Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No matter if they’re eaten earlier or later, or with one family member at the table or everyone, I still try to make “nice” meals every day. They may not be fancy on busy days, just a soup on the stove, or a hefty salad that sits in the fridge for everyone to help themselves.
I consult the family and the calendar, make a plan for the week and shop for the ingredients over the weekend. Then whoever has the lighter schedule on a given day does the cooking.
I try to keep all that in mind as I plan, especially everyone’s cooking strengths and individual schedules. So if I have to be somewhere on Tuesday, we’ll have something DH enjoys cooking. If everyone is busy, it will be something that can be prepped the night before, or a crockpot meal.
My family would not eat a salad from the fridge and consider that dinner.
Dp- then you are making your salads wrong. A good salad presents the same ingredients as a good plated meal, just in a different form.
Our salads typically are - grilled chicken, mixed greens with extra baby spinach, avocado, shredded broccoli, shredded carrots, sliced almonds or seeds, craisins, tomatoes and cucumbers. Often with a boiled egg white and amazing bread.
How is
Sounds delicious and I’d love that for dinner! My DH and teens would not go for it though.
How do you shred broccoli?
Anonymous wrote:I cook at least four nights a week but with two teens and a tween in various activities, we rarely eat all together. I’m thrilled if I get at least three of us together out of the five. I usually have the teens heat up their plate after dance or sport. We have Sunday night dinner at home as a family or go out to a restaurant Saturday.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No matter if they’re eaten earlier or later, or with one family member at the table or everyone, I still try to make “nice” meals every day. They may not be fancy on busy days, just a soup on the stove, or a hefty salad that sits in the fridge for everyone to help themselves.
I consult the family and the calendar, make a plan for the week and shop for the ingredients over the weekend. Then whoever has the lighter schedule on a given day does the cooking.
I try to keep all that in mind as I plan, especially everyone’s cooking strengths and individual schedules. So if I have to be somewhere on Tuesday, we’ll have something DH enjoys cooking. If everyone is busy, it will be something that can be prepped the night before, or a crockpot meal.
My family would not eat a salad from the fridge and consider that dinner.
Dp- then you are making your salads wrong. A good salad presents the same ingredients as a good plated meal, just in a different form.
Our salads typically are - grilled chicken, mixed greens with extra baby spinach, avocado, shredded broccoli, shredded carrots, sliced almonds or seeds, craisins, tomatoes and cucumbers. Often with a boiled egg white and amazing bread.
How is
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My tweens have manners. They also have sports practice 3x week in the evenings (differing nights) plus traveling weekends for tournaments. We do the best we can. Some weeks I meal prep, other weeks there is too much take out or easy meals (like quesadillas). But it is more than not we are eating on the fly, including in the car. It is what it is. They are happy and busy. It’s a season of life.
Exact same life here with two club players. I treasure our time in the car and watching them play.
I enjoy cooking and will bulk cook and meal prep on Sundays. Kids love easy healthy stuff like salmon cakes and roasted veggies soup. We are all lovers of poke bowls and salads so I make sure I’ve got healthy proteins ready so they can make dinner if I’m with the other.
Anonymous wrote:I used to cook pretty nice meals 5-7 days a week. Now kids are in and out with sports, games, work, and I find I am always frazzled to cook unless I prepped during the day. I wah so can some days, but not always. So sometimes we eat really fast meals. Today ds just scarfed down tortellini between practice and going to work, and dd and dh aren't home yet.
Anonymous wrote:I used to cook pretty nice meals 5-7 days a week. Now kids are in and out with sports, games, work, and I find I am always frazzled to cook unless I prepped during the day. I wah so can some days, but not always. So sometimes we eat really fast meals. Today ds just scarfed down tortellini between practice and going to work, and dd and dh aren't home yet.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No matter if they’re eaten earlier or later, or with one family member at the table or everyone, I still try to make “nice” meals every day. They may not be fancy on busy days, just a soup on the stove, or a hefty salad that sits in the fridge for everyone to help themselves.
I consult the family and the calendar, make a plan for the week and shop for the ingredients over the weekend. Then whoever has the lighter schedule on a given day does the cooking.
I try to keep all that in mind as I plan, especially everyone’s cooking strengths and individual schedules. So if I have to be somewhere on Tuesday, we’ll have something DH enjoys cooking. If everyone is busy, it will be something that can be prepped the night before, or a crockpot meal.
My family would not eat a salad from the fridge and consider that dinner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No matter if they’re eaten earlier or later, or with one family member at the table or everyone, I still try to make “nice” meals every day. They may not be fancy on busy days, just a soup on the stove, or a hefty salad that sits in the fridge for everyone to help themselves.
I consult the family and the calendar, make a plan for the week and shop for the ingredients over the weekend. Then whoever has the lighter schedule on a given day does the cooking.
I try to keep all that in mind as I plan, especially everyone’s cooking strengths and individual schedules. So if I have to be somewhere on Tuesday, we’ll have something DH enjoys cooking. If everyone is busy, it will be something that can be prepped the night before, or a crockpot meal.
My family would not eat a salad from the fridge and consider that dinner.
Dp- then you are making your salads wrong. A good salad presents the same ingredients as a good plated meal, just in a different form.
Our salads typically are - grilled chicken, mixed greens with extra baby spinach, avocado, shredded broccoli, shredded carrots, sliced almonds or seeds, craisins, tomatoes and cucumbers. Often with a boiled egg white and amazing bread.
How is
Sounds delicious and I’d love that for dinner! My DH and teens would not go for it though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No matter if they’re eaten earlier or later, or with one family member at the table or everyone, I still try to make “nice” meals every day. They may not be fancy on busy days, just a soup on the stove, or a hefty salad that sits in the fridge for everyone to help themselves.
I consult the family and the calendar, make a plan for the week and shop for the ingredients over the weekend. Then whoever has the lighter schedule on a given day does the cooking.
I try to keep all that in mind as I plan, especially everyone’s cooking strengths and individual schedules. So if I have to be somewhere on Tuesday, we’ll have something DH enjoys cooking. If everyone is busy, it will be something that can be prepped the night before, or a crockpot meal.
My family would not eat a salad from the fridge and consider that dinner.
Dp- then you are making your salads wrong. A good salad presents the same ingredients as a good plated meal, just in a different form.
Our salads typically are - grilled chicken, mixed greens with extra baby spinach, avocado, shredded broccoli, shredded carrots, sliced almonds or seeds, craisins, tomatoes and cucumbers. Often with a boiled egg white and amazing bread.
How is