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Posts by Stacy

I write primarily about trees and the lessons they teach us, nature and the outdoors, life with disability and chronic illness, life in a camper van, and what hope looks like to me right now.

Rolling Food Prep Part 2

A Weekly Template

In the last post, I talked about “rolling food prep” as a strategy for pacing: preparing extras of one or two ingredients each time you cook for use in future meals. The aim is to prepare about half of each meal fresh, and to assemble the rest from previously prepared ingredients.

Keeping track of what needs prepared and what’s already done can be tricky, though. To help with that, I follow a weekly plan or template and focus on preparing one nutritional category a day (e.g., protein, grains, vegetables). While I certainly make other things most days as well, this category is the one I make extra of.

The plan isn’t rigid. I vary it based on energy and what I already have on hand. Having a framework, though, helps keep meal planning relatively simple while making sure all my groceries get used before they spoil.

Here’s my typical template. (My menu planning week starts on Thursdays, since the trash goes out on Wednesday, and I have a cleaned-out refrigerator to fill.)

  • Thursday (Grocery Shopping Day): Beans I generally cook dry legumes from scratch. Shopping days turn into weary days, so first thing in the morning, 2-3 cups of soaked beans go in the slow cooker. At dinner time if all else fails I can just dress them simply with salt and a flavored oil and serve them with vegetables prepped earlier in the week. The remaining beans are frozen on a cookie sheet and then go into a resealable bag, where I can draw out handfuls as needed to round out a meal. I may reserve the broth for soups.
  • Friday: Perishable Produce I wash greens and chop or slice things that will only keep a few days. I probably won’t get to everything on Friday, but the produce is more likely to be used before it spoils if it is ready to go.
  • Saturday: Meat (or more produce, or condiments) When I buy meat (I don’t always) I’ll cook two or three pounds at once. Leftovers are divided into individual or double portions to freeze.
  • Sunday: Day of rest Leftovers.
  • Monday: Sturdy Produce E.g., chopped cabbage, roasted beets, shredded carrots—again, I probably won’t get to everything on the same day. Because I’m less worried about these foods spoiling, the next three days get re-ordered a lot.
  • Tuesday: Grains Rice, barley, polenta, quick-breads, and their ilk. I usually freeze rice like I do the beans, but other whole grains go in the freezer in small containers.
  • Wednesday: Condiments, sauces, etc. E.g., tomato sauce, pickled onions, a basic vinaigrette, or a ginger-scallion sauce—things that keep well or can be frozen. On Wednesday nights I soak beans for Thursday.

Despite the best-laid plans, I usually end up skipping at least one day due to illness. But almost always, the refrigerator and freezer have enough things pre-prepared to make an easy, balanced meal, even on days when I can’t cook anything new.

Of course, this is just one way to pace food prep throughout the week, and it may not suit your tastes and nutritional needs. The template is easily adapted, though. I do find that sticking to a framework of some sort keeps the fridge and freezer well-stocked with ready-to-go ingredients with minimal mental effort.

In the next post I’ll show how this template turns into actual menus for a week.

Rolling Food Prep Part 1

A Strategy for Pacing

Good pacing is crucial for most of us with energy-limiting conditions. We need to avoid over-doing on low-to-mid-energy days to prevent a “crash,” and on zero-energy days, when all activity is over-doing, we need easy meals on hand.

I don’t know anyone who manages those things perfectly every time—I certainly don’t. But doing a “rolling” food prep helps me come close reasonably often. Basically, I prepare extras of one or two ingredients each time I cook that will go in the freezer or refrigerator for future meals.

  • If I’m chopping a stalk of celery for tonight’s soup, I’ll cut a couple more into sticks for snacks tomorrow.
  • If making rice, I’ll double or triple the quantity and put the extra in the freezer.
  • If toasting nuts or seeds, I’ll do enough to fill a pint jar to have on hand in the fridge.

The question I always ask is, “What can I easily do today that will save me a task tomorrow?”

The aim is to prepare about half a meal fresh, and to assemble the rest from previously prepared ingredients. This makes it easier to do small amounts of work every day, which helps with more consistent pacing. On zero-energy days, the freezer, refrigerator, and pantry are already stocked with a broad range of pre-prepared ingredients that can easily be assembled into a meal.

When I first tried this method, I found it more of a mental challenge than anything, just to keep track of what needed to be prepared and what was on hand to create balanced meals. For me the solution has been to plan meals that focus prep work each day on one nutritional category (e.g., protein, grains, or vegetables). While I certainly prepare other things most days as well, this category is the one I make extra of.

That’s the basic theory. In the next post I’ll get down to brass tacks and look at how I use rolling food prep to plan a typical week.

The World of One Spoon Cooking

Every day: three meals. An endless round of shopping, chopping, cooking, cleaning. But also—an endless round of color, fragrance, flavor, fullness.

Preparing your own meals can be both pleasure and hardship, but sometimes hardship takes over. Cooking can be a challenge even for the healthy. If you live with an energy-limiting condition—chronic illness, chronic pain, injury, age, or even pregnancy—feeding yourself three times a day can seem like an insurmountable hurdle. It is one of the most relentless challenges many of us face, yet managing our conditions well demands nourishing our bodies well.

In this blog I share the strategies I’ve found most effective during my 20+ year illness journey for preparing nutritious, tasty, varied meals that don’t break the energy bank. They aren’t no-effort strategies, I’m afraid. No magical solution makes self-care a snap. But they let me pace myself so that I can eat well and enjoy the pleasures of the table without getting (too) beaten up in the process.

These are my mainstays:

  1. Do a “rolling” food prep: prepare extras of one or two ingredients each time you cook for use in future meals.
  2. Let time (slow, hands-off methods of cooking) or money (e.g., buying pre-chopped vegetables) compensate for minimal energy.
  3. Go off-recipe when possible. This makes pacing easier, as you can respond more intuitively to your body’s need for rest.
  4. Learn good flavor combinations that go well together no matter how they’re prepared. You can choose the cooking method based on your energy level.
  5. Rely on easy flavor boosters: sauces, dressings, flavored oils, pickles, spice mixes.
  6. Give foundational ingredients (rice, beans, meat) good flavor. That lets you make simple meals from leftovers that still have layered flavors.
  7. Play to your energy strengths (meal-planning, chopping, standing) when you have them. It helps to avoid cooking all of dinner at dinner-time.
  8. Do small, fussy tasks in advance to minimize the mental effort of juggling multiple steps.
  9. Maintain good infrastructure: sharp knives, curated spices and tools, accessible utensils, etc. This is basic, but it takes discipline!
  10. Plan plenty of extra time so that you can take rest breaks as needed. Again, basic but hard to do.

You can find a fuller version of the list with examples in the menu bar, and of course, I’ll explore them in more detail in future posts. Because these are strategies and not recipes, they work well for different diets, whether Mediterranean, ketogenic, gluten-free, or vegetarian.

If you are new to this adventure of cooking with an energy-limiting condition, I hope even this bare-bones list will ease your way. If you’re an old pro, I hope you can still find something useful here—and that you’ll share your own strategies in the comments. I would love for this site to become a generous community of cooks and eaters.

Welcome, and bon appétit!