Are you a meal planner or do you just wing it?
September 3, 2019 by DarcieTwo cobs of corn sullenly glare at me from the bottom shelf of my refrigerator. Just over a week ago they were torn from their stalks on a farm a mere four miles away and delivered the same day to a farmers’ market, full of potential to add their fresh, sweet flavor to a meal. As I strolled through the market, I grabbed the cobs almost as a reflex because the season for fresh corn is so fleeting. I tossed them into a plastic bag, returned home, and shoved them into the only space I could find in my over-stuffed refrigerator.
Over the ensuing seven days, the sugar in the corn has been inexorably transforming into starch. Each sunrise the kernels become a little less sweet, their plumpness diminishing by a fraction with every passing sunset. As each hour ticks past, the husks dry imperceptibly but steadily.
I stare back at the corn cobs, my gaze shifting downward in shame. I have once again failed my produce. I had no plan. Yes, I will use the corn, but it will never taste as vibrant as it was on the day when I thoughtlessly plucked it from the market stand.
There are three types of people in this world: those who plan their meals, prudently devising a shopping list after deciding on what to eat for the upcoming week (or whatever interval they choose); those who can visit the grocery store, grab whatever ‘speaks to them’, take it home and make delicious meals off the cuff; and those who think they are part of the latter group but who, in fact, cannot pull off that feat. If you haven’t already guessed, I belong to the last group.
It’s not that I have never attempted to plan my family’s meals, make a shopping list, buy the groceries, and dutifully follow the schedule. I stick to it for about three days before it all falls apart. I have to work late, or we get invited to a friend’s house for an impromptu dinner, or some other circumstance pops up and throws a wrench into the works. Then I sit with overripe, moldy, or wilted produce – or worse yet, meat that has gone off or dairy that has soured. I shudder to think of it.
For those of you who fall squarely in the first group: what is your secret? I would love to hear your tips on meal planning, what tools you use to stay on the path (I hope one of them is EYB!), and how you recover from life’s little roadblocks. My corn cobs say ‘thanks’.
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