Anonymous wrote:My teen boys like the relatively new chopped bagged salads. The toppings make them fun but are quite proportionate. My kids eat croutons and tortilla strips out of the bag, and those bags are expensive. So the salads seem affordable enough since they provide toppings but in modest amounts. The ones we like best are Steakhouse Wedge, various Southwest-inspired blends, and the kale with cranberries, pepitas, and poppyseed dressing.
Anonymous wrote:I love the website skinnytaste.com. The woman who runs it posts weekly meal plans with grocery lists. Everything is healthy, easy, and ready in 30 minutes. There are a decent number of repeat recipes, but I think frequent rotation makes things easier anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I marinate chicken the night before. It’s easy to put on the rice/toast naan, steam some vegetables and cut up fruit while the protein cooks in the oven. We make fish in parchment, put vegetables and herbs inside and voila, dinner. Sheet pan meals are quick and easy to do. The key is to do some prep work the night before: all the chopping and washing that takes time. And there’s always the trusty crockpot especially with this season.
Definitely true that the washing and chopping of vegetables is the big time suck. Also the cleanup of all the veggie scraps and cutting boards that can’t go in dishwasher. We eat a LOT of fresh vegetables, not just a steamed side or whatnot.
Prepping the night before doesn’t work because things like salads get soggy, though I will look into a spinner and things like cauliflower turn brown
Also, we are running kids around at night, homework, and I already stay up late cleaning the kitchen from dinner — i don’t see how prepping separately, storing in MORE Tupperware to clean later, saves time. It time shifts I agree, but my aggregate time cooking increases since I have to handle the same food twice.
But I will look into a spinner — if we can wash and cut veggies for 2-3 nights that could help us get to Thurs. but it sounds like a lot of frozen or canned food or takeout is a staple of working parents?
Seriously for public health they should allow more part time work to support families:
https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC4001859/
“ We show that children whose mothers work more consume more unhealthy foods (e.g. soda, fast food) and less healthy foods (e.g. fruits, vegetables, milk) and watch more television. Although they report being slightly more physically active, likely due to organized physical activities, the BMI and obesity results suggest that the deterioration in diet and increase in sedentary behaviors dominate.”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I marinate chicken the night before. It’s easy to put on the rice/toast naan, steam some vegetables and cut up fruit while the protein cooks in the oven. We make fish in parchment, put vegetables and herbs inside and voila, dinner. Sheet pan meals are quick and easy to do. The key is to do some prep work the night before: all the chopping and washing that takes time. And there’s always the trusty crockpot especially with this season.
Definitely true that the washing and chopping of vegetables is the big time suck. Also the cleanup of all the veggie scraps and cutting boards that can’t go in dishwasher. We eat a LOT of fresh vegetables, not just a steamed side or whatnot.
Prepping the night before doesn’t work because things like salads get soggy, though I will look into a spinner and things like cauliflower turn brown
Also, we are running kids around at night, homework, and I already stay up late cleaning the kitchen from dinner — i don’t see how prepping separately, storing in MORE Tupperware to clean later, saves time. It time shifts I agree, but my aggregate time cooking increases since I have to handle the same food twice.
But I will look into a spinner — if we can wash and cut veggies for 2-3 nights that could help us get to Thurs. but it sounds like a lot of frozen or canned food or takeout is a staple of working parents?
Anonymous wrote:I marinate chicken the night before. It’s easy to put on the rice/toast naan, steam some vegetables and cut up fruit while the protein cooks in the oven. We make fish in parchment, put vegetables and herbs inside and voila, dinner. Sheet pan meals are quick and easy to do. The key is to do some prep work the night before: all the chopping and washing that takes time. And there’s always the trusty crockpot especially with this season.
Anonymous wrote:If you both work, why not hire a personal assistant/chef to cook dinner? It's not that expensive and they will do the prep/cooking/cleanup for yiu.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do people make tacos quickly?
1) sautee beef
2) wash and shred lettuce
3) wash and shred cilantro, onion, dice tomatoes.
4) shred cheese or I guess use anti-caking agent cheese
It seems as much work or more than a salad?
2-4 happens while the meat is cooking.