas from time to time. I
remember very vividly calling her in distress not long after I had my son (and
quit my job) needing ideas for cheap meals.
Within this
last generation, it feels like cooking was close to becoming a lost art. We have drive-thru windows, take-out, and
Bertolli frozen meals – and it is so tempting to let these modern conveniences
become a substitute for a home cooked meal.
At the end of a long day of mothering and working, I’m the first to
admit I don’t always feel like making dinner.
But I am so glad to see, at least amongst my circle of friends and a
widening group of online acquaintances (hi y’all!) that meal planning, home
cooking, and eating REAL food is making a come back. I also love the urban garden movement, and am super envious of those who have enough sun (we live in the woods) to have a big garden.
The best way
to keep yourself from falling into the take-out trap, the fish stick trap, or
frozen pizza trap, is to have a plan. A
meal plan is a MUST for the busy mom.
And really aren’t we all?
Disclaimer - I have been known to serve both fish sticks and frozen pizza, and feel no shame for it. Sometimes you need dinner NOW. Ok, moving on...
As a child,
I remember my mom always having a small notebook and a pencil on the kitchen
counter beneath the phone, and throughout the week if she ran out of an item
she would put it on the list. Then once
every two weeks, she would sit down and plan meals and fill out the rest of the
list. Each category had their own sacred
spot on the paper. I do the exact same
thing. Dairy is in the top left, then
produce next to that, then dry goods, then baking supplies. The next line is meat, frozen items, and
miscellaneous. It keeps my thoughts
organized to do my list like this. It’s
more of a graph or table than a list.
I do my meal
plans once a week, since our schedule changes quite a bit. Some folks (like my mom), like to do it every
other week, and I’ve seen others make a plan for the month at a time. My husband works part time three nights a
week, so I like to wait until Sunday night when I know his schedule so I can
plan our meals around that. Because when
he gets home from teaching at 4:15 and has to head back out the door at 4:45, I’m
not really in the mood to make Beef Bourguignonne.
Each week,
on Sunday night, I sit down with my handy notebook and block out a sheet of
paper. The top half is for the list, the
bottom half gets divided into six blocks, one for each dinner. I write lunch, snack, and breakfast ideas
above the dinner blocks. I put the day
of the week at the top of each block (I usually skip Friday, since I usually
don’t cook that night), and then next to the day of the week I write in if my
husband is working, if I have a work function, etc.
Then I get
to work! I round up magazines,
cookbooks, or find websites where I remembered seeing something I wanted to
try. I only do new recipes on nights when we are both free so I actually have
time to cook and enjoy it. I don’t
always do an actual recipe each night, since my family likes to eat very
simply. It’s usually just a protein, one or two
veggies, and maybe rice or homemade rolls or bread. We are members of an organic buying club
called Annie’s Organic Buying Club, and this also helps me figure out what I’ll make each
week. We pick up our box of produce on
Tuesdays, and I look online on Sunday to see what will be in our share and plan
around that. This helps ensure that I am
cooking fresh, seasonal foods and also has gotten us to eat a lot more fruits
and vegetables. It has taken some
getting used to, because it feels backwards to start with ingredients and then
make a meal plan, but if you think about it, it really does make sense. I like following the seasons with our food
(although I do miss strawberries in winter!), and it makes me feel more
connected to the natural rhythm of the year, and also, even though it may sound
hokey, I think it makes me more mindful of the farmers who produced the
food. We have considered suspending our
buying club share for the summer since all the local farmers markets are now in
full swing, but it’s just so darn convenient to pick it all up in a basket once
a week.
So now that
you know my method, I’m excited to share that starting next Sunday I will be
posting my actual meal plans and grocery lists each week here on our blog. It is my hope that it will inspire those of
you who are tired of “winging it” to sit down and make a plan, and will inspire
those of you who are already seasoned chefs with some new recipes. I also hope that you will join in the conversation
and post some of your own meal planning ideas and recipes in our comments and
with our Facebook community.
Can't wait!
Claire Williamson
Representative for Ecological Babies
claire@ecologicalbabies.com
(850) 228-8322
2 comments:
This couldn't come at a more perfect time! I'm sitting at the desk right now to come up with this week's meals. I'm always wanting to change it up a bit but find myself trapped into using the same old things pretty regularly. Can't wait to see what you have next week!
Lauren, that's exactly why I'm doing this! So we can all help each other. :)
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