If you feel cooking is an unnecessary waste of time

BackupFridge
BackupFridge Posts: 105 Member
edited 5:56AM in Food and Nutrition
This is one of my favourite resources: http://therawtarian.com/

Eating just about everything raw makes life easier and does wonders for one's margin of error. Who knows - might help some of you folks. The total prep time for all of my daily meals is less than an hour. Simple, easy, healthy.

Anyone have a similar resource to share?

Replies

  • PeachyCarol
    PeachyCarol Posts: 8,029 Member
    I used to be a raw vegan. There was an awful lot of prep time involved in my food. I wouldn't have called what I was doing a time saving strategy.
  • BackupFridge
    BackupFridge Posts: 105 Member
    edited October 2015
    I used to be a raw vegan. There was an awful lot of prep time involved in my food. I wouldn't have called what I was doing a time saving strategy.

    I just figured that it stands to reason a raw substitute of a similarly cooked meal (and raw ones in and of themselves) would open another window of possibilities for people who might not have thought to try. Worth a mention.

    Out of curiosity, what was a typical meal for you and the time taken for it?
  • paperpudding
    paperpudding Posts: 9,282 Member
    Depends what you eat, I suppose.

    But most of what I eat, which is not raw vegan, takes less than an hour to prepare too.
    For example, sausages, mashed potatoes, cooked beans, cooked carrots - can easily do that in 20 minutes.
  • RoxieDawn
    RoxieDawn Posts: 15,488 Member
    It all depend on what you eat. I am not 23 years old like the OP and I have time to cook and love to cook especially when I can make it healthy.

    I can make a weeks worth of food in a couple of hours on Sunday..
  • MissJay75
    MissJay75 Posts: 768 Member
    Interesting alternative option. However. I can only imagine the planning, prepping, and shopping to eat a balanced raw diet would counter any time you saved by not actually cooking anything.

    Cooking is one of my least favorite activities. It is a chore, every time. I feed a family of 4, one with very restrictive dietary needs, 1 fairly picky eater, 1 normal, and 1 calorie counter. I prepare about 350 meals a month, but I spend less than an hour a day on meal prep.
  • Ang108
    Ang108 Posts: 1,711 Member
    This is one of my favourite resources: http://therawtarian.com/

    Eating just about everything raw makes life easier and does wonders for one's margin of error. Who knows - might help some of you folks. The total prep time for all of my daily meals is less than an hour. Simple, easy, healthy.

    Anyone have a similar resource to share?

    I prepare all my food every day in the conventional way and even with clean up do not spend an hour in the kitchen.

  • Ang108
    Ang108 Posts: 1,711 Member
    Ang108 wrote: »
    This is one of my favourite resources: http://therawtarian.com/

    Eating just about everything raw makes life easier and does wonders for one's margin of error. Who knows - might help some of you folks. The total prep time for all of my daily meals is less than an hour. Simple, easy, healthy.

    Anyone have a similar resource to share?

    I prepare all my food every day in the conventional way and even with clean up do not spend an hour in the kitchen.
    Also, I MAKE the time to cook (or otherwise prepare) my food, because it is important to and I enjoy the activity. Imo most people make the time for things they find importat; that also applies to food prep.
    9

  • Ang108
    Ang108 Posts: 1,711 Member
    Ang108 wrote: »
    Ang108 wrote: »
    This is one of my favourite resources: http://therawtarian.com/

    Eating just about everything raw makes life easier and does wonders for one's margin of error. Who knows - might help some of you folks. The total prep time for all of my daily meals is less than an hour. Simple, easy, healthy.

    Anyone have a similar resource to share?

    I prepare all my food every day in the conventional way and even with clean up do not spend an hour in the kitchen.
    Also, I MAKE the time to cook (or otherwise prepare) my food, because it is important to me and I enjoy the activity. Imo most people make the time for things they find importat; that also applies to food prep.
    9

  • Ang108
    Ang108 Posts: 1,711 Member
    Ang108 wrote: »
    Ang108 wrote: »
    This is one of my favourite resources: http://therawtarian.com/

    Eating just about everything raw makes life easier and does wonders for one's margin of error. Who knows - might help some of you folks. The total prep time for all of my daily meals is less than an hour. Simple, easy, healthy.

    Anyone have a similar resource to share?

    I prepare all my food every day in the conventional way and even with clean up do not spend an hour in the kitchen.
    Also, I MAKE the time to cook (or otherwise prepare) my food, because it is important to me and I enjoy the activity. Imo most people make the time for things they find importat; that also applies to food prep.
    9

  • Ang108
    Ang108 Posts: 1,711 Member
    Ang108 wrote: »
    Ang108 wrote: »
    Ang108 wrote: »
    This is one of my favourite resources: http://therawtarian.com/

    Eating just about everything raw makes life easier and does wonders for one's margin of error. Who knows - might help some of you folks. The total prep time for all of my daily meals is less than an hour. Simple, easy, healthy.

    Anyone have a similar resource to share?

    I prepare all my food every day in the conventional way and even with clean up do not spend an hour in the kitchen.
    Also, I MAKE the time to cook (or otherwise prepare) my food, because it is important to me and I enjoy the activity. Imo most people make the time for things they find importat; that also applies to food prep.
    9

  • amusedmonkey
    amusedmonkey Posts: 10,330 Member
    Checked the websites, as a veggie lover I found a few interesting ideas there that I want to try when the mood strikes. Thank you! Not sure about food prep though. Frying an egg takes only a few minutes and tossing together a tuna salad takes less than a minute (the way I make it). I love vegetables so much but all the cutting and chopping sometimes gets to me that I need a quicker meal. At least with many cooked dishes most of the prep time is idle time while it cooks.
  • cmtigger
    cmtigger Posts: 1,450 Member
    Ang108 wrote: »
    This is one of my favourite resources: http://therawtarian.com/

    Eating just about everything raw makes life easier and does wonders for one's margin of error. Who knows - might help some of you folks. The total prep time for all of my daily meals is less than an hour. Simple, easy, healthy.

    Anyone have a similar resource to share?

    I prepare all my food every day in the conventional way and even with clean up do not spend an hour in the kitchen.

    This. I also have done some things that are "raw vegan" and if I make them they take a long time, and if I buy they are very expensive.
  • kommodevaran
    kommodevaran Posts: 17,890 Member
    I love to cook and don't view it as a waste of time, at all.
  • ponycyndi
    ponycyndi Posts: 858 Member
    I love cooking as much as anything. Also, some of my most favorite meals are vegan or raw.
  • allaboutthecake
    allaboutthecake Posts: 1,535 Member
    Cooking is so overrated....now....if we're talking BAKING <3<3
  • Francl27
    Francl27 Posts: 26,371 Member
    Ang108 wrote: »
    This is one of my favourite resources: http://therawtarian.com/

    Eating just about everything raw makes life easier and does wonders for one's margin of error. Who knows - might help some of you folks. The total prep time for all of my daily meals is less than an hour. Simple, easy, healthy.

    Anyone have a similar resource to share?

    I prepare all my food every day in the conventional way and even with clean up do not spend an hour in the kitchen.

    This...
  • PeachyCarol
    PeachyCarol Posts: 8,029 Member
    I used to be a raw vegan. There was an awful lot of prep time involved in my food. I wouldn't have called what I was doing a time saving strategy.

    I just figured that it stands to reason a raw substitute of a similarly cooked meal (and raw ones in and of themselves) would open another window of possibilities for people who might not have thought to try. Worth a mention.

    Out of curiosity, what was a typical meal for you and the time taken for it?

    Well, I liked thinks like nut/veggie patties, so I made them. They required lots of prep time --- days! -- soaking the nuts, chopping the veggies, dehydrating the patties. There was so much vegetable prep.

    Even a simple meal of massaged kale salad took as long as it takes me to cook a meal ... washing and chopping the kale, chopping the tomatoes, squeezing the lemon, massage, massage, massage...

    A lot of cooking is leave it in the oven or with a lid and walk away and wait. It's not active prep time.

    I had just as much prep time as a raw vegan as I do eating cooked food.
  • seska422
    seska422 Posts: 3,217 Member
    Microwaving a Lean Cuisine takes, at most, 6 minutes. A fast, well-rounded (but salty) meal that aligns quite well with the MFP default macro percentages.

    Portion control is built in and I can eat right when I'm hungry.

    The only prep time is buying them in the store and fitting them into my freezer. ;)
  • HippySkoppy
    HippySkoppy Posts: 725 Member
    I used to be a raw vegan. There was an awful lot of prep time involved in my food. I wouldn't have called what I was doing a time saving strategy.

    I just figured that it stands to reason a raw substitute of a similarly cooked meal (and raw ones in and of themselves) would open another window of possibilities for people who might not have thought to try. Worth a mention.

    Out of curiosity, what was a typical meal for you and the time taken for it?

    Well, I liked thinks like nut/veggie patties, so I made them. They required lots of prep time --- days! -- soaking the nuts, chopping the veggies, dehydrating the patties. There was so much vegetable prep.

    Even a simple meal of massaged kale salad took as long as it takes me to cook a meal ... washing and chopping the kale, chopping the tomatoes, squeezing the lemon, massage, massage, massage...

    A lot of cooking is leave it in the oven or with a lid and walk away and wait. It's not active prep time.

    I had just as much prep time as a raw vegan as I do eating cooked food.

    @PeachyCarol I intrigued why do need to massage kale????

    I'm fascinated but my wicked mind has mental image of this really stressed out kale on a bed get it 'knots' pounded out and it's chakras aligned. ;)

  • PeachyCarol
    PeachyCarol Posts: 8,029 Member
    edited October 2015
    I used to be a raw vegan. There was an awful lot of prep time involved in my food. I wouldn't have called what I was doing a time saving strategy.

    I just figured that it stands to reason a raw substitute of a similarly cooked meal (and raw ones in and of themselves) would open another window of possibilities for people who might not have thought to try. Worth a mention.

    Out of curiosity, what was a typical meal for you and the time taken for it?

    Well, I liked thinks like nut/veggie patties, so I made them. They required lots of prep time --- days! -- soaking the nuts, chopping the veggies, dehydrating the patties. There was so much vegetable prep.

    Even a simple meal of massaged kale salad took as long as it takes me to cook a meal ... washing and chopping the kale, chopping the tomatoes, squeezing the lemon, massage, massage, massage...

    A lot of cooking is leave it in the oven or with a lid and walk away and wait. It's not active prep time.

    I had just as much prep time as a raw vegan as I do eating cooked food.

    @PeachyCarol I intrigued why do need to massage kale????

    I'm fascinated but my wicked mind has mental image of this really stressed out kale on a bed get it 'knots' pounded out and it's chakras aligned. ;)

    Raw kale is tough. When mixed with lemon juice, sea salt, and avocado, it gets softer and it's more pleasant to eat. If you like kale, it's a pretty tasty dish. But it does need to be worked to have a pleasing texture.
  • HippySkoppy
    HippySkoppy Posts: 725 Member
    Thank you for answering...I had no idea, have never seen it here, yet so I'm clueless.
  • Queenmunchy
    Queenmunchy Posts: 3,380 Member
    I used to be a raw vegan. There was an awful lot of prep time involved in my food. I wouldn't have called what I was doing a time saving strategy.

    I just figured that it stands to reason a raw substitute of a similarly cooked meal (and raw ones in and of themselves) would open another window of possibilities for people who might not have thought to try. Worth a mention.

    Out of curiosity, what was a typical meal for you and the time taken for it?

    Well, I liked thinks like nut/veggie patties, so I made them. They required lots of prep time --- days! -- soaking the nuts, chopping the veggies, dehydrating the patties. There was so much vegetable prep.

    Even a simple meal of massaged kale salad took as long as it takes me to cook a meal ... washing and chopping the kale, chopping the tomatoes, squeezing the lemon, massage, massage, massage...

    A lot of cooking is leave it in the oven or with a lid and walk away and wait. It's not active prep time.

    I had just as much prep time as a raw vegan as I do eating cooked food.

    @PeachyCarol I intrigued why do need to massage kale????

    I'm fascinated but my wicked mind has mental image of this really stressed out kale on a bed get it 'knots' pounded out and it's chakras aligned. ;)

    Raw kale is tough. When mixed with lemon juice, sea salt, and avocado, it gets softer and it's more pleasant to eat. If you like kale, it's a pretty tasty dish. But it does need to be worked to have a pleasing texture.

    Massaged kale is my favorite.
This discussion has been closed.