panda: drawing of a panda sitting in a tea cup which has fallen over on its side (sleepeh panda)
panda ([personal profile] panda) wrote in [community profile] healthy_eating2011-08-02 02:30 pm

discussion: cooking when tired

One of my healthy eating goals is to cook more from scratch, using fresh ingredients. But when you are tired/low on spoons, this can be very hard to do. Last night I made ramen with ground beef and frozen peas. I personally try not to eat things like ramen very often because of the sodium/saturated fat content. But eating ramen is certainly better than not eating anything at all. And when I'm low on spoons, saying "I'm just too tired to eat" is tempting. But of course, skipping meals would only make me feel worse.

So, how do you get yourself to prepare food when you're exhausted/spoonless?

My thoughts:

-when you do have spoons, make extra of dishes that reheat well and eat them as leftovers. If they freeze well, freeze them as individual serving sizes for an instant heat-n-eat meal.
-when you do have spoons, do prep work in advance. I'm going to be tired/busy starting in 3 weeks when school starts, and my plan is to wash/chop a day's worth of vegetables in the morning, when I still have energy.

The downside of these ideas is I get tired of eating the same thing over and over again. If you go the freezer rout, you can at least mix and match without having to worry about your food going bad. But that also depends on your having space in the freezer.

Other alternatives:

-eating something that doesn't require much preparing, like bananas, apples or baby carrots with peanut butter or another nut butter. Of course, that doesn't really make a full meal ...

I know I'm going to have to deal with this a lot during school, so I'd like several coping tactics in my back pocket. What are you guys' suggestions?
killing_rose: Raven on an eagle (Default)

[personal profile] killing_rose 2011-08-02 08:50 pm (UTC)(link)
Microwave! This is always my go-to. I don't mean "find microwaveable meals" either. I mean things like eggs. Or polenta. Or have a steamer basket for vegetables. Keep precooked chicken in the freezer and microwave it for dinner. Keep cans of beans and add them to something.
killing_rose: Raven on an eagle (Default)

[personal profile] killing_rose 2011-08-02 10:11 pm (UTC)(link)
I'm heavily contemplating buying a microwave cookbook that the women's prison up here puts out. Since the only thing they're allowed to cook in is a microwave, I'm told they have a wide variety of recipes.

Eggs are actually fairly easy once you get it down. Though scrambled is still easiest. And remembering liquid and/or oil is very, very important. (Though green beans mixed with scrambled eggs on top and Parmesan or red pepper or other flavoring or nutritional yeast was my go-to simply because they all cooked at the same time and thus removed my issues with having to remember to do more than one quick fork stir at about 1 and a quarter and then pull out about 2 and a quarter.)