T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1667.1 | Try The Cooking Bible | SPGBAS::KATZ | Have Ramjet, will travel | Thu Mar 09 1989 12:17 | 4 |
| The Joy of Cooking has a section on menus...and the recipes for
what they recommend!
Daniel
|
1667.2 | Different Meal Planning Problem | USWAV1::BRADISH | | Mon Mar 13 1989 12:20 | 16 |
| My problem is cooking the same things over and over. I have a friend
that writes down her weekly dinner menu and keeps in on the fridge.
She is home all day and can make lots of different things. I don't
get home until 6pm and I can't cook for two hours after that. My
husband and I had a fight over meal planning. We came to a solution.
(his idea)
Before we get up from the dinner table, WE decide what we'll be
having for supper the following night. We've been doing it for
a week now, but it is really working out wonderfully. I don't mind
cooking, but I hate trying to decide what to have every single night.
I don't have the Joy of Cooking (or the other one "Joy of" book
either).
My name -- Joy.
|
1667.3 | Marian Burros cookbook | VAXUUM::FARR | | Mon Mar 13 1989 16:08 | 7 |
|
There's a book by Marian Burros a food writer/activist (honest!)
called `You've Got It Made' that provides menus that are balanced,
nutritious, low fat, but good. Her thing is low/cost, low quantity
of meat in a menu, so they're not elaborate either.
Julie
|
1667.4 | Another Burros cookbook | VINO::SSCOTT | | Tue Mar 14 1989 12:13 | 7 |
| Marian Burros is also the author of "Keep it Simple" which contains a varity of
30 minute meals (entire menus). She has a nice variety of tasty dishes, most
are for 2 to 4 persons, and all are planned with nutrition in mind. The
book is available in paperback -- a small investment for the start of many
a great (and easy) meal!
Sandy
|
1667.5 | Write down menus for the week | LEDDEV::BLAKE | | Tue Mar 14 1989 17:07 | 20 |
| re: .2
I plan meals (suppers) and baking by the week before I write the
weekly grocery list. On an ordinary calendar, I write down a supper
menu for each day, along with the cookbook initials and page number
(I have 40+ cookbooks and I can't always remember which one I need).
Then, I make sure I have all the ingredients on hand before shopping
and I cross off each menu as it is used (we don't always stick to
the menu for a particular day). I don't get home until 6 pm or
later either so at least I have saved the decision-making time
(as much as an hour as I dawdle over the cookbooks and snack).
My husband can also start dinner if he gets home first (a rarity)
because he can just check the calendar. The disadvantage is my
menu-planning is usually a 1-2 hour process once a week (usually
right before I want to go shopping) because I love
looking at my cookbooks and cross referencing recipes. Also, this
doesn't eliminate actual cooking time, although I try to plan for
quick meals during the week.
Tammy
|
1667.6 | Menu planning works great for me | CADSYS::RICHARDSON | | Wed Mar 15 1989 13:26 | 31 |
| re .5: Me, too. I'm not crazy about grocery shopping anyways
(especially if the store is out of some common item that I really need
so I have to go to *another* store to finish - what a waste of time!),
and don't have a lot of spare time these days, so I always make out the
menus for the week, and the grocery list for them - I don't go to the
grocery store without a list. I actually put a bookmark in the
relevant cookbook for each menu, and put the cookbooks on top of the
microwave (just the right size spot), and then put them away after that
menu is used. I write the week's menu down one side of the grocery
list as I do the list, including notes like when to thaw various items
that are needed for later menus. It usually takes an hour or two to do
the week's menu (unless there is a dinner party or something), and I
usually do that on Tuesday since I usually shop on Wednesday. I don't
usually plan on doing very fancy things with vegetables (unless I am
planning a party), so I write down generic things like "Friday
vegetable" (meaning one that can cook quickly so we can eat before
going to the synagogue - artichokes are out on Fridays!) and then can
substitute whatever looks good at the store (like, if fiddlehead ferns
are in season and not outrageous, I always buy those instead of
whatever was on the menu) - this tends to mean that really perishable
veggies get eaten on Thursday and Friday, and by the following Tuesday
we are eating less perishable stuff (like carrots). But it sure saves
time!
One of my friends thinks this limits spontaneity, though! She says she
shops nearly every day, on her way home from DEC, and wanders around
the store until she finds something that looks appealing for dinner for
her family, plus any other needed items she remembers. I would feel
like I was wasting an awful lot of time doing things that way, but then
again I'm not fond of shopping of any kind anyhow, and can think of
lots of places I'd rather wander around in than the grocery store.
|
1667.7 | But, we eat well and we're happy | WITNES::HANNULA | Cat Tails & Bike Wheels Don't Mix | Wed Mar 15 1989 13:57 | 15 |
| Re .6
Now, I can't think of something I enjoy more than stopping at Idylwilde
Farm on my way home from work to pick up something exciting for
dinner. I don't menu plan, so it doesn't matter what I pick up
since I can just go home and cook whatever I bought.
I really wish I had the discipline to menu plan. We always end
up wasting so much food in our house. Just this morning I had to
throw out a pound of Danish Ham, since nobody bothered to eat it
over the past couple weeks. I just walk through the grocery store
once a week and buy whatever looks good, with no idea when we will
get around to eating it.
-Nancy
|
1667.8 | Planning is great...but sometimes plan not to plan. | PSTJTT::TABER | The call of the mild | Wed Mar 15 1989 14:02 | 15 |
| We do the same as the last few respondants -- make up a menu, shop against it,
and then I tick meals off as they are done. It's great because I can just
breeze in the door, pick something off the menu and start dinner without
having to get into "what do you want?/I dunno, what do YOU want?/ I dunno..."
with my wife.
We keep things from getting too planned out by always having at least one
"Free Throw" night (where we're each responsible for getting our own
dinner) and putting "go out to dinner" or "order pizza" on the menu too
from time to time.
("Go out to dinner" usually specifies where, or we play the alternate
game "Where Do You Want To Go?" until midnight.)
>>>==>PStJTT
|
1667.9 | | USMFG::PJEFFRIES | the best is better | Wed Mar 15 1989 16:49 | 9 |
| I don't exactly do menu planning, but I do keep in mind that I usually
cook 4 out of 7 nights a week. So when I grocery shop I think in
4's. I too hate to find that the market is out of something that
I really need, because out where I live there is only one market.
I do keep my freezer pretty well stocked though, and with the microwave
it doesn't take much to make a last minute change. The only time
that I stop after work every night is during sweet corn season,
but there is no browsing just grab the corn and run.
|
1667.10 | Look into magazines | AKOV11::THORP | | Thu Mar 16 1989 11:27 | 9 |
| Woman's Day or Family Cirle Magazine includes a monthly menu plan
in the form of a calendar. They include entres, side dish, vegetable
and/or salad, and I think they even include desert. Recipes are
provided.
You may not use the plan every night of the month, but they give
you 30+ ideas for the nights you will cook.
Chris
|
1667.11 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Wed Feb 09 1994 13:04 | 47 |
| I keep looking for new, better meal-planning aids - none of which I
use, but that's beside the point; _someday_, my meal-planner will come
- so when I spotted a new menu-planning cookbook on the last-chance
island at Barnes & Noble (the one they put where you have to look at it
while waiting to pay for your purchases, sort of the bookseller's
equivalent of candy in the checkout line), I seized it.
It turns out I was snookered (again), but only partially; the book has
some good ideas, it's just the execution that needs work. This thing
consists of a hard-cover folder that opens flat into three sections,
each of which has a spiral-bound collection of recipe cards in it. The
first one is "Appetizers" (including salads, not just canap�s), the
second "Main Courses" (including things that might pass as side dishes,
like potatoes), and the third "Desserts" (desserts). The cards are
bound at the top so that you can flip each book to a likely-looking
recipe and then scan all three side by side to see the complete menu.
[If you happen to want more than one recipe from a single book, you're
out of luck; you'll have to flip pages, just like with ordinary
cookbooks.]
Each recipe covers two cards; the top is a photograph ("is it
_supposed_ to look like that?") and the bottom contains instructions
(the ones I read seemed to be pretty clearly documented) and a few
handy hints for presentation.
So - the layout impressed me as a convenient way to package assorted
recipes for different courses, and to allow all the recipes for a
single meal to be visible at once. However, since the setup is limited
to three books/courses, and since cards can't easily be added to the
spiral-bound sets, it's got a lot of builtin restrictions. (The
selection of recipes tends towards the "fancy," as well, and there were
only about 20% of them that I'd actually use. This is a decent average
for a cookbook - one never likes *all* the recipes - but for a
meal-planner it's not too great.)
It did occur to me that this setup could be made more flexible if one
could obtain a number of smallish binders (one for each course - make
up your own indexing scheme) that would open flat and could be lined up
side by side or top to bottom, preferably with plastic sleeves or those
self-stick photo-insert things, and construct one's own set. [This
whole process would be best done via computer, since it's easier to
index the same recipe under multiple headings, but until it's time- and
cost-effective to hand-enter or scan all those clippings and recipe
cards into the machine - and to have the machine's recipes handy while
you're cooking - a hard copy system seems like a good idea.]
-b
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