| I have gone through this (multiple times) over the last several months - home with 3 tween/teens and DH. I rarely make breakfast -- mostly on the weekends when I can bake something. Lunch is usually leftovers or whatever you can make in the brief lunch break, but sometimes I'll make soup if I'm inspired. When I'm in a dinner rut we'll do more take out, but from different places -- I'm also sick of eating the same thing! Different grocery stores help too -- I rotate between Safeway, Trader Joes, Whole Foods, and Costco. If one part of the meal can be "done" I'm more motivated to work on the other parts. |
| one thing that we do is make pizza - I buy Molinaro's at Costco. It is a 4 pack of pizza shells and comes with 4 packs of sauce. We just put cheese and anything else we have (olives, onions, oregano, etc.). It also comes with a plastic bag for storage. Quick and easy! I am so sick of cooking too! |
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Our emergency dinners:
Breakfast for dinner Pasta with jarred sauce and (previously frozen) meatballs Grilled cheese (people can individualize) mac and cheese |
| I didn’t realize anyone “made” breakfast. We toast bagels, pour cereal or spoon yogurt. That’s it. |
same here. It's become drudgery. For me it's the combination of not eating out like we used to plus winter cooking. In the summer, we grill much of the time. |
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I feel you OP! Some ways we make it work (will depend on age of kids):
- Only cook for dinner; leftovers, sandwiches, yogurt, etc can be eaten for lunch - Takeout or restaurants about 2x per week for dinner - at least one "Potluck" dinner where everyone just eats what they want from the fridge - Go-tos: fajitas, BLTs, pasta and sauce, omelets for dinner |
| When I feel like this I order a rotisserie chicken, Stouffers frozen Mac & Cheese, and some deli coleslaw. I'm a chef. |
lol! I hear you! |
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I went through this recently and started doing really 'cheater' cooking:
-lots of bag salads with things like baked fish that is either pre-seasoned or just uses lemon + herbs, baked chicken breasts, super basic spaghetti with pre-made meatballs -a giant pot of stew that we get 2-3 days out of -rotisserie chicken + steamed 'ready to go/pre-cut' veggies -fish tacos that are just frozen battered fish + soft tacos + pre-made slaw and everyone assembled their own -stir-fry with pre-prepped veggies -cans of soup with a couple extra veggies or protein added in, or with a sandwich on the side I also unloaded 2 days per week on DH, but they can be as simple as he wants as long as there is a veg and a protein. 99% of the time he does stir fry with chicken, chilli, or burgers/sausages. It also helps to cook a large pot of pasta or rice and then use it for 2-3 meals in a row. We pick up a lot of pre-made hearty salads for lunches, and only do hot cooked breakfast on the weekend. M-F it is cereal, instant oatmeal, toast or yogurt. |
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I only do dinner, and I think some days if asked I would chose death over a life of meal planning and cooking. It is the most in enjoyable, monotonous, unappreciated task.
For my birthday this year, I am asking my husband to take care of dinner for a week. The planning, the buying and the cooking. |
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How old are the kids? At some point, start instituting "on your own" dinner nights.
I feel you though OP. |
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If your kids are old enough, you should set up a cooking schedule. Each person in my home needs to cook one meal a week.
- must have a protein - must have a vegetable (fruit if it’s breakfast for dinner) - can’t be a frozen meal When I cook I put in my audio book so it doesn’t seem as much of a chore. |
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NYT recently did an article about what their Food staff cook when they don't feel like cooking:
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/02/18/dining/quick-easy-recipes-staff-picks.html (Not a bad list of ideas, even if you don't subscribe to get the actual recipes.) |
| We often do a no-cook night. Oven baguette, good cheeses, crudités, boiled eggs, salami or prosciutto. Honey and butter for dessert. Everyone loves it. |
This post was sponsored by the chile crisp lobby. |