Anonymous wrote:Costco is awful for that type of shopping. You will end up wasting money and food. I prefer to order exactly what I need for each meal and have it delivered 2-3x a week.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you buy half a cow from a local farmer? That would take a lot of guesswork and save tons of money.
OP here we get all of our beef from a local farmer.
But that still begs the question…how to meal prep or plan ahead with Costco?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you buy half a cow from a local farmer? That would take a lot of guesswork and save tons of money.
OP here we get all of our beef from a local farmer.
But that still begs the question…how to meal prep or plan ahead with Costco?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you buy half a cow from a local farmer? That would take a lot of guesswork and save tons of money.
OP here we get all of our beef from a local farmer.
But that still begs the question…how to meal prep or plan ahead with Costco?
Why does it have to be Costco? If you’re cooking from scratch a grocery store is more useful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Stuffed peppers are great for meal prep. They freeze well, too. You can get everything at Costco (bell peppers, ground beef/turkey, rice, cheese).
I always have jarred pasta sauce, organic pasta variety pack, Parmesan, and Kirkland pesto on hand for pasta night.
Caesar salad kit, Kirkland frozen breaded chicken chunks, and tortillas/wraps for chicken Caesar wraps.
three children under 5 won't eat stuffed peppers ask me how I know
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you buy half a cow from a local farmer? That would take a lot of guesswork and save tons of money.
OP here we get all of our beef from a local farmer.
But that still begs the question…how to meal prep or plan ahead with Costco?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:we do a ton of Costco with a protein (chicken, beef tenderloin, salmon or pork tenderloin), roasted veggies (usually broccoli) and bagged salad (mediterranean), sometimes rice on rotate and repeat
Does it get boring? Does it feel like “cooking”?
Anonymous wrote:Since it sounds like you don’t really cook, here are some ideas for premade stuff we regular stock up on from there for a quick kid friendly dinner:
Chicken cilantro wontons: steam with a bit of broth in a skillet with sugar snap peas or broccoli
Ravioli + sauce
Gyro meat. Serve on pitas with cherry tomato’s, cucumbers, red onion, plain yogurt
Frozen meatballs. Make meatball subs or pasta
Chicken apple sausage. Slice and sauté with apples and onions. Serve on rice
Salmon burgers / salmon fillets. Grill and put on a bun with avocado and lettuce.
The chicken tacos and chickpea/quinoa salad in the premade meals case are really good too.
Anonymous wrote:we do a ton of Costco with a protein (chicken, beef tenderloin, salmon or pork tenderloin), roasted veggies (usually broccoli) and bagged salad (mediterranean), sometimes rice on rotate and repeat