What Meal Planning Really Is
Meal planning is choosing a few meals before you're tired and hungry, then shopping for the missing ingredients. It doesn't have to be spreadsheets or a full Sunday of prep. It can include leftovers, one big batch, or a mix of homemade and store-bought. The only rule is that you decide ahead instead of at 6 p.m. when you're hungry and tired.
Why It Works
You make better choices when you're not stressed. Planning also reduces waste because you use what's already in your fridge and freezer on purpose. When you plan, you can deliberately balance quick nights with slower projects, reuse ingredients across meals, and leave room for one or two "flex" nights when you eat out or improvise. Even a loose plan beats no plan.
How to Meal Plan (When You Hate Planning)
Plan 3 dinners
Start small; expand later.
Check your kitchen
Pantry, fridge, freezer, "use first" items.
Pick easy wins
One pasta, one tray bake, one leftovers night.
Write a short list
Ingredients only; keep it quick.
Shop once
Buy the missing pieces and stop re-running to the store.
Stay flexible
Swap days when life happens.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Planning seven "project" dinners (burnout).
Ignoring leftovers (plan a remix night).
Buying without checking the pantry (duplicates).
Making the plan rigid (swap, don't quit).
Writing a plan but not a shopping list (you still end up at the store without a plan).
Tips
Theme nights cut decisions (tacos, pasta, soup).
Keep two backup 15-minute meals.
Put the plan where you'll see it (fridge or shared note).
Leave one night unplanned so you can use leftovers or takeout without guilt.
FAQ
Summary
A "good enough" plan is 3-5 dinners, one shopping trip, and flexibility. That's the version that actually sticks. Small steps beat a perfect system you never start.