Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I did a bunch of reading on dinner prep businesses recently (love the idea), and I hadn't thought of this, but one of the articles mentioned they source their supplies and food from Sysco or similar food vendors. So their vegetables all come pre chopped (which frequently means additives to keep them in good shape while frozen), it isn't the same quality you would necessarily buy depending on your personal preferences, etc.
That really turned me off. Part of the point of Home cooked meals is me knowing all the ingredients are fresh and minimal additives/preservatives. According to this article, they aren't prepping the most of the stuff, they are buying prepared ingredients and you are combining them. I also wondered about the freeze/thaw/freeze thing. Usually quality goes down the more times you thaw and freeze.
I ended up doing Once a month meals at home (using the website by the same name) and love it. It obviously is a ton more work because you have to buy the groceries (Peapod?), do all the prep, clean the dishes, deal with kids at home, etc. But I like that they are truly home cooked meals that I know the source of the ingredients, I can buy my preferred quality level, and I have thousands of recipes to pick from. I have been doing it about 7 months now. The first month was brutal because I didn't follow instructions well (key is to make two of each item, you really get double the meals in not much more time). Last month though I got 31 meals in about 8 hours (not including grocery shopping but everything else such as prep and dishes was included). I break it over 2 days and it isn't bad.
I've only done Plated (and only as a trial) but none of the vegetables or other ingredients came prepared/chopped -- even the artichokes needed to be prepped. And all the veggies were in greenbags for freshness. So maybe some of the food services send heavily preserved stuff, but not all do.
Anonymous wrote:OP, could you create a war chest of quick recipes and then prep/chop in advance? I cook from scratch every night, but what I make during the week can be made in less than 30 minutes with a baby and preschooler hanging on my legs. I sometimes prep out the ingredients the night before or on the weekends. There are a LOT of recipes that don't require too much active cook time to set up, but then passively simmer or bake while you can play with the kids. E.g., quiche, stew, chili, pasta sauce, etc. And there are also super-fast recipes that only require you have the ingredients prepped and 10 minutes to cook, e.g., stirfry, fried rice, udon and veggies, wraps, salads, quesadilla, frittata, shrimp scampi, etc. I've found ethnic food to be easier to prep and cook quickly than the traditional American meat-starch-veggie dinner.
Once you have an arsenal of recipes like this, you'd be surprised how little effort dinner can take.

Anonymous wrote:I did a bunch of reading on dinner prep businesses recently (love the idea), and I hadn't thought of this, but one of the articles mentioned they source their supplies and food from Sysco or similar food vendors. So their vegetables all come pre chopped (which frequently means additives to keep them in good shape while frozen), it isn't the same quality you would necessarily buy depending on your personal preferences, etc.
That really turned me off. Part of the point of Home cooked meals is me knowing all the ingredients are fresh and minimal additives/preservatives. According to this article, they aren't prepping the most of the stuff, they are buying prepared ingredients and you are combining them. I also wondered about the freeze/thaw/freeze thing. Usually quality goes down the more times you thaw and freeze.
I ended up doing Once a month meals at home (using the website by the same name) and love it. It obviously is a ton more work because you have to buy the groceries (Peapod?), do all the prep, clean the dishes, deal with kids at home, etc. But I like that they are truly home cooked meals that I know the source of the ingredients, I can buy my preferred quality level, and I have thousands of recipes to pick from. I have been doing it about 7 months now. The first month was brutal because I didn't follow instructions well (key is to make two of each item, you really get double the meals in not much more time). Last month though I got 31 meals in about 8 hours (not including grocery shopping but everything else such as prep and dishes was included). I break it over 2 days and it isn't bad.
Anonymous wrote:I did a bunch of reading on dinner prep businesses recently (love the idea), and I hadn't thought of this, but one of the articles mentioned they source their supplies and food from Sysco or similar food vendors. So their vegetables all come pre chopped (which frequently means additives to keep them in good shape while frozen), it isn't the same quality you would necessarily buy depending on your personal preferences, etc.
That really turned me off. Part of the point of Home cooked meals is me knowing all the ingredients are fresh and minimal additives/preservatives. According to this article, they aren't prepping the most of the stuff, they are buying prepared ingredients and you are combining them. I also wondered about the freeze/thaw/freeze thing. Usually quality goes down the more times you thaw and freeze.
I ended up doing Once a month meals at home (using the website by the same name) and love it. It obviously is a ton more work because you have to buy the groceries (Peapod?), do all the prep, clean the dishes, deal with kids at home, etc. But I like that they are truly home cooked meals that I know the source of the ingredients, I can buy my preferred quality level, and I have thousands of recipes to pick from. I have been doing it about 7 months now. The first month was brutal because I didn't follow instructions well (key is to make two of each item, you really get double the meals in not much more time). Last month though I got 31 meals in about 8 hours (not including grocery shopping but everything else such as prep and dishes was included). I break it over 2 days and it isn't bad.
Anonymous wrote:Let's Dish was too far away to work for us. Any Blue Apron people out there? I thought I would try. Should I get the "for two" (different recipes?) or the "for four" and refrigerate the leftovers. Are they different. The ad makes them sound different.
