Meal planning

A calmer way to plan the cooking week

Flexible weekday frames, themed nights and printable templates that adapt to whatever ends up in the fridge by Wednesday.

Wooden table with a planner notebook surrounded by fresh ingredients
The framework

Themed weeknights make planning easy

Instead of choosing seven meals from a blank page, we suggest five soft themes. The theme stays the same, the recipe rotates. Decision fatigue drops, the shopping list tightens and dinners feel familiar without being repetitive.

  • Meatless Monday — legumes, eggs or tofu as the star ingredient.
  • Bowl Tuesday — grain, greens, protein, sauce. Done.
  • Sheet-Pan Wednesday — one tray, one wash up.
  • Soup or Stir-Fry Thursday — clears the veggie drawer.
  • Fresh Friday — pasta, flatbreads or a generous salad.
Sunday set-up

Thirty minutes that save your week

This is the short Sunday ritual our readers use to lock in dinners without spending hours on prep.

Audit the fridge

Spend five minutes noting what needs using up before it goes south. This shapes the first two dinners.

Drop in themes

Slot four or five themed dinners onto your planner. Leave one night intentionally free for leftovers.

Write the list

Group items by aisle — produce, pantry, fridge, freezer — so the shop takes one loop, not three.

Shop once

One mid-week top-up at most. The whole point is fewer trips and less waste.

Common questions

Planner FAQs

Do I need a separate planner for breakfasts and lunches?

Not unless you want to. Most readers default to a small rotation of three breakfasts and two lunch builds, and only plan dinners in detail. The Friday fresh idea often becomes Saturday lunch too.

How do I plan around an unpredictable week?

Pick three anchor dinners you definitely will cook and leave the other nights flexible. The pantry guide on the Nutrition Basics page lists fall-back combinations you can put together in under fifteen minutes.

What if I cook for one?

Halve the themes and lean into batch-friendly options like bowls and soups, which keep brilliantly. Aim for two cook sessions and three reheats per week.

How do you handle picky eaters?

The themed approach helps because the structure stays the same — only the toppings change. Let everyone build their own bowl or sheet pan plate from the same base.

Want the printable planner?

Send us a quick note and we will share the latest seasonal version along with a sample shopping list.

Request the planner