π In This Article
Why Meal Prep Actually Works
Most people fail their diet not because of willpower β but because of convenience. When you're hungry and tired, you reach for whatever is fastest. Meal prep fixes this by making the healthy option the easy option.
Spending 1β2 hours on Sunday can save you 5β7 hours of cooking during the week. You eat better, spend less money, and always know exactly what's going in your body.
Meal prep isn't about being obsessive β it's about removing daily decision fatigue. When the food is already made, you eat it. Simple.
Before You Start: What You Need
You don't need fancy equipment. Here's the bare minimum to get started:
- Meal prep containers β 5β10 airtight containers (glass or BPA-free plastic)
- A large pan and pot β for cooking proteins and grains simultaneously
- A sheet pan β for roasting vegetables in bulk
- A food scale β optional but helps if you're tracking macros
- A grocery list β plan your meals before shopping, not after
Start with just 3 meals prepped, not 21. Trying to prep every single meal is overwhelming for beginners and leads to burnout. Build the habit first.
Step-by-Step: How to Meal Prep
Choose Your Prep Day
Sunday is the most popular choice. Pick one day where you have 1.5β2 hours free. Consistency matters more than the day itself.
Plan Your Meals for the Week
Decide what you'll eat for lunch and dinner (and breakfast if needed). Pick 2β3 proteins, 2 carb sources, and 2β3 vegetables. Keep it simple.
Write a Grocery List
Shop based on your plan β not randomly. This prevents buying ingredients you won't use and keeps costs low.
Cook Everything in Parallel
While rice cooks on the stove, roast vegetables in the oven and cook chicken in a pan. Multi-tasking cuts your total prep time in half.
Portion and Store
Divide meals into containers by serving size. Label with the day or meal name if needed. Refrigerate what you'll eat within 4 days, freeze the rest.
Reheat and Eat
Most meals reheat in 2β3 minutes in a microwave. Add fresh toppings like avocado, hot sauce, or lemon after reheating to keep things interesting.
Best Foods to Meal Prep
Not all foods prep equally well. These hold up great in the fridge and reheat without losing quality:
| Category | Best Options | Lasts In Fridge |
|---|---|---|
| Protein | Chicken breast, ground beef, eggs, tofu, canned tuna | 3β4 days |
| Carbs | Rice, oats, sweet potato, quinoa, pasta | 4β5 days |
| Vegetables | Broccoli, bell peppers, zucchini, carrots, spinach | 4β5 days |
| Legumes | Black beans, lentils, chickpeas | 4β5 days |
| Sauces | Hummus, Greek yogurt dressing, salsa | 5β7 days |
Leafy salads (go soggy), fried foods (lose texture), avocado (browns quickly), and dishes with cream-based sauces (separate when reheated). Add these fresh instead.
Sample Weekly Meal Prep Plan
Here's a simple beginner-friendly prep session that covers 5 days of lunches and dinners:
Protein: Baked Chicken Breast (1kg)
Season with olive oil, garlic, paprika, salt. Bake at 200Β°C for 25 mins. Slice and divide into 5 portions. Use in rice bowls, wraps, or salads.
Carb: White Rice (500g dry)
Cook according to package instructions. Divide into 5 containers. Pairs with everything and reheats perfectly.
Veg: Roasted Broccoli + Bell Peppers
Toss with olive oil and salt. Roast at 200Β°C for 20 mins. Divide into 5 portions. Add colour and fibre to every meal.
Bonus: Hard-Boiled Eggs (10 eggs)
Boil for 10 mins, cool in ice water. Keep in shell until ready to eat β lasts up to 7 days in the fridge. Great for quick high-protein snacks.
This entire prep session takes about 60β75 minutes and gives you 5 days of ready-made lunches and dinners. That's under 15 minutes per meal β done in advance.
How Long Does Meal Prep Last?
| Storage Method | How Long | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Refrigerator | 3β5 days | Current week meals |
| Freezer | 2β3 months | Batch cooking extras |
| Room temperature | 2 hours max | Serving only β never store |
A good rule: prep MondayβWednesday meals on Sunday, and prep ThursdayβFriday meals on Wednesday. This keeps food fresh and reduces freezer dependency.
Beginner Mistakes to Avoid
Prepping too many different meals at once β’ Not labelling containers β’ Skipping sauces (makes food boring) β’ Storing warm food directly in fridge β’ Prepping foods that don't reheat well
Start with just 3 meals β’ Keep sauces separate until eating β’ Let food cool before storing β’ Use glass containers for better reheating β’ Prep snacks too, not just main meals
The best meal prep routine is the one you actually stick to. Start small β even prepping just your lunches for 3 days is a massive win. Add more complexity as the habit builds.