Anonymous wrote:I don't know, but I'm pretty sure that it would be more than getting meal kits, or buying prepared foods at Whole Foods, or getting healthy restaurant takeout delivered. We don't really cook, but I can cook some rice and toss some Trader Joes food and frozen vegetables in the microwave and have a passable meal on the table in 15 minutes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a ton of people who will shop and come over and cook all Monday for you for the week. Usually in the various immigrant communities and its not per hour but per number of dishes you want. Youd still have to reheat things ar dinner time.
NP and this seems like a much better option. Honestly cooking is the easy part, it's the prep (mainly chopping veggies) that takes the most time. Hire someone one day a week to chop up veggies for the week and arrange them in Tupperware boxes in your fridge and you're all set.
Or buy precut vegetables at a grocery store. Logistically, that seems a lot easier, even if you don't care about the cost.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are a ton of people who will shop and come over and cook all Monday for you for the week. Usually in the various immigrant communities and its not per hour but per number of dishes you want. Youd still have to reheat things ar dinner time.
NP and this seems like a much better option. Honestly cooking is the easy part, it's the prep (mainly chopping veggies) that takes the most time. Hire someone one day a week to chop up veggies for the week and arrange them in Tupperware boxes in your fridge and you're all set.
Anonymous wrote:There are a ton of people who will shop and come over and cook all Monday for you for the week. Usually in the various immigrant communities and its not per hour but per number of dishes you want. Youd still have to reheat things ar dinner time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about a private cook?
I'm a pretty good cook. I make a nice variety of dishes. I'm used to accommodating a variety of needs like veganism and food allergies. But I'm just a "mom" cook and not a professional chef.
I would much rather cook than my current job. How much would people pay for someone like me to come in for a few hours and leave with dinner on the table, lunch boxes packed, and something for breakfast the next morning? If you have kids, I'm happy to involve them so they learn to cook too.
I'm talking about regular family food, not restaurant fancy food.
I'd much rather have someone like you cook for us! You should create a userid here for these type of posts in case someone wants to reach out to you in private.
I'm a single parent, so I'm not really in a position to quit my job right now, and I don't have time to take on clients, and work, and parent. I could totally see taking on some clients when my kids go off to college though, and then maybe working up from there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about a private cook?
I'm a pretty good cook. I make a nice variety of dishes. I'm used to accommodating a variety of needs like veganism and food allergies. But I'm just a "mom" cook and not a professional chef.
I would much rather cook than my current job. How much would people pay for someone like me to come in for a few hours and leave with dinner on the table, lunch boxes packed, and something for breakfast the next morning? If you have kids, I'm happy to involve them so they learn to cook too.
I'm talking about regular family food, not restaurant fancy food.
I'd much rather have someone like you cook for us! You should create a userid here for these type of posts in case someone wants to reach out to you in private.
Anonymous wrote:What about a private cook?
I'm a pretty good cook. I make a nice variety of dishes. I'm used to accommodating a variety of needs like veganism and food allergies. But I'm just a "mom" cook and not a professional chef.
I would much rather cook than my current job. How much would people pay for someone like me to come in for a few hours and leave with dinner on the table, lunch boxes packed, and something for breakfast the next morning? If you have kids, I'm happy to involve them so they learn to cook too.
I'm talking about regular family food, not restaurant fancy food.
Anonymous wrote:We used a chef for a bit. It was about 900-1000/week. Got us thru a very busy time but was not sustainable.
She came on Monday afternoons and Thursday afternoons - grocery shopped, prepped meals, cut up veggies and fruit. Food was amazing.
Then she shifted to making food in a shared kitchen off site and we didn't see much of her. It turned into a very expensive meal delivery service, so we quit.
It was a life saver and made things so much easier (and healthier)
HHI upper 800's
Anonymous wrote:We used a chef for a bit. It was about 900-1000/week. Got us thru a very busy time but was not sustainable.
She came on Monday afternoons and Thursday afternoons - grocery shopped, prepped meals, cut up veggies and fruit. Food was amazing.
Then she shifted to making food in a shared kitchen off site and we didn't see much of her. It turned into a very expensive meal delivery service, so we quit.
It was a life saver and made things so much easier (and healthier)
HHI upper 800's
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What about a private cook?
I'm a pretty good cook. I make a nice variety of dishes. I'm used to accommodating a variety of needs like veganism and food allergies. But I'm just a "mom" cook and not a professional chef.
I would much rather cook than my current job. How much would people pay for someone like me to come in for a few hours and leave with dinner on the table, lunch boxes packed, and something for breakfast the next morning? If you have kids, I'm happy to involve them so they learn to cook too.
I'm talking about regular family food, not restaurant fancy food.
I would pay ~$150 per day I think. Does that seem unreasonable? I have literally no frame of reference for this.