Showing posts with label menu planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label menu planning. Show all posts

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Stretching the Food Dollars: Menu Planning

What is menu planning? It is planning out your meals in advance to avoid standing in front of the open refrigerator at 5pm like a deer in headlights struggling to figure out what to cook for dinner. That is a terrible feeling and will often incite a budget-blowing fast food grab or restaurant expedition. At the very least, lack of menu planning will require a quick run to the grocery store for that one item that you need for the dinner you just figured out. I know for myself that there is no such thing as a quick run into a grocery store for just one thing. I always end up picking up several other items along the way. Next thing you know, I have wasted over half an hour in the store and have dumped over $40.  So, menu planning can save you a bit of money because it eliminates the temptation to eat out and it saves you money at the store by eliminating extra trips and helping you buy just what you really need.


I have to confess. Although I think meal planning is an awesome thing to do, I am not as disciplined in this area as I would like to be. In my mind, I would love to have several monthly meal plans that I could rotate through. Each would be filled with breakfasts, lunches and dinners that my family loves complete with grocery lists. I have really tried to accomplish this, but I end up not sticking to it. I think there is something rebellious in me that doesn't like to be boxed in by what a menu plan says that we should eat. I do better with a loose weekly menu plan to aid in the making of my grocery list. You have to figure out what works best for you. If you are a very disciplined person who requires organization, detailed monthly meal plans may be the perfect fit for you. If you are a person who craves a bit of spontaneity, you may enjoy a looser weekly plan like I use. The key is finding a what you are comfortable because you will stick with it.


Let's discuss some different ways to go about menu planning:
Just plan dinner meals. In our house, we try to keep breakfast and lunch on auto-pilot. We have a list of basic breakfasts that we rotate through. (oatmeal, cereal/granola, eggs, toast, breakfast burritos, and Saturday is usually pancake day) Lunch is typically leftovers from last night's dinner. If we don't have any, or there is not enough, we will eat usually sandwiches, macaroni and cheese, or ramen noodles.

Make a meal list. I have made and regularly update a list of tried and true meals that I know how to make with ease and my family enjoys. I like to group them by main ingredients, usually type of meat used, so if I get a great deal on chicken breasts, I can go to my list of chicken meals for inspiration. I also group them by type of food (i.e. Italian, oriental, etc.) I posted a list a couple of years ago that seems pitifully meager compared to the variety of foods that I make. One of these days I am going to make a great master meal list that I can keep updating, but at this time I usually just start from scratch listing meals that are fairly current for us.


Fill in the calendar. The simplest way to create a meal plan is to take a calendar and start filling in the blanks. You can do a month at a time, 2 weeks or even just one. That depends on how much variety you need. The Simple Mom has a great idea of using Google Calendar for this purpose. She creates a separate calendar just for menu planning and adds her meals for each day. She sets them up to repeat every two weeks (which is a fairly simple thing to do with most calendar programs). If you can come up with two weeks worth of meals, you are instantly done for the month this way. Sometimes it is nice to menu plan right on your regular calendar so you can see what you have going on. That way if you have something going on right up until the dinner hour, you will know that this is a good day for a crockpot meal that will be ready for you as soon as you arrive home.


Use a premade menu plan. There are cookbooks or even subscriptions to menu plans that have already been set up for you with grocery lists you can take to the store. I discovered this several years ago and subscribed to a weekly menu plan service. Most are fairly inexpensive and the cost is readily made up by visiting the grocery store with a shopping list and avoiding eating out because you know what you are cooking each night and have all of the supplies already. This is an easy way to jump into the meal planning arena.
Here are just a few of the menu plans available online:

  • Saving Dinner – I have also used this menu plan and have enjoyed it. Then I discovered that you can buy their cookbooks that each have a year's worth of their meal plans and I did that.

Do some once-a-month or mega cooking.
The original book, Once-a-Month Cooking discusses this concept which is basically shopping and preparing a month's dinner entrees in one day and having them in the freezer to use all month. It is economical because you can buy things is bulk quantities, you save time because you do all of your chopping, etc., at one time. The book maps out how to shop and prepare 30 meals all in one day.  I find this to a bit overwhelming and exhausting with small children underfoot.  I remember that the very first time I tried this, I had a restless 18 month old and no other adult support.  It was a very LONG day. 



I have decided that I prefer mega-cooking.  That is doubling, tripling or quadrupling a meal as I am cooking it for dinner and freezing the excess.  I like to do this with meatloaf, lasagna, casseroles, and homemade enchiladas.  I doesn't take much more time and is an easy way to stock up the freezer.  Another good resource for freezing meals ahead is Dinner's in the Freezer.


Plan by the week.  Even if you don't feel like you can pull off a monthly meal plan, working out a weekly one will help considerably.  It can help you stick to a weekly grocery trip and save you money if you have the discipline to stick to your list.


Meal plan according to the sales.  Often I go to the store for my staple and basic items and fill in with meats that I can find for a good deal.  This is when your list of meals (above) can come in handy.  If I got a great deal on chicken breasts, I will pick out various chicken meals.  If you can scour your local grocery store adds before you shop, you can make a meal plan so you know exactly what else you will need to complete your meals.
 
At the very least, meal plan by the day.  Often I am not organized enough to have a meal plan.  I usually have a good supply of basic foods that I use often and some sort of meat that I have found for a good price in the freezer.  So, during my morning quiet time, I will decide what I will make and pull anything that I will need out of the freezer.  Anything that I can prep early, I will do while I am in the kitchen at breakfast or lunch.  Often I will put something together after lunch and place it right in the oven and set the delay start.  Then I can blissfully go about my afternoon without having to stop and think about dinner.  

Whether you plan out meals a month at a time, a week at a time or even a day at a time, planning can save you a lot of time and money.

Thursday, July 10, 2008

More Menu Planning



Well, I did it. I started my menu plan. Of course, it is only the second day and I have already digressed from it. I'm hopeless. I was grocery shopping and got home kinda late and didn't have time to bake the meatloaf that I had taken out of the freezer for dinner. So, I made something extra I had bought at Aldi's. I also wasn't able to get the bulk ground beef I wanted from my favorite local butcher shop so I won't be able to make a big batch of meatballs to freeze on Saturday. Bummer! Oh well, we will improvise. I am just happy that I have a start on the menu planning thing.

**EDITED**
I didn't realize that I had to set my google menu planning calendar to "publc" for you all to be able to see this. Sorry about that. Let me know if you can't see the menu plan above.

Wednesday, July 09, 2008

Menu Planning


Menu planning!
It's something I need to do but really struggle with. I will be very organized about this for a while and then just go back to my natural inclination which is to be more of a fly-by-the-seat-of-my-pants kinda girl. When you are trying to feed a family of 7, that really isn't practical though. I tend to go to the store and buy what sounds good and is on sale as far as main dish meats. Then I add in a bunch of staples for sides and my shopping is done. I usually have to get creative each day with what is on hand. Because of this, we eat a nice variety of meals and most are pretty good.
I was inspired by this post at the Simple Mom site to get back to menu planning. I like how she has it all online with links to her recipes and set to send her daily reminders. Very clever! So I started making a list of our tried and true dinner favorites. Now, I have been married and cooking for 20 years. I should have a really big list by now, but I was struggling to think of things. What do we eat? We eat a whole bunch of stuff, but a lot of our meals are one time deals using up what is in the pantry/fridge. These are hard to remember and repeat.
So, next I resorted to asking the kids for their opinions.
Some of their suggestions were:
fishsticks
fries
bread
pancakes
[sigh] I had to explain that I was looking for healthy, homemade, economical meals. Then I got the blank stares. You know, there are gonna be times when fish sticks and fries will be served around here (usually when I am gonna be gone ;-). The goal, however, is to eat healthy and cheap. That generally means cooking most everything from scratch instead of buying stuff to heat up.
Here are some of the ideas we have come up with so far:

MEXICAN
Enchiladas-Beef
Enchiladas-Chicken
Enchilada Casserole
Tacos
Taco Salad
Store-bought burritos with enchilada sauce and cheese added
Fajitas

ITALIAN
Spaghetti
Lasagna
Creamy Pasta (Alfredo)
Creamy Tomato Pasta
Chicken Parm
Eggplant Parm
Pizza
Calzones

ORIENTAL
Sushi
Fried Rice
Eggrolls
Stir Fry
Orange Chicken
General Tso's Chicken
Chicken Lo Mein
(some of these I need to come up with good recipes for making these from scratch)

BEEF
Shepherd Pie
Sloppy Joes
Meatloaf
Italian Beef
Grilled Steaks
Hamburgers
Beef and Noodles
Chili
Meatballs
Steak Kabobs
Beef Burgundy
Beef Stroganoff
Onion Steaks

PORK
Grilled chops
Pork Chops a la Jenni
Creamy Tomato Pasta with sausage
Ribs
Ham tetrazini

CHICKEN
Crockpot Chicken
Marinated Grilled
Chicken and Noodles
Chicken Salad
Baked
Casserole

CASSEROLES
Kitchen Sink Surprise
Tuna Noodle

TUNA
Creamed Tuna over Toast
Tuna Croquettes
Tuna Noodle Casserole

SOUP
Clam Chowder
Potato
Vegetable
Chicken Noodle

BREAKFAST TYPE
Pancakes
Omelets
Biscuits and Gravy
Quiche
Egg Casserole
Baked French Toast

MISC.
Baked Potatoes
Hot Dog Pie

SIDES
Mashed Cauliflower
Crash Potatoes

I will continually adding to this as I think of more things. Several of these items (especially those in the Oriental category) are things that I usually buy premade in the freezer section of Sam's Club. Ideally, I need to learn to make them from scratch. I would also like to add in more fish to our diets. Lately, what fish we have been having is frozen from Sam's. We especially love their blackened salmon, but it barely stretches to feed us all and it gets expensive.
I'll have to keep you all updated on how this goes. Maybe I can share my menu plans and some recipes.