Anonymous wrote:Career nanny here. This is what I have done for all my nanny families (and a few friends who are busy moms):
1) Come up with a list of 18 meals your family at least sort of likes. This is 6 meals a week plus one day of leftovers or takeout.
I like to break it down by day so like every Sunday is something I have to bake in the oven, every Monday is a crock pot meal, Tuesday soup/salad, Wednesday sheet pan dinner, Thursday pasta, Friday stir fry, something like that.
You now have a Week 1 menu, Week 2 menu and Week 3 menu.
2) Write out a shopping list for ingredients for each week. Depending on how often you like to shop, break it into two lists (Sun-Tuesday and Wed-Friday for example).
Going forward shop according to the list and make whatever is on the list for that night. Your family in never eating any particular meal more than on e every 21 days so you can do this for years and nobody will because absolutely bored of a specific food.
Anonymous wrote:Now that my kid has moved out, I cook a big meal or two on the weekends and eat it all week. Usually, I eat the salad kits for fresh veg. This week, it’s low cal Gen Tso’s chicken and tortellini soup. I’ll steam broccoli on the days I eat the Chinese dish. I work 60+ hour weeks, so I’ve gotten over my dislike of eating the same food for a week. Freezer meals that get done in a crockpot would be good for feeding a family during the week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I never understand bagged salad. It takes like 3 minutes to wash/dry lettuce and tear it up. And it seems like bagged salads are always getting recalled for listeria. I would feel very uncomfortable just eating it out of the bag and not washing it.
Np. I’m not eating lettuce. I eat spring mix- arugula, romaine and spinach. What’s the purpose of eating lettuce?!? It has almost no nutritional value.
Anonymous wrote:I never understand bagged salad. It takes like 3 minutes to wash/dry lettuce and tear it up. And it seems like bagged salads are always getting recalled for listeria. I would feel very uncomfortable just eating it out of the bag and not washing it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And there is no reason that your kids can’t handle dinner one day a week, once they are 12 or 14. Your husband could do one night and you can eat out or order out another.
NP. My kids know how to cook, but by 12 or 14, they’re never home on week nights in time to cook dinner… they’re at sports practices or other activities. I’m sure that’s true for many/most people.
OP, I know a couple who cooked meals for the whole week every Sunday.
Re-evaluate your schedule so a teen can set aside one night a week to make dinner. See research of the importance of family dinner and cut back just a bit on activities.
Do you have teens? Were you ever a teen? This isn’t a question of multiple activities. One activity is often a 5-6 day/wk commitment.
Anonymous wrote:I never understand bagged salad. It takes like 3 minutes to wash/dry lettuce and tear it up. And it seems like bagged salads are always getting recalled for listeria. I would feel very uncomfortable just eating it out of the bag and not washing it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And there is no reason that your kids can’t handle dinner one day a week, once they are 12 or 14. Your husband could do one night and you can eat out or order out another.
NP. My kids know how to cook, but by 12 or 14, they’re never home on week nights in time to cook dinner… they’re at sports practices or other activities. I’m sure that’s true for many/most people.
OP, I know a couple who cooked meals for the whole week every Sunday.
Re-evaluate your schedule so a teen can set aside one night a week to make dinner. See research of the importance of family dinner and cut back just a bit on activities.
Do you have teens? Were you ever a teen? This isn’t a question of multiple activities. One activity is often a 5-6 day/wk commitment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And there is no reason that your kids can’t handle dinner one day a week, once they are 12 or 14. Your husband could do one night and you can eat out or order out another.
NP. My kids know how to cook, but by 12 or 14, they’re never home on week nights in time to cook dinner… they’re at sports practices or other activities. I’m sure that’s true for many/most people.
OP, I know a couple who cooked meals for the whole week every Sunday.
Re-evaluate your schedule so a teen can set aside one night a week to make dinner. See research of the importance of family dinner and cut back just a bit on activities.
Do you have teens? Were you ever a teen? This isn’t a question of multiple activities. One activity is often a 5-6 day/wk commitment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And there is no reason that your kids can’t handle dinner one day a week, once they are 12 or 14. Your husband could do one night and you can eat out or order out another.
NP. My kids know how to cook, but by 12 or 14, they’re never home on week nights in time to cook dinner… they’re at sports practices or other activities. I’m sure that’s true for many/most people.
OP, I know a couple who cooked meals for the whole week every Sunday.
Re-evaluate your schedule so a teen can set aside one night a week to make dinner. See research of the importance of family dinner and cut back just a bit on activities.