![]() ![]() ![]() (Pictured: Spicy pork posole, from Self magazine many moons ago!) ![]() I also put notations like MD:CP in the main title (so all of my crockpot main dishes are together), and I tag them with words like “slow cooker, clean, low carb, etc” since I sometimes go on and off different eating regimens. One tip: I keep a backup of all my recipes in B-Folders (which doesn’t have an iPhone app, so it can’t quite serve the same purpose). Both in Pepperplate and in B-Folders, I organize recipes by putting the meal in the title of the recipe, so if I’m sorting by alphabet I see all of my BF (breakfast) or MD (main dishes) together. (You can also pick and choose which ingredients to add to the shopping list, which is always helpful when you already have 60% of what you need in the house.) And one of the things I like best is that you can add all of the recipe ingredients to a single shopping list where items are grouped by general grocery store section (dairy, meat, etc) and consolidated. When you’re sitting down to do the meal planning for the week you add a specific recipe to a calendar, making it easy for your partner or a helpful third party (nanny, au pair, whomever) to know what the plan is for that night. (I like that you can add a picture - they’re always my favorite part when looking for recipes!) The program can import recipes from some of its partner sites (allegedly), but it’s also easy enough to add recipes manually. It has a web version, as well as an app for my iPhone and my iPad, and I’ve set it up on my husband’s phone as well (which gives him ready access to the recipes and shopping lists as well). I really like the free app we’ve found: Pepperplate. (Or am I the only one who, when faced with a food item I can’t find, consults the recipe and says, “well, screw it, they only want 1Tbsp of shallots anyway!” and moves on?) I, too, was seeking an app that would help with meal planning, shopping lists, and also hold the recipe so I could consult it if I needed to in the store. Prior to that we had a system of just cooking 10 easy meals “on rotation,” but we got bored with that. We fell off The Fresh 20 because the meal prep was just too involved for the time we wanted to invest - we also don’t eat at home reliably 5 nights a week, and adjusting the shopping list to only 4 nights took a surprising amount of thought. We keep trying different things family dinner strategies at Casa Griffin. We actually have talked about this in general, rounding up 5 family dinner strategies better than delivery, as well as having a nice discussion about how to share dinner duties between two working parents - but we haven’t talked directly about apps (and I have a good one!), so let’s discuss - I’m always curious to hear what people are using! Ladies, do you have any favorite meal planning apps? Have you tried and abandoned any? Reader M wonders:Īre there any resources that you have gathered/written about for meal planning for working moms? I am looking for a good app or system that will help! As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. This post may contain affiliate links and CorporetteMoms may earn commissions for purchases made through links in this post. ![]()
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