To Meal Plan or Not to Meal Plan, that truly is a great question. Does it help some people to save money and eat right? Yes! Does it help everyone? No! But we’ll discuss meal planning ideas and methods below, whether it’s right for you, as well as ways to get you started with some free printables.
Should You be a Meal Planner?
Ask yourself these questions:
- Do you often not get meat out of the freezer until 3pm the day you’re planning on using it, because you just thought of what to make?
- Does making daily meals stress you out?
- Do you feel like making a daily meal is a big chore?
- Do you feel like you’re stuck in a rut with meals?
- Do you eat out often because you don’t feel like cooking or just can’t think of anything to cook?
I’m going to keep it real with you. I am not a huge traditional meal planner. I plan…and then completely ignore it after 3 days. It’s how I roll. Does that mean we eat out? No. I said I’m not a traditional meal planner. I have my methods (see below).
Often, meal planning to some degree will save money, save time, and reduce stress.
Meal Planning Ideas and Methods
Traditional Meal Planning
A great way to follow a traditional meal plan method is to complete the following steps:
Step 1: Make a List of Your Family’s Favorite Meals
- Interview your family. Mine give me the wonderful, “I don’t know”, so I narrow it down and ask them to give me their favorite Breakfast, Lunch, and Dinner. Give them ideas to get their brains moving.
- Make a list of what you enjoy making. Make a list of what’s fast and convenient.
- Categorize it according to Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner, and snacks.
Step 2: Decide on a weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly method
- A weekly method involves sitting down once a week to plan all meals for the upcoming week. A good way to do this is to designate a time and write it on the calendar until it becomes a habit. If I know I’m going to have a busy few weeks I will use the traditional bi-weekly method and get everything ready. Otherwise, I often follow the non-traditional method. I cook according to my mood.
- A bi-weekly method involves making a plan for two weeks at a time. This is my favorite, because of its versatility (and because I know I won’t plan once a week).
- Plan a new set of meals every two weeks.
- Plan for 2 weeks and repeat. I make a two week plan for spring, summer, Fall, and winter to keep with seasonal veggies and whether we’ll be grilling, etc. Honestly, you’re only eating the same meal twice a month so they don’t get old before you change seasons.
- A monthly method involves sitting down a making a plan for the month. They can be all different, or you can repeat meals, whatever you choose. A lot of people who make monthly plan will also buy what they need and prepare a lot of items ahead of time ( cut veggies that will be frozen, dice chicken and add spices, etc.).
Stick that Favorite Meals List on your fridge
Step 3: Make a List of Supplies and Purchase Them
Whether you choose a weekly, bi-weekly, or monthly method, you can easily make a list of everything you will need for that time period. Make a shopping trip and buy what you need so it’s at least in the house.
Step 4: Prepare Ahead of Time
Honestly, this step is optional. If you have made the plan and have the supplies in the house then you’ve won a HUGE battle! Congratulations!
Get in the habit of referencing your list the night before. Why the night before? To get the meat out of the freezer and into the fridge.
Preparing a week in advance? If making a stew, chop the veggies and meat and put them in a freezer bag ahead of time. Anything that you can do that will make cooking during the week a breeze.
Enlist kids! This is where they learn. Have them help prepare and then cook during the week. They will take these lessons with them into their own home. You’ll be doing them a great service!
That’s it. Traditional Meal Planning at its best.
Free Printables for Meal Plan Ideas
I’d love to help you organize your meals better so that you can decrease your stress levels and eat more healthy. Here are a few different types of planners. You can download these, or simply use them to give you ideas for creating your own. I hope they inspire you.
Click to Download
DOWNLOAD #1: Monthly Meal Planning Chart
DOWNLOAD #2: Biweekly Meal Planning Chart
DOWNLOAD #3 Weekly Meal Planning Chart Option 1
DOWNLOAD #4 Weekly Meal Planning Chart Option 2
Please leave a note below telling us how you plan your meals. We’d love to hear from you.
This is part of the Simplify Your Life Series
Simplifying your life is a continuous mindset. Our goal is to reduce stress, simplify routines, simplify recipes, and get organized.
Others in this series:
- How to Begin to Simplify Your Life
- 12 Steps to Declutter and Organize Your Kitchen
- 15 Simple and Healthy Breakfast Ideas
- What Stress Does to Your Body
- 20 Stress Relieving Herbs and Teas
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