Meal Planning Made Easy
by Rachel Paxton
It's no fun trying to decide what to make for dinner every night.
Planning your meals ahead of time often saves you time as well as
money.
There are many different ways to plan your meals. How you plan
yours depends on how much time you want to spend now to save yourself
time later.
I plan my meals once a week. Because I have limited
refrigerator/freezer space and a small family to feed (3), this plan
seems to work best for me. I only go to the grocery store once a week.
When I'm getting ready to go to the store, I sit down and starting
planning my menu for the next week.
This is a good time to go through this week's grocery ads to see
what's on sale this week. I also take this time to clean out my
refrigerator to see what needs thrown away and what can be re-used as
leftovers in the next couple of days. Cleaning out your refrigerator
weekly is crucial in avoiding wasting food that could still be used to
make a perfectly good meal.
So after I've cleaned out the refrigerator and scanned the grocery
store ads, I start my shopping list. I try to plan around what I
already have in the freezer. For example, if I know I have a pound of
hamburger in the freezer and I know I have spaghetti noodles on hand,
then I just need to put spaghetti sauce on my list in order to have
spaghetti for dinner one night.
I've also found that often we don't need as much meat in our meals
as you might think. For our family of three, a pound of hamburger can
be used for both spaghetti and tacos. If I cook the hamburger all at
once, I can just put half of it in the refrigerator for the next meal
(a big time savings!). If I already have taco shells on hand all I
need is to make sure that the sour cream I have in the refrigerator is
still good and put lettuce and tomatoes on my shopping list.
You should always stock up on meat when it's on sale. If you do
you'll find that some weeks you'll end up buying almost no meat at
all, if any. I also stock up on items like jars of spaghetti sauce
when they're on sale. Then I'll always have a quick dinner ready on a
moment's notice if I already have hamburger (also bought on sale) and
spaghetti noodles on hand.
Some weeks I realize that I already have much of what I'm going to
need for the week. Some of the staples I keep on hand: sour cream,
cheese, taco shells, spaghetti noodles, egg noodles, cream of mushroom
soup, onions, potatoes, garlic, tuna, spaghetti sauce, tomato sauce,
black olives, canned clams, and rice. These ingredients make a lot of
the meals we eat, like: hamburger and rice, beef stroganoff, tacos,
spaghetti, clam chowder, and hamburger gravy and mashed potatoes.
I usually plan for only 5 meals a week. I know that sometime during
the week we'll be eating leftovers or fending for ourselves due to
time constraints.
This system has worked really well for me and saved us lots of
money. I plan once a week, shop once a week, and don't give a thought
to meal planning for the rest of the week. And I don't hold myself to
cooking a certain meal on a certain night. I usually decide that day
what I'm going to cook for dinner to be a little flexible.
There are many other ways you can plan your meals. Some people cook
once a month and freeze their meals for later use (requires a lot of
freezer space). A couple of books on this subject are Frozen Assets by
Deborah Taylor Hough and The Freezer Cooking Manual by Tara Wohlenhaus.
Meal planning doesn't have to be hard. Modify your plan to suit
your family's needs. Just make sure you HAVE a plan. It will
inevitably save you time as well as money.
Rachel Paxton is a freelance writer and mom who publishes the
Creative Homemaking Recipe of the Week Club, a weekly newsletter that
contains quick, easy dinner ideas and money-saving household hints. To
subscribe send a blank e-mail message to FreeRecipes-subscribe@egroups.com.
Visit Creative Homemaking at http://www.creativehomemaking.com and in
the Home and Garden section of Suite 101 - http://www.suite101.com/welcome.cfm/creative_homemaking
Keywords: cooking, recipes, food, budget, frugal, shopping,
groceries, meal planning
Written by: Rachel Paxton, W. Richland, WA, USA
rachel@creativehomemaking.com
http://www.creativehomemaking.com
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