View Full Version : Weekly Menu Planning Service
I'm trying to find a service that provides a weekly or
monthly menu planning service by e-mail. Anybody know of
one?
<jtpcap@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:E1VFc.791$jJ3.47@bignews5.bellsouth.net...
> I'm trying to find a service that provides a weekly or
> monthly menu
planning
> service by e-mail. Anybody know of one?
You mean you need someone to tell what to eat and when?
Isn't that what mothers are for? Planning ahead takes the
fun out of cooking and eating,
IMO.
Perhaps I'm missing something, but of what benefit is such a
service? Ed
On Sun, 4 Jul 2004 11:14:00 -0400, <jtpcap@nowhere.com> wrote:
>I'm trying to find a service that provides a weekly
>or monthly menu planning service by e-mail. Anybody
>know of one?
www.savingdinner.com Look for the menu mailer link (low carb
and regular versions available). Comes in your email once a
week complete with shopping list. The menus are reasonably
healthy and the recipes are usually very good.
Regards, Tracy R.
"Edwin Pawlowski" <esp@snet.net> wrote in
news:b4WFc.708$vI3.62@newssvr16.news.prodigy.com:
>
> <jtpcap@nowhere.com> wrote in message
> news:E1VFc.791$jJ3.47@bignews5.bellsouth.net...
>> I'm trying to find a service that provides a weekly or
>> monthly menu
> planning
>> service by e-mail. Anybody know of one?
>
> You mean you need someone to tell what to eat and when?
> Isn't that what mothers are for? Planning ahead takes the
> fun out of cooking and eating,
> IMO.
>
> Perhaps I'm missing something, but of what benefit is such
> a service? Ed
>
>
>
Such a service would allow for better budgeting as You could
get possibly all the stuff you'd need excepting perishables,
on sale. Or save time by grocery shopping in one swoop.
You'd could organize better. Like defrost everthing that's
frozen, chop, slice and brown the night before etc..
I prefer my method though...getting what looks good at the
market on the way home. And stocking various ingredients for
fast foods incase nothing looks good or I feel lazy. And
doing major meal or fancy meals on the week ends when I have
more time. But If I had kids or other people depending on my
cooking I'd like a planned menu better.
Some folk have the same breakfasts all of the lives with
little or no change. Some have a 8 or 10 item supper menu
that repeats...So a monthly meal menu might be a good idea
and help to indroduce new tastes etc...
Wednesday night might not need to be meatloaf supper
night anymore.
--
Once during Prohibition I was forced to live for days on
nothing but food and water.
--------
FIELDS, W. C.
On Sun, 04 Jul 2004 16:53:40 GMT, hahabogus <not@valid.invalid>
wrote:
>Such a service would allow for better budgeting as You
>could get possibly all the stuff you'd need excepting
>perishables, on sale.
That would be a reason *not* to use such a service. How
would the service know what's on sale or not?
>I prefer my method though...getting what looks good at the
>market on the way home.
That's what I do too. I keep enough on hand to tide me over
for a few days, but often I decide during the daywhat's for
dinner that night. And shop the sales often.
Like today: 15lbs of $.69/lb brisket.
-sw
"hahabogus" <not@valid.invalid> wrote in message
> You'd could organize better. Like defrost everthing that's
> frozen, chop, slice and brown the night before etc..
Perhaps, but I don't need a service to tell me that.
>
> I prefer my method though...getting what looks good at the
> market on the way home. And stocking various ingredients
> for fast foods incase nothing looks good or I feel lazy.
> And doing major meal or fancy meals on the week ends when
> I have more time. But If I had kids or other people
> depending on my cooking I'd like a planned menu better.
We plan some things ahead, like a dinner with friends or
holiday meal. OTOH, last week we had house guests for a
few days. I knew what the meat was going to be, but not
the rest of the meal. A trip to the local farmer's market
that opened at 4 decided the rest. We bought what was
fresh that day.
> Some have a 8 or 10 item supper menu that repeats...So a
> monthly meal menu might be a good idea and help to
> indroduce new tastes etc...
>
> Wednesday night might not need to be meatloaf supper night
> anymore.
I think my wife married me to escape pasta on Sunday,
Tuesday, Thursday. That went on for YEARS in her house.
Minor variations on the meat in the sauce.
There are plenty of things in life we must do on a
particular schedule set by others. What to eat for dinner is
not one of them. A little spontaneity makes life much more
fun. We had friends over today. I called them this
afternoon. "Hey, I'm cooking a chicken, come on over" was
met with "OK, I'm making macaroni salad so I'll bring it."
Grabbed the snow peas and a meal was born and enjoyed. Ed
esp@snet.net http://pages.cthome.net/edhome
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