What the kitten is meal prep?

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Replies

  • JeromeBarry1
    JeromeBarry1 Posts: 10,179 Member
    TonyB0588 wrote: »
    Just many differing levels of "meal prep" is all.

    My idea of meal prep is deciding what I want and then making it with as few dishes requiring washing as possible.

    My 'meal prep' is to bake a loaf of bread on Saturday. I'll take a slice off the loaf each morning to carry it to work in a Ziplock bag.

    Wow!! Is that all you eat for a whole day at work?

    No. My lunch is small, but it's a little bit more than the piece of bread. See my diary.
  • PWRLFTR1
    PWRLFTR1 Posts: 324 Member
    Sundays are meal prep day. As long as the microwave holds out, I'm good for the week
  • seltzermint555
    seltzermint555 Posts: 10,740 Member
    As others have said, it really varies by person and there are different "levels" of meal prep.

    The most I personally do is prep 2-3 mornings' worth of plain Greek yogurt with oats, fruit, chia, etc, for my husband and I to grab and eat for breakfast. Other stuff, like prepped egg-muffins, just doesn't appeal to me at all and I'd rather quickly cook an egg and toast a piece of bread each morning. I like fresh stuff, so if I'm doing an omelet I want to grab fresh herbs, some feta cheese, etc, out of the fridge that day.

    I used to do 4 lunches for my work week ahead of time since I didn't have an opportunity to come home for lunch. 4 instead of 5 because I knew I would go out or have a lunch meeting once a week. Now, I am able to come home every day for lunch and my husband works from home so he cooks our meals fresh. I prefer that, but some people have long commutes & different types of jobs that prevent such a thing. I used to buy reusable plastic containers for my meals and would do things like shredded chicken, corn & black beans along with simple salads in the containers. I was very sick of that by Lunch #4 but it was still okay.

    I also know a lot of moms who meal prep for their family's dinner meals, but it is a much bigger thing involving 1-2 full days of cooking and pans of lasagna, casseroles, etc, filling a locker style deep freezer. Since my husband and I are a two person household, I can't imagine the need for that (for us). I also can't imagine having that many 9 X 13 pans or casseroles to use for such a thing, but I am sure it's different in a large household.
  • amtyrell
    amtyrell Posts: 1,447 Member
    I don't prep anything ahead as I am single and well don't like leftovers.
    My sister preps lunch for her family of 5 on Sunday night for Monday Tuesdayand wedsand Wednesdaynightfor Thursday Friday. Differentpeopledo things different you should do what works for you and your family.
  • ejohndrow
    ejohndrow Posts: 1,399 Member
    ejohndrow wrote: »
    There aren't any decent options for food at work and I'm not paying someone $$ to make a crappy salad I can make myself, with better ingredients. Anyway, food prep is helpful for various lifestyles and it's helped me out a lot.

    Apparently my phone had rent on the mind in my earlier post. I'd better proofread better before submitting via mobile

  • Noodle797
    Noodle797 Posts: 366 Member
    edited September 2017
    My boyfriend and I meal Prep for the week on Sundays. We cook up several things and portion them off into separate containers then put them all in the freezer. That way we can each just grab one to take for lunch and one for dinner when we get home. No excuse to go out to eat or get fast food/take-away when you can have a hot meal in about three minutes from the microwave. Plus when we cook & freeze several things at once we can have decent variety during the week. It doesn't work for everyone, but it works well for us.
  • hesn92
    hesn92 Posts: 5,966 Member
    I don't meal prep. Just doesn't make sense to me. I don't eat breakfast, and for lunch I either bring leftovers from dinner or a sandwich, which I would never prep ahead of time lol. I have occasionally made a lasagna or chicken pot pie ahead of time to bake later in the week. I have gotten better about picking meals that don't take too long to make on week nights. At most I will spend an hour making dinner.
  • Treece68
    Treece68 Posts: 780 Member
    edited September 2017
    I meal prep by making more dinner then 2 can eat and freeze one and put the other in the fridge for lunch. To eat the same thing every day for a whole week BORING!!!
  • rybo
    rybo Posts: 5,424 Member
    I meal prep my lunches for the week. It takes me 15 minutes on a Sunday.
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    yirara wrote: »
    It might sound odd, but maybe there are cultural differences here. What the kitten is meal prep? When googling I see rows and rows of containers with different compartments containing different food.

    1. Is that how the average American eat though out the day
    2. How long does it take to prepare all this???
    3. And do you throw the containers out? This looks like so much garbage.

    Now, hear me out. For me, eating throughout the day looks very different. I get up, make a pile of bread (butter, slice of cheese or something meaty, second slice on top), grab veggies and fruits for the day. Some people I know do the same, others have cereals, porridge or other things for breakfast. But anyway, nothing complicated throughout the day. Then cooking for me takes 30 minutes max with all preparations, and probably dishes if I was to do them every day. I often cook for 2-3 days and just warm up the leftovers or cook fresh rice or pasta for those. So I guess I hardly ever spend more than 30 minutes on preparing and cooking food in a day. Even with a busy job that's not a lot.

    Seeing all those containers with stuff boggles my mind. Do I misunderstand food prep?

    No, this is not how the average American eats throughout the day...the average American mindlessly shovels food into their face.

    My wife and I don't use any specialized compartment containers. My wife does more prep than I do...she will typically make 5 salads for lunches during the week on Sunday and she just uses a regular washable container. I usually grill up a bunch of chicken on Sunday so that we have a protein for lunches for most of the week. I also often make enough food with our evening meal to have leftovers...which is about the extent of my meal prep.

    Those special containers are washed and re-used.
  • avskk
    avskk Posts: 1,787 Member
    I do a mix of meal prep and fresh cooking. Usually, I'll make a big batch of soup or something similar in quantity (a casserole, a sheet-pan roast) over the weekend and eat it all week. I also usually make one other thing (a quiche, a grain salad) that can work as a dinner side or a full lunch. Then throughout the week I cook mostly fresh dinners, but I eat the prepped food for lunches, sides, and the occasional full dinner. I tend to cook three times during the work week and eat leftovers the other two nights -- I guess it's like mini-prep?

    Plenty of people do the weekly pack with portioned containers so they have food to take to work or classes or whatever. It's a significant improvement over eating out or endless soggy sandwiches!
  • Tried30UserNames
    Tried30UserNames Posts: 561 Member
    I'm not sure what you're talking about with the rows and rows of special containers, but I'm not a Pinterest or Facebook person and those sound like you might be seeing something on there.

    I meal prep. And it sounds like you do, too, if you're cooking for 2-3 days at a time and warming up the food later.

    I wash and trim my vegetables when I get home from the store. That's meal prep.

    I made stuffed peppers a couple weeks ago. I made 4 servings, ate them for dinner 2 days in a row and froze the other 2 servings in individual containers. I made moussaka last week. I ate it for dinner 3 days and froze 5 servings in individual containers. I put the frozen food in a Pyrex container and reheat in the oven. My individual freezer containers are usually old pint sized sour cream or cottage cheese or yogurt containers. If I use them at home, I wash them and reuse later. If I take food to work in them, sometimes I rewash or I throw them away if there's no running water available. I often have a pan in the refrigerator with rice in it because when I cook rice, I make several servings at once. All of that is meal prep.

    The average American eats in a restaurant, orders delivery or picks up takeout from a restaurant or grocery store. I know almost nobody who cooks on a regular basis. A "homecooked" dinner these days means buying a rotisserie chicken and serving it with a Trader Joe's pre-assembled salad and some already cooked quinoa. Sometimes people get really domestic and bake their own sweet potatoes instead of buying the quinoa dish from the food bar at Whole Foods. I think the average American breakfast is either a Starbucks latte or a carton of yogurt.
  • lemurcat12
    lemurcat12 Posts: 30,886 Member
    Francl27 wrote: »
    I think it's just making meals ahead? Like roasting a chicken for the week or whatever... obviously there are different degrees to that.

    Yeah, this. My idea of meal prep is that when I make dinner I make enough so I have leftovers to use for a lunch and maybe enough for a second dinner. I might roast a chicken or make a stew or some pulled pork or anything on the weekend with a plan to use it for a few lunches or a couple of lunches and a dinner, too. Or I might not.

    Beyond that, I think about what I might have during the week and get out anything I need from the freezer (or buy it).

    The containers are reusable, as others have said. I have some for lunches, although not enough for 5-7 days worth, and I never cook that far ahead, I like to be able to be flexible.
  • Ironandwine69
    Ironandwine69 Posts: 2,432 Member
    When you spend all *kitten* Sunday cooking. And then eat the same thing all *kitten* week, wishing you would just die by Thursday
  • Duchy82
    Duchy82 Posts: 560 Member
    I meal prep in the sense that I will make a big pan of soup, if that is what I fancy for lunches during the week and l will portion that daily into my soup mug and grab something to go with it like bread or this week I made falafel so that comes with. I also grill chicken breast for the other half for his lunches portion it out and freeze and he will boil enough eggs for him to take 1 to work each day. As for evening meals I tend to make big batches of homemade pasta sauce and roast veggies and such, I portion and freeze for those days I don't feel like cooking elaborate meals then it's just heat up and eat. But that's it.
  • amusedmonkey
    amusedmonkey Posts: 10,330 Member
    I'm not sure what you're talking about with the rows and rows of special containers, but I'm not a Pinterest or Facebook person and those sound like you might be seeing something on there.

    Something like this:

    b3214fb9baf4273e9606cb7fa31a9d10--how-to-meal-plan-for-two-meal-prep-for-one.jpg
  • seltzermint555
    seltzermint555 Posts: 10,740 Member
    ^ Pic from Pinterest may look pretty but I just have to laugh (and gag a bit) thinking of how nasty some of that would taste refrigerated and reheated and flavors beginning to mix. So gross to me. Even at the bottom row, what looks like turkey, tomatoes & cucumbers...it seems like that would taste disgusting after about two days in the fridge.
  • JoRocka
    JoRocka Posts: 17,525 Member
    That's what my fridge looks like- lots of containers- one main one for lunch- and then two small ones (two for each day)

    the whole point of it is just to pre-portion the food out to get it done and ready to go for the week. I only cook 1 x a week. I do the lunch and then I have snacks for the day (carrots for the AM- and yogurt in the PM).

    No- most people don't do this- but it sure makes life a LOT easier to deal with IMHO.

    also- I reuse all my Tupperware as much as possible to reduce waste.
  • seltzermint555
    seltzermint555 Posts: 10,740 Member

    The average American eats in a restaurant, orders delivery or picks up takeout from a restaurant or grocery store. I know almost nobody who cooks on a regular basis. A "homecooked" dinner these days means buying a rotisserie chicken and serving it with a Trader Joe's pre-assembled salad and some already cooked quinoa. Sometimes people get really domestic and bake their own sweet potatoes instead of buying the quinoa dish from the food bar at Whole Foods. I think the average American breakfast is either a Starbucks latte or a carton of yogurt.

    Waste of money...I cringe at that. Although I do go out to eat a couple times a week, I can't even imagine wasting cash on *that*

  • rheddmobile
    rheddmobile Posts: 6,840 Member
    ^ Pic from Pinterest may look pretty but I just have to laugh (and gag a bit) thinking of how nasty some of that would taste refrigerated and reheated and flavors beginning to mix. So gross to me. Even at the bottom row, what looks like turkey, tomatoes & cucumbers...it seems like that would taste disgusting after about two days in the fridge.

    This is what I wonder about. Sliced veggies deteriorate quickly. Sliced strawberries start getting mushy within a couple of hours, much less days. Who wants to eat fresh food that was fresh five days ago? I think one of those is some sort of grilled fish, which should really be eaten within 24 hours to be at its best.
  • theowlbox
    theowlbox Posts: 912 Member
    Meal prep is a great tool, but everyone does it for different reasons. To save time because you're single and go out a lot, or are in school, or have kids and need to cook for children and adults who eat differently, etc. It's a frequent staple in people trying to save money who want to cook large quantities and freeze before they go bad, use cheaper cuts of meat that are larger and a single person would buy, or to avoid buying meals out while on the go. People aren't meal prepping 7 cheese sandwiches, they are prepping to hit nutrient goals or to eat cooked recipes of food rather than simple options where 2-3 ing are used. But one thing to keep in mind is that there is a meal prepping aesthetic that is like candy to type a people everywhere. Things matching? Pictures on pinterest? Perfectly stacked freezers? Aside from being iseful, there is a satisfaction that comes with meal prep for a certain type of person. I just made my 93 year old uncle 12 plastic containers of frozen plum crunch and apple cake so he doesn't eat his crappy ice cream bars made from processed funk. Just looking at those stacked containers gave me a peacock tail. So it might be cultural, but it might also be a form of organization worship. :smile:
  • seltzermint555
    seltzermint555 Posts: 10,740 Member
    theowlbox wrote: »
    Meal prep is a great tool, but everyone does it for different reasons. To save time because you're single and go out a lot, or are in school, or have kids and need to cook for children and adults who eat differently, etc. It's a frequent staple in people trying to save money who want to cook large quantities and freeze before they go bad, use cheaper cuts of meat that are larger and a single person would buy, or to avoid buying meals out while on the go. People aren't meal prepping 7 cheese sandwiches, they are prepping to hit nutrient goals or to eat cooked recipes of food rather than simple options where 2-3 ing are used. But one thing to keep in mind is that there is a meal prepping aesthetic that is like candy to type a people everywhere. Things matching? Pictures on pinterest? Perfectly stacked freezers? Aside from being iseful, there is a satisfaction that comes with meal prep for a certain type of person. I just made my 93 year old uncle 12 plastic containers of frozen plum crunch and apple cake so he doesn't eat his crappy ice cream bars made from processed funk. Just looking at those stacked containers gave me a peacock tail. So it might be cultural, but it might also be a form of organization worship. :smile:

    Peacock tail!! I LOVE IT!!

    Yeah, definitely can see the appeal in a lot of ways.

  • ritzvin
    ritzvin Posts: 2,860 Member
    I always prep food in advance. For me, breakfast, lunch, dinner, and post-workout snacks are almost always eaten at either work or a dancing venue. Then a late supper after dancing - usually the only thing I eat at home (and I'm not about to do anything more than microwaving/assembling at 11pm). Not everyone has a large enough block of free time to drive home, cook, and eat between work and gym/group run/cycling/dancing/other stuff.

    For soup/stew, I usually do leave the large pot in the fridge, and only portion out about 3 containers at a time.
    If doing salad at work, I'll just throw some of the greens from the salad spinner into a produce bag and bring the seasonings/etc separately. I usually just do soup though - less effort. I pre-mix and portion out batches of greek yogurt and cottage cheese for breakfast and snacks (the 1 cup pyrex glass storage cups are great for that) and keep hard boiled eggs handy.

    I usually wash the containers at work after eating (since I'm rarely home for long enough to wash them there).
  • cwolfman13
    cwolfman13 Posts: 41,865 Member
    72 hours is my max for prepared in advance food...even shorter for some things. Most of my prep is done the night before for the next day...breakfast, lunch, and snacks. Dinner is almost always fresh...
  • ritzvin
    ritzvin Posts: 2,860 Member
    Even with meal prep, dinner for me has been 2 pouches of fruit snacks pre-run followed later by 1/2 a Clif bar + 1/2 a single-serve tub of peanut butter while simultaneously strapping on dance shoes on more occasions than I might like to admit.