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Meal Planning

Dinnertime at our house sometimes gets a little crazy. Doesn't everybody's? George does most of the cooking in our house, which he's *mostly* fine with. I don't love to cook, but I don't hate it, and I was starting to feel guilty that he's doing too much of it so a couple of weeks ago we sat down to remedy that so I could take my turn cooking more often.


Now, what I do hate about cooking the evening meal is coming up with what to eat and having to think too much at the end of the day. Therefore, we decided to go back to something we've tried, with some success, in the past--a pre-planned, weekly rotating menu.

For each night of the week, we set out general guidelines for what we're going to eat that night. We also divided up the cooking so that I cook three times a week and George cooks four. Both of these things take a lot of pressure off us, and I'm actually enjoying coming up with things to cook on my nights.

You'll see in our plan below that I get Tuesday crock-pot night, Wednesday hot dog night (something easy to cook because George is out of the house teaching private music lessons that night), and Sunday grilled cheese and soup night. My nights are quite easy, yes, and I like that. I prefer to cook with recipes and, when I know in advance that it's my night to cook, I can have fun finding good ones to try. And, because I'm using the crock-pot or making soup, I can cook my meals earlier in the day when I feel more alive.

Here's our latest weekly plan:

Mondays--George cooks--salmon patties or hamburgers; potatoes and a green vegetable

Tuesdays--Lisa cooks--crock pot meal and whole grain rolls or bread

Wednesdays--Lisa cooks--hot dogs with buns; cooked carrots or corn

Thursdays--George cooks--beans and rice or tortillas; squash

Fridays--grocery store deli or George's homemade--PIZZA NIGHT!

Saturdays--George cooks--crock pot meal with meat; make bread or rolls!

Sundays--Lisa cooks--grilled cheese sandwiches and homemade tomato or vegetable soup

For most of our planned meals, we always have the ingredients on hand. For example, we always have canned salmon in the pantry for salmon patty night, and sometimes we have ground beef from a local farm in the freezer for when we want to mix it up and eat something different. (BTW, both of those foods are Rose's least favorite, so we have to be prepared for some Monday night battle--why not make it Monday night? Actually, I often do let her eat an egg instead of a salmon patty because our eggs also provide the needed omega-3 fatty acids that salmon does, and I really want her to get that in her diet.)

There is quite a bit of room for variety in the plan, too, as you'll see we have generic "crock pot night" or "soup night" or "beans and rice" night. On beans night, for instance, we can have Indian lentils and rice with spicy onions (yum!), or we can have black beans and tortillas, or whatever. That's George's night, so he can feel free to improvise (within the limits of what the rest of us will eat, of course!).

Tonight I'm making "Reyna's Crock-Pot Enchilada Casserole" from the great cookbook, Saving Dinner by Leanne Ely of http://www.flylady.net/ and http://www.savingdinner.com/ fame. We haven't tried this one before, but we've never had a bad meal from this cookbook. It's a simple recipe and at least the spoonful I just tasted is tasty! Here it is:


1-14.5 oz. can whole tomatoes
1 onion, cut into fourths
2 cloves garlic, pressed
1/2 teaspoon ground red pepper
1/2 teaspoon salt
1-6 oz. can tomato paste
12 corn tortillas
1 pound ground beef, browned and drained
3 cups cheddar cheese, grated


In a blender or food processor, blend tomatoes and their liquid with onion and garlic. Add ground red pepper, salt and tomato paste and blend some more.


Place 4 tortillas in bottom of crock-pot. Add one-third of the ground beef, one-third of the tomato sauce, and one-third of the cheese. Repeat each layer two more times.


Cover crock-pot and cook on low for 6-8 hours.*


*depending on your crock-pot. Mine seems to run hot and foods don't take nearly as long to cook as recipes say. This meal has been in the crock-pot on low for 3 hours now and looks and smells quite done, so I turned it to "warm" until we eat at 6 p.m.

Comments

changingways said…
That sounds so yummy, I might try it next week, I've found only a few successful meals for my slow cooker.

I've been thinking about if there was an easier way to meal plan each week, be it regular type of meal each day or a rotating schedule of meals.
Jenny said…
Am going to try a few of your recipes :) And low and behold, as I begin to read your blog, and I scroll down and what do I see? The Flylady :) YEA!!!! A fellow flylady enthusiast. Me too.

Gracie
Sara said…
The meal planning is such a good idea. We used to do it, but haven't since about September. We have suffered a bit because of that. Thanks for putting it back in my mind so that hopefully we can start it again. And that casserole looks and sounds so good!
Kitchen Mama said…
I am interested to know your recipe for salmon patties. I have a never-ending supply of canned Alaskan salmon and I don't know what to do with it other than mix it with mayo to spread on bread or crackers.

I have planned out a weekly menu for the past couple years. I choose different meals each week, but I work from a master list of meals that everyone likes. It saves on money and trips to the grocery store (my least favorite thing to do ever). I hope it works out for your family as well as it works for us.

Thanks! Arienne
Judy T said…
We started planning our menus for the week a little over a year ago. Things go so much more smoothly. On Saturdays I take stock of what we have on hand, plan the menus and do the shopping for the week. I have a small dry-erase board on the fridge with the week's menu so everyone knows what to expect and I don't get the 'What's for Dinner?' question.
Jim said…
The Enchilada Casserole looks delicious. I need to dig my crock pot out of the cabinet and give it a try.
Gina said…
meal planning has been on my "goal list" for a couple of years now (and I still haven't tackled it!!!) I have the same issue with DH being gone most of the week and it is hard to get motivated to cook with just me and the kids (and at 6 pm when I get home from work). the CP enchilada recipe sounds intriguing and I will try it this week.

Since we are only eating from our stored foods now, I really need to get on this goal!
Lisa Zahn said…
The Enchilada Casserole was pretty good, but the husband and son just thought it was okay. I'd give it a B-, but it's still worth making. My husband wanted "real enchilada sauce" in it, which of course he can make off the top of his head but I just follow the recipe. I thought it was fine! (But DH doesn't usually complain so I guess I have to take it seriously...)

I'll try and post some more recipes, including the salmon patty one, soon.

Lisa
Anonymous said…
You would think that with so many people extolling the virtues of meal planning, that I would get on the stick and do it. One of these days. . . .

The crockpot is my friend, though I want to get a new digital one with a timer or auto shut-off. Mine cooks hot as well, and I always worry about stuff getting overdone and/or burning.
Tara said…
I do almost all of the cooking in our house (generally without recipes) and we split duties for awhile and it worked out great. I love to cook but need a break sometimes. Now DH has a really long commute and I work from home most days so I'm back to all the cooking! I'm usually good about meal planning, but have fallen off the wagon since Christmas.

It's just the two of us, so I usually cook about four or five times a week, and the other days we eat the leftovers. My five-day meal plan usually looks something like:

one meat dish
one pasta dish
one rice/grain based dish
one soup
one "other" (baked potatoes, quiche, etc.)

It doesn't always go exactly like that, but I find that does help me to keep things varied!

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