Category Archives: menu plans

Weekly menu plan

Last night my husband did some kind of clean up of the computer system, so I couldn’t get on to post.  But my toddler has helped me put this here in a timely way, by waking up much, much earlier than usual this morning.  🙂  So today I’m enjoying being awake in a very quiet house with just him – I got a load of laundry in the washer, another in the dryer, wrote up my weekly menu, and it’s still silent.

Sometimes it takes me a lot longer to plan my menu than other times, but I started by pulling a couple of the meals that didn’t happen last week (due to being out one afternoon and having a lot of something left over one day from the night before) and stuck them in for this week.  So this took just a few minutes.

Sunday – breakfast – french toast (I think – I was up late and then on the phone for a long time with a few people, so I wasn’t there); lunch – sandwiches; dinner – chicken, kasha, green beans

Monday – b – low country cream style grits (perfect for making on a day when I have lots of time before everyone wakes up – it’s easy, but cooks for an hour); l – sandwiches; d – split pea soup, cornbread

Tuesday – b – hash browns, eggs; l – leftover split pea soup; d – chickpea and peanut stew

Wednesday – b – french toast; l – cottage cheese pancakes, baked yams; d – shepherd’s pie (using deboned turkey from homemade stock)

Thursday – b – pumpkin streusel muffins, l – pizza; d – salmon patties, rice

As always, breakfast is supplemented with milk and fruit, other meals are supplemented with whatever veggies I have on hand.

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

Today is a busy day for all of the kids – the older four have been in and out (mostly out) all day.  Three kids had piano this morning, and are practicing for their recital late this afternoon.  The older two boys spent hours together at the gym (finally got the family membership on Friday), the two older girls spent a couple of hours volunteering at a synagogue social event, and after the recital, one dd will be out babysitting for the night.  So my menu plan that was written last night has already been adjusted for today since so many of them haven’t been around.

Here’s the menu for the week:

Sunday – breakfast – french toast with fried apples; lunch – oatmeal muffin loaf; dinner – turkey, sweet potatoes with apples, kasha, and leftover cholent

Monday – b – farmer’s breakfast casserole; l – calzones; d – kasha nut loaf, yogurt sauce

Tuesday – b – granola, yogurt, sliced banana; l – black bean soup; d – Brunswick stew

Wednesday – b – omelets, buttermilk biscuits; l – minestrone soup with rice pasta; d – falafel balls, Greek rice, techina

Thursday – b – Amish oatmeal; l – CORN (clean out refrigerator night, but my kids told me last week I need to call it CORA – clean out refrigerator afternoon when I have leftovers for lunch); d- chickpea and peanut stew

As you can see, I decided to take advantage of the cold weather and planned soup for almost every day lunch.  It’s filling, nourishing, warming, and very inexpensive to make.  In the summer no one has the slightest interest, so I need to make it while I can!  I made a huge pot of turkey stock today that will make a delicious base for each of them.

Having a menu prepared at the beginning of the week really simplifies preparations for the rest of the week, because I know what I’ll need when, and can take steps to have it ready.  Today we did a bunch of prepping for meals this week.  One dd prepared the oat mixture for the granola, so it can soak overnight and we’ll bake it all tomorrow, so it will be ready for Tuesday morning.  She also blended the steamed cauliflower for the calzone filling.  Another made the pizza dough for the calzones, and baked up a double recipe of leftover oatmeal muffin loaf (from the leftover apple cinnamon oatmeal at the end of last week) for a late lunch today.  Ds6 brought up chick peas, kidney beans, and black beans, and ds10 started soaking all three in separate bowls.  By soaking them now, they’ll have sprouted later in the week when we need them and the nutritional benefits will be maximized.  Ds15 is preparing the breakfast casserole loaf for tomorrow’s breakfast – I’ve learned from scheduling this in the past that it has to be made in advance to be ready to serve on time for breakfast.  And lastly, dd8 is preparing to soak two packages of walnuts in a sea salt solution; they’ll be dehydrated overnight and ready to use for Monday night’s kasha nut loaf.

Does that sound like a lot of work?  It actually has taken just an hour, fit in between the kids going in and out.  That should basically be it for the week’s necessary advance food preps, except for soaking the flour and oats for Weds and Thursday morning breakfasts, and I can do that the night before I make them.  It drastically simplifies my cooking during the week when time is shorter, and makes it possible to make healthy meals that are served in a timely way.  By lumping the preparations together, it’s an efficient use of our energy, and by doing it together, we get a lot done in a short time frame.  And no one feels overly burdened by having to do all the work.

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

It’s already another new week!  Doesn’t time just fly by?  Here’s this week’s menu plan:

Sunday – breakfast – oats and milk; lunch – sandwiches; dinner – chicken stew

Monday – b- apple cinnamon oatmeal; l – creamy cauliflower soup; d – fish cakes, corn dodgers

Tuesday – b – french toast, homemade banana jam; l – baked yams; d – split pea soup, Cuban bread

Wednesday – b – pumpkin streusel muffins; l – out shopping and will buy the kids something; d – whole wheat pasta with bolognese sauce

Thursday – b – eggs, hash browns; l – cauliflower calzones; d – CORN (clean out refrigerator night)

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

Last week I was feeling very uninspired to write up my menu plan, so it was only half completed and I didn’t post it.  It makes such a big difference when we have a plan for meals for the week and when we don’t, and last week I got to remind myself of that again.  Let’s just say that if I felt uninspired when there was no time pressure and making a menu was just a mental exercise, I felt even more uninspired when everyone kept asking me what we were going to eat for the next meal, and it was less than an hour until meal time.  🙂  It was a good reminder of the value of being consistent in this aspect of my home management.

Here is this week’s menu:

Sunday – breakfast – pancakes (which my kids made in the sandwich maker and named ‘mattresses’ – they were long, rectangular, and puffy); lunch – peanuts and apples; dinner – turkey, green bean almondine, yams, potato kugel

Monday – b – hot rice with milk; l – cottage cheese pancakes; d – baked beans, buckwheat cornbread

Tuesday – b – apple walnut muffins; l – vegetarian stuffed baked potatoes; d – rice/cheese/bean burritos

Wednesday – b – eggs and hash browns; l – sandwiches; d – turkey stew, barley mock risotto

Thursday – b – cornmeal waffles; l – colcannon; d – pizza

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

Here’s the menu for this week:

Sunday – breakfast – eggs, fried potatoes; lunch – rice crackers, butter, homemade jam; dinner – chicken lima bean stew

Monday – b – oatmeal muffins; l – broccoli-zucchini quiche (plan to double this and put one in the freezer); d – minestrone soup, corn cakes (made double last week)

Tuesday – b – fritata ranchera; l – minestrone soup; d – vegetarian meatloaf

Wednesday – b – pumpkin streusel muffins; l – colcannon; d – honey baked lentils, cornbread

Thursday – b – traditional pancakes; l – vegetable chicken stew; d – CORN

I try to plan not only with what’s in my pantry in  mind, but with my leftovers in mind.  That avoids lots of leftovers at the end of the week, and it also turns something old into something new and different.  For example, when I made the chicken lima bean stew for dinner tonight, I decided to use the leftover cholent in place of the potatoes it called for.  The stew doesn’t look anything like cholent, but it used up something that otherwise could have sat around all week and then gotten thrown away on Friday.

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

Here is this week’s menu.  If there’s something you’d specifically like the recipe for, let me know.

Sunday – b – oats and milk; d – chicken, kasha, fresh snow peas, julienned jicama

Monday – b – polenta/oat fritters; l – apple and banana slices with peanut butter; d – chicken burgers, roasted root veg

Tuesday – b – baked oatmeal; l – cauliflower latkes, cottage cheese; d – yellow squash pie

Wednesday – b – zucchini muffins; l – princesses (baked meat sandwiches); d – honey baked lentils, corn cakes, roasted cauliflower

Thursday – b – warm rice with milk; d – CORN (clean out refrigerator night)

Some days we do more cooking than others – I definitely don’t spend the same amount of time in the kitchen every day.  Today has been a good day for food prepping and we’ve gotten a lot done in the last hour or two.  The baked oatmeal is ready for tomorrow’s breakfast (was supposed to be for this morning, but dd started the fritters before she knew I had prepared the oatmeal and the pan was waiting in the oven to be baked), the chicken burgers are ready for tonight (it’s almost 4 pm right now), the root veggies are all peeled for tonight, and the squash pie filling for tomorrow night is prepared.  I’ll make up the crust for the pie tomorrow and then there’s nothing to do but throw it all in together and bake it.  The zucchini for the muffins is shredded (once the food processor was out for the squash, I figured we’d do everything at once) and I’ll probably make the muffins today so that the shredded veggies aren’t sitting for another day and a half.  I’ll start the lentils soaking today for Thursday’s dinner – I don’t think they’ll sprout well ll in this cold weather, but it won’t hurt.

We’re also making brown rice crackers for the first time – they’re in the oven now.  I’ll share the recipe with you if they turn out well.  I have about 17 pounds of ground chicken simmering right now that I’m planning to can in the next hour or so.  And I’d like to get some strawberry jam made today, too, but it will depend on how crowded the kitchen is. 🙂

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

I was feeling so uninspired today when I was planning my menu for the week.  I  usually enjoy planning it a lot more but was so tired my brain just wasn’t working.  So my menu plan is a reflection of that, and as a result, it’s likely I’ll adapt it some tomorrow.  But for now, this is what I have:

Sunday – lunch – nuts, fruit, popcorn (as per Daddy Fun Day), dinner – indoor campout – hot dogs, hamburgers with all the fixings

Monday – b – oatmeal, milk, fruit; l – (was supposed to be leftover hamburgers but my 2.5 yr old and 16 month old managed to raid the plate in the fridge throughout the day without me noticing except for once and finished them all off!) – leftover kasha and lentils heated up with meat broth; d – red beans with sauteed veg (onion, garlic, green pepper, celery), 3 grain pilaf (2.5 c.  brown rice, 1 c. millet, 1 c. kasha cooked with meat broth), steamed cauliflower and carrots

Tuesday – b – polenta; l – creamy cauliflower soup (doubled for Thursday’s lunch), baked potatoes, cottage cheese; d – baked salmon, hush puppies, sauteed yellow squash

Wednesday – b – oatmeal; l – will be out food shopping, so I usually buy the kids something like wraps/crackers and cheese/yogurt on these days, with baby carrots and fruit and they have a mini picnic in the grass near a field by one of the stores; d – sloppy joes

Thursday – b – cottage cheese pancakes; l – creamy cauliflower soup, savory buckwheat muffins; d – CORN (clean out refrigerator night :))

I made beef stew for Shabbos that was delish, and made a large pot of broth with the bones that I cut off to use separately (I used ribs for the stew so there were lots of bones).  I used all of the broth today for cooking the pilaf for dinner and earlier in the day to add to the leftovers (adds a great rich flavor, plus great nutritional value), and still have a decent bit of meat that fell off the bones once they were cooked. That will be added to the meat sauce that I’ll use for sloppy joes on Wednesday night, for a very quick and tasty meal.

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

Okeydoke, here’s this week’s menu.  I’m doing what seems like more vegetarian meals than usual, though most of you know my usual comments about cooking grains and beans with chicken broth, etc.

Sunday – b- waffle French toast; l – bagels, cream cheese; d – taco style lentils and rice, tacos, steamed asparagus, chopped tomatoes

Monday – b – orange muffins; l – panini sandwiches, cauliflower popcorn; d – kasha nut loaf, yogurt sauce

Tuesday – b – baked banana oatmeal;  l – tomato chickpea soup; d – baked fish, mashed potatoes

Wednesday – b – vegetable omelettes; l – baked potatoes, cottage cheese, guacamole; d – baked falafel, whole wheat pitas, fried eggplant

Thursday – b – polenta; l – leftovers; d – honey baked lentils

Have a great week!

Avivah

Make a menu based on your pantry

>>Do you plan your menus from the sale flyers in advance, or buy the sale items and then come up with a menu after?<<

I’ve written about menu planning, and I’ve written about shopping to fill your pantry.  I do both.  But I suggest something else that I rarely see advocated, but is very advantageous to your food bill.

Most people make their menu, and then plan their shopping list.  And that’s really good – it’s a huge step above what most people do, which is to not plan much at all.  But what I like to do is stock my fridge, freezer, and pantry first.  I buys lots of whatever is a good price, buy a variety of fruits and vegetables (no pricey non seasonal veggies), and whatever else rounds out my basic pantry list for the month.  (I’ll try to share a list of what I try to stock my pantry with another time.)  Then, and only then, I make my menu, by looking at whatever I already have in the house.

How does this help?  Firstly, you’ll always have the ingredients you need on hand – you know you have them, and that’s why you planned each particular meal!  Secondly, and more importantly, is that you are always eating sale priced items.  Let’s say that thanks to buying only sale items, your monthly discounts on groceries average out to 30% less than what you would have paid at full price.  That means that you are either a) saving 30% of what you would have otherwise spent, or that b) you’re spending the same monthly total on food, but getting 30% food more than you could have otherwise, which can last you 5.5 weeks instead of 4.  That adds up to a big difference, don’t you think?

Some of you may object, saying that you can’t buy a lot of what you need ahead of time.  But I think running out daily for milk and bread is a habit more than anything.  And then people get used to it and can’t imagine shopping differently.  But even items like bread and milk can be purchased in advance.  Bread can easily be frozen and then defrosted before needed, or toasted if you prefer.  Milk can also be frozen, and if you’re not buying raw milk, then the consistency when you defrost it will be the same as before it was frozen.  Raw milk is fine to freeze, too, but the consistency changes – the cream will be in tiny chunks.  Meat and chicken can stay good in the fridge for several days, in the freezer for a lot longer.  Fish is kept the same as the chicken or meat.  Cottage cheese, ricotta cheese, butter, yogurt, and hard cheese can be frozen (I’ll do a separate post soon on some specific suggestions for freezing hard cheeses), and all of them easily stay good in the fridge for at least a week.  Don’t freeze sour cream, though – I tried this recently and when it defrosted, it was liquid.  So I used it for cream style grits for breakfast. 🙂

Root vegetables (potatoes, sweet potatoes, cabbage, carrots, parsnips, turnips, rutabagas) can all be easily stored in the winter without refrigeration.  Fresh vegetables that are more perishable don’t need to be purchased more than once a week. And of course, frozen vegetables are nutritionally pretty good and can be bought much more than a week ahead.  Winter fruits store well in cold weather, too, like apples, pear, and citrus.  If you like to buy fruits out of season, then just refrigerate them.

So buying food ahead shouldn’t be too hard – just shop the sales, and stock up.  It’s a different way of thinking about shopping, and will take some time to get a full variety of pantry items stocked, but not nearly as long as you think.

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

Here’s the menu for this week:

Sunday – breakfast – oats and milk; early dinner – bagels, cream cheese, vegetables

Monday – b – bagels and cream cheese ; l – cream of tomato soup, English muffins; d – cream of tomato soup, baked salmon, vegetable platter with cream cheese dip (changed from chicken and dumplings)

Tuesday – b – pumpkin bread; l – corn salad, sandwiches; d – huevos rancheros and Brazilian black beans

Wednesday – b – lemon blueberry muffins; d – burritos with beans and cheese, sauteed zucchini with tomatoes

Thursday – b – polenta ; d – red beans and rice, roasted vegetables

My older two girls, 14 and 12, volunteered for hours yesterday at our shul (synagogue) Chanuka party.  They had also helped out last year, and it was a good thing, because this year they were the only ones who knew how to set up (the adults in charge were doing it for the first time)!  The turnout was less than expected, and they came home with a bunch of bagels, cream cheese, and fruit salad (other people helping out also took food home).  So that was integrated into the plan for yesterday and today.    They had a great time helping out, and everyone else in the family enjoyed the ‘fruits’ of their labor when they got back!

I also have some new recipes to try for Shabbos – beef stew, eggplant curry, and baked onions.  I have the right combination of ingredients for all of these things this week, and I like to try new recipes.  I never make the same things for Shabbos, even after all of these years.  We do have our favorites that occur on a somewhat regular basis, though!

Avivah