Category Archives: menu plans

Weekly menu plan

Last week I had several dinner changes because of leftovers or food that we had that I wanted to use up, so I’ve moved a couple of the dinners we didn’t have then to this week.

Sun – breakfast – buckwheat pancakes with agave nectar, milk; lunch – sorry, can’t remember – yesterday was so far away and I hadn’t yet written my plans down :), dinner – latkes, applesauce (homemade with apples picked and preserved by us), ricotta cheese (planned to have sour cream, but I froze it and it didn’t defrost to the consistency desired)

Mon – b – buckwheat pancakes (I made eight times the recipe yesterday instead of four times the recipe, so I had enough for two meals – it was a good thing the kids liked it!); d – veggie stir fry (garlic, orange peppers, cabbage, celery, endives), brown rice, meat, roasted zucchini

Tues – b – french toast; l – cream of cauliflower soup, marinated tomato salad; d – broccoli calzones, corn, grilled veg, tomato sauce

Wed – b – warm millet with milk; l – sandwiches or leftover soup/calzones; d – vegetarian chili

Thurs – b – cream style grits; l -chili, rolls; d – salmon patties, kasha

Last week my menu was a boon for the entire family, since my sleep schedule was totally off and several mornings I woke up too late to fix breakfast in time.  (This week is already off to a better start – my solution?  To ask dh to set the alarm for me so I don’t rely on myself!)  My solution would have been to make something quick like oatmeal, but my dd14 (the first day of Chanuka, today, was her birthday!) just looked at my menu plan and took the initiative to make breakfast as planned.

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

Here’s the menu for this week:

Sunday – breakfast – oats and milk, fruit; lunch – sandwiches; dinner – chicken noodle soup with veggies, leftovers from Shabbos

Monday – b – apple cinnamon pancakes; l – veg soup, Cuban bread; d – spicy beans and beef

Tuesday – b – biscuits, eggs; l – cauliflower cheese casserole (this was a hit last week); d – vegetarian meatloaf

Wednesday – b – polenta; l – sandwiches and veg soup; d – broccoli calzones

Thursday – b – pumpkin bread; l – leaving this open, I like to use any leftovers from week by this point or have sandwiches; d – chili and cornbread

As you know if you’ve been reading for a while here, I supplement the lunches and dinners with vegetables, but don’t plan that in advance.  Breakfast almost always includes milk and fruit, unless we have yogurt for breakfast (not scheduled for this week), in which case that’s in place of the milk.  Though officially I schedule dinners so that one meal is meat, one is dairy, and three are vegetarian, since we have so much meat on the weekends, it frequently ends up adapted to be two meat meals instead, and most vegetarian meals include chicken stock as a cooking ingredient.

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

I’m back from my weekend away, and it’s so nice to be home!  As I said out loud as I drove up to my house, “Be it ever so humble, there’s no place like home!”

Here’s my menu plan for the week, a day late 🙂 :

Sunday – b – shakes;  l – I think they made more shakes, I wasn’t here; dinner – chicken soup with rice and leftover cholent

Monday – b – oatmeal, fruit, milk; l – sandwiches; d – sloppy joes, steak rolls, brown rice for those who didn’t want rolls, and cooked vegetables

Tuesday – b – polenta; l – miso soup; d – oat walnut burgers, taco sauce, carrot-pineapple salad

Wednesday – b – banana bread; l – cauliflower soup or casserole; cottage cheese pancakes

Thursday – b – rice pudding – or maybe just hot rice with milk over it and some cinnamon and sweetner – the kids seem to enjoy it more like that; l – whatever leftovers are around, or sandwiches; d – minestone soup with kidney beans and whole wheat pasta

Breakfast will include milk and fruit every day, lunch and dinner usually has some kind of vegetables but I don’t usually plan those in advance.  I stick to this as much as I can, but I shift the menu plan around to accomodate more or less of something so that I don’t end up with leftovers at the end of the week.

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

As I’m getting back into the swing of regular life, I’m getting back to some of my routines that make life feel somewhat organized :), and that means that last night I wrote up the menu plan for this week.  Here it is:

Sunday – brunch – vegetable omelets with English muffins; snack – popcorn; dinner – lentils cooked in chicken broth, rice, carrot salad

Monday – breakfast – oatmeal raisin scones with homemade plum jam, nectarines; lunch – veg lentil soup (used leftover lentils from Sunday night); dinner – beans and hotdogs (thanks to the beans that I canned, this is a now a quick and easy dinner)

Tuesday – breakfast – Southern grits bread; lunch – chili bean soup (with leftover beans from Monday night); dinner – oat walnut burgers

Wednesday – breakfast – baked oatmeal; lunch – vegetable soup; dinner – cottage cheese blintz loaf

Thursday – breakfast – buckwheat pancakes; lunch – sandwiches; dinner – leftovers (empty the fridge before Shabbos)

Friday – breakfast – fried potatoes and eggs

I’ll post some recipes from this sometime during the week, but if something in particular interests you, let me know and I’ll be sure to post it.

Avivah

Crawling out of the chaos – step #1 – make a menu plan

I heard within two days from three moms who told me they are overwhelmed and don’t feel like they’re coping well.  So I thought it might be helpful to give a starting point to work your way out of the feeling of being in a quagmire.

First of all, don’t compare yourself to anyone else!  A saying I love is, “Don’t compare your insides to someone else’s outsides”.  And that’s what we all do.  You know yourself on the inside, and you think what you see of someone else is what they really are, through and through.  It’s not true, and even if it would be, it doesn’t matter.  You are you, and learning to love and accept yourself as you are, for who you are, should be part of your efforts.  That means, forget being perfect and just do the best you can wherever you are right now. 

There are probably a number of potential first steps you can take to start to putting things in order.  I’ll give you my suggestion for the first step – make a menu plan.

I suggest this as a starting point because there are three meals a day that need to be prepared, and when you don’t have a plan for this, then you’ll constantly be scrambling to pull something out of thin air.   When the food isn’t ready, everyone feels hungry, irritable, and out of sorts.  When everyone is fed, they’re much more enjoyable to be with, and then you can get them involved in being more helpful with other areas.  Also, feeling rushed and pressured every day before mealtime rolls around is emotionally wearing, and you end up spending a lot more money on food because you’re reaching for whatever is quick and easy.   So we’ll break the cycle here, by doing something that will save you time, energy, and money.  Sound good?

How do you make a menu plan?  For the first weeks, let’s keep it very, very simple.  Don’t overwhelm yourself by planning time consuming dishes that require several pans to prepare.  Take a piece of paper, and make a grid that has each day listed going across the top, with the first day indented about an inch or so – like this:

            Sun                  Mon                     Tues                    Weds                   Thurs                 Fri

Okay, now that you’ve done that, on the left hand horizontal side, write the three meals you need to prepare – like this (add in snacks if that’s part of your day):

breakfast

lunch

dinner

Now make grid lines between everything with a ruler (you don’t have to use a ruler, it will just make you feel really organized and neat – I usually don’t).  Repeat this so that you have two empty menu charts on the paper (this will be enough for two weeks).

Okay, now that you have an empty chart ready, get out your cookbooks.  Take out another piece of paper, and make four sections: breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacks.  As you go through your cookbooks, if something looks good to you, put in under the appropriate category.  I like to make a note of which cookbook and what page the recipe was in, because if it’s a new recipe, I won’t remember later on where I found it, and it would be time consuming and counterproductive to have to go through all of the cookbooks to find it again.  Try to list about 5 – 10 options for each meal that look like options your family would enjoy.  Also, if it’s a recipe that I won’t automatically be able to recall which ingredients are in it, I make a note right next to where I’ve listed it of the main ingredients (not every little dash of spices) so that when I compile my food shopping list, I can buy what I’ll need for the planned meals.

Now, here’s the easy and gratifying part.  Put your cookbooks away, and with just the two pieces of paper in front of you, start filling in the boxes on your menu plan.  Fill in all the breakfast meals first – if you want to eat the same thing every day, that’s fine.  If you don’t, planning all of them at one shot helps you to schedule it so that you won’t have eggs or cold cereal two or three days in a row.  I personally think it’s just as easy to plan two weeks of menus as one, once you’re in the mental planning mode, but if you don’t, then just fill in one week’s worth of menus right now.

Next, on to the lunch menu.  Do the same thing as you did with the breakfast menu, keeping in mind what is already written for the breakfast meal that day so it won’t be repetitive.  Once that’s finished, fill in the dinner menu. 

If this is new to you, you might want to plan to begin using your menu in a few days, or a week from now.  If you try to jump into it without being properly prepared, you’re going to end up feeling overwhelmed and like a failure.  You’re going to need to go shopping to be sure you have everything in the house you’ll need, so if you want to start right away, then make sure you have all the ingredients you’ll need for a week already in the house, or go shopping first thing tomorrow. 

Remember, keep it simple!  That can mean cottage cheese and bread for lunch, baked potatoes and chicken for dinner, rice and beans, canned tuna, etc – whatever – anything that takes very, very little time or effort.  You can plan for slightly more involved meals after you’ve done this for a week or two and feel like you’re starting to get into a groove.

Now, post this on your refrigerator.  Take your list of menu options and file it away somewhere, in a cookbook if you don’t have somewhere else you’ll remember to look for it.  You’re going to add to this list over time, and can pull it out each time you make a menu plan (saves you having to take out a pile of cookbooks every week or two).

Any questions?  If so, please ask.

Avivah

This week’s menu

I’ve been really lazy all summer long about writing out a menu in time to share it with you for Sunday, but I decided today to share it with you for this week even though it’s already Tuesday.  Maybe it will motivate me to post it more regularly, earlier on, as some of you have told me privately you found it helpful.  Which I appreciated hearing.  🙂  I didn’t write it until Sunday afternoon, so Sunday isn’t on it.

Mon – breakfast – oatmeal; dinner – mexican shepherd pie

Tues – breakfast – polenta, cottage cheese; dinner – oat walnut burgers (actually ended up having leftovers from last night because I made so much)

Wed – breakfast – eggs and potatoes; dinner – lasagna

Thurs – breakfast – oatmeal muffins; dinner – fast and easy black eyed peas

I’ve recently adjusted my meal schedule so that dinners on Sun/Tues/Thurs are vegetarian meals, Mon is meat, and Wed is dairy.  The main change from how it’s been all year is to replace one meat meal with a vegetarian meal.  Since we have a lot of meat on the weekend, this is a good balance.  Lunch isn’t listed because we usually have planned leftovers from the night before (I cook a larger amount than I need for one meal for this purpose), or we have something simple and quick like sandwiches or baked potatoes with cheese.  I add salads to our dinner if the main dish doesn’t have a substantial amount of vegetable in it, and usually have fruit and milk for breakfast, but I don’t write that on my plan. 

I don’t strictly stick to this if something comes up, but I find it makes the day run much more smoothly, when I know what we’ll be eating and can plan my time in the day accordingly.

Avivah

My pantry challenge and this week’s menu

For those of us who celebrate Passover, we all know that food is a big expense that can break the usual food budgets.  By using some of my frugal strategies I’ve shared here, I’ve managed to spend the same amount I always do monthly, in spite of having so many expensive holiday meals to prepare, and buying lots more meat and poultry.  I’ve gone through huge amounts of food, and though I’ve depleted my pantry/freezer significantly, am determined not to go out and buy anything else until the 15th (that’s when I replenish my monthly food money).  So I’m making my own personal pantry challenge, to see if I can make it through almost two more weeks without doing any shopping, and continuing to serve nutritious and tasty meals. 

I’ve always found menu planning to be a very helpful tool, but on a month like this, it’s indispensable!  If I wasn’t forcing myself to be a little more creative, it would be the most natural thing in the world to run out and stock up on some staples (like rice, potatoes, carrots and cabbage).  I inventoried my fridge and freezer today, made a list of what I have in the house, and have based my menu for this week strictly on that.  It’s similar to the approach I usually do, but since I have so much less variety (and quantity) in my pantry than usual, I have to be more creative and committed to make this work. 

Here’s what I have to work with:

– steel cut oats, millet, buckwheat, cornmeal (lots of all these things), nuts, and some flour and dried beans

– canned pumpkin, some canned beans and 2 cans tomato sauce

– freezer – 2 pkg. lamb breast, 4 lb ground meat; 3 lb chicken, some chunks of banana, 2 lb cottage cheese, 3 lb ricotta; prepared frozen stuff: chicken stock, 1 pan of turkey stew, 1 pan vegetarian stuffed peppers, 2 pans of moussaka

– the veg are really low – onions, celery, butternut squash, cabbage, a few carrots, a couple of turnips, tomatoes and lettuce, some broccoli stalks, bok chok, napa, no fruit

So the fun begins today!!  Though I’m planning now for the next two weeks, to be sure that there will be enough of everything until I go shopping, I’m only sharing this week’s menu here with you.  Just remember that the items above are for a family of ten, three meals a day, for almost two weeks.  Whenever you don’t see something listed for lunch, it’s because I’ll make a larger amount of dinner the night before and have planned leftovers the next day:

Sun – b – eggs; l – leftovers from yesterday; d – bean soup with bok choy (using lentil flour – I ground the lentils – and chicken stock in the fridge)

Mon – b – steel cut oats; d – lamb cassoulet (I have a pot of cooked lima beans in the fridge, and some lamb and stock in the freezer), cornbread

Tues – b – pumpkin bread; d – lasagna (with polenta as the base instead of pasta), and I’m going to shred and saute some broccoli stalks I have to use in place of spinach

Wed – b – steel cut oats; l – lasagna; d – moussaka (from freezer)

Thur – b – banana nut muffins; l – stuffed vegetarian peppers; d – lentils and rice

Fri – b – steel cut oats; l – lentils and rice

– for the baby: I’m going to cook up the last carrots and blend them together with butternut squash with some coconut oil.  He also loves drinking rich chicken broth. 

My kids usually like having fresh fruit daily, but I told them this morning that they’re going to have to focus on how much they’ll appreciate when I go shopping on the 15th!!   It’s important to me that we have ample, not just adequate, amounts of nutritious food, but if their taste buds miss the fruit, I’m not going to feel too bad about it. 

Would any of you like to join me for the week?  If so, inventory your foods, and get busy making a menu, using only what you have in your house.  (If you get something for free from someone or somewhere, that’s fine, too. )

Avivah

Weekly menu plan

Here is this week’s menu – most dinners are supplemented by salads or cooked vegetables:

Sun: b – pancakes; d – chicken soup with rice

Mon: b- farmer’s breakfast casserole; l – lentils and rice; d – beef stir fry

Tues: b – biscuits and gravy; d – salmon patties, mashed potatoes

Wed: b – corn muffins; d – lasagna

Thurs: b – rice pudding; d – oat walnut burgers

Fri: b – banana bread; l – leftovers

Dh has a friend who is opening a new restaurant, and is having a ‘trial run’ tonight for friends before they officially open the doors this week.   We were invited, and though eating out isn’t my favorite activity (I have a hard time not thinking how much less the same dishes cost when I make them at home :)), I’m looking forward to an evening with dh, which we haven’t had for a while.

Avivah

This week’s menu

Every week I try to plan out the menu for the coming week.  This saves me lots of time since I don’t have to spend lots of time thinking about what to make at the last minute, or run out to buy an ingredient here or there.  Since I know at the beginning of the week what I’ll be making, I include it in my regular shopping trip.  This also saves money, since I don’t have to resort to costly convenience foods.  And maybe best of all, it adds to a relaxed home environment, since I’m not stressed out trying to think about what to make at the last minute, and the kids have regular healthy meals, which keeps them happier, too!

 Quite a while ago, I posted a sample menu, and at that time I received requests for more sample menus.  My menus change from week to week and season to season, but here is the menu for this week.  It takes into account a recent change I made, which is to cook an extra large amount for dinner so that it leaves me with plenty to serve for lunch the next day.  I did this since I was preparing three meals a day every day, and it was getting overly time consuming.  So the menu below only lists breakfast and dinner meals.

Sun – b – potatoes and shredded cheese; d – chili cornbread pie

Mon – b – cottage cheese pancakes; d – hot dog hash

Tues – b – eggs and potatoes; d – fish casserole

Wed – b – corn fritters; d – spinach and cheese calzones

Thur – b – pumpkin bread; d – lentil tomato soup

Fri – b – baked oatmeal

Friday night begins our weekend menu plan, so it’s not included here.

Avivah

Menu planning

Since I wrote a couple of days ago about creating structure in your days, I thought it might be helpful to share what I do about meals. Since mealtimes come around with almost frightening regularity, being prepared for them makes all the difference between relaxed family meals and a tense mom rushing around trying to find something to fill everyone up at the last minute. (I’ve been on both sides of dinner time, and really strongly advocate being ready!)

I make three meals a day, and almost everything is cooked from scratch. I don’t do anything too fancy, but just knowing ahead of time what is planned makes cooking from scratch much easier. For eg, I can soak and sprout the beans a day before I need to cook them (which maximizes the nutritional value as well as making them more digestible), without needing to spend extra time on it because I see it coming up on the menu. If I’m making turkey pot pie, I will whip up a double recipe of biscuit dough and use half for a breakfast, and the other half to top the pot pie.

As each week progresses, I often make some changes to my written menu, depending on what leftovers I have, maybe to take advantage of a great sale on something this week, etc. But I still have the basic structure there, I don’t have to plan every meal an hour before dinner. Like this, we have a nice variety, we have meals everyone usually enjoys, and I don’t have the pressure of trying to think about it more than once every three weeks.

It’s really nice to all sit down together for a cooked meal. It’s just a totally different feeling than everyone scrounging for something of their own. I try to sit down as a family for all three meals every day, though lunch tends to be the weakest – sometimes only half the family is there at a time and others are busy playing outside, or something like that, but I’m okay with it. Soups, casseroles, and one pot dishes are great in terms of ease and limited time.

Here’s what this week’s menu looks like (many that look vegetarian actually have meat stock or gravy added for flavoring and nutritional value):

Sunday – b: pancakes (made of freshly ground millet, buckwheat, and rice); l – can’t remember, leftovers, I think; d – chili with cornbread
Monday – b: farmers casserole (shredded potatoes with eggs, ricotta cheese, and yogurt); l – freshly baked Cuban bread, split pea soup; d – buckwheat with ground beef and veggies
Tuesday: b – baked oatmeal; l – fresh bread, chickpeas, fried potatoes (my kids asked if they could make this today so I agreed and changed the original plan); d- baked beans and hot dogs
Wednesday: b- cranberry muffins; l – turkey pot pie; d – pizza
Thursday: b – pumpkin bread; l – baked potatoes w/ leftover stew ; d – spaghetti squash with meat sauce

Having meals planned out ahead of time also helps keep the food budget in check, something I will write more about in the future since there seems to be more interest in this aspect of things than I initially expected!

Avivah