Menu Planning and Grocery Shopping

Menu Planning and Grocery Shopping

It took me awhile to develop my current system of menu planning and grocery shopping, but I’ve finally settled on something that works for me.  I’d love to hear about your system. 

Choosing Recipes
1.  Search through favorite cookbooks.  A few of my favorite cookbooks include:

2.  Search for recipe by ingredients I already have or on favorite sites.  A few of my favorites are:

  • eatingwell.com
  • delish.com
  • epicurious.com
  • allrecipes.com  (in my experience, this one is hit or miss because the users reviewing the recipes tend to completely change the original recipe!)
  • Crockin’ Girls  (They have a Facebook page and a website.  I’ve used my crockpot more in the last six months than in my entire married life thanks to these easy, tasty recipes.)

3.  Go to my saved, loose recipes.  I’m the process of organizing my recipes.  I have several on index cards, many in a three-ring binder separated by category, and plenty bookmarked on the computer.  I’m still figuring out how to organize them.  I’m considering making my own online recipe book using Googledocs.

Making the List
Going to the grocery store is quite the outing these days.  Usually, I can get a solid half an hour of shopping in before Janie gets ants in her pants or Walt decides he needs a new diaper.  Having limited time to grab the food and go means that I had to create a system to make shopping as efficient as possible.  To do this, Philip created this handy-dandy list in Microsoft Word. 

I print off five of these at the start of each month and stick them on the fridge with a magnet.  I add to the list as we run out of items, and I use this to organize items as I make the weekly shopping list.  Having the ingredients organized helps me to be more efficient at the store.

It’s also important for me to be efficient with my cart space and position of items because I have Janie buckled into the front of the cart, Walt in the basket in his infant carrier, and the diaper bag on the lower area.  I don’t know what I’m going to do when I finally get Walt out of the infant carrier.  He has an inch and two pounds left before he officially has to graduate from the infant carrier.  That’s a whole different story, though.  Back to making the list…

Once I got to know the stores where I buy items, I noticed myself even writing items in the order I’d encounter them in the store.  For example, my produce is organized first by fruits and then by veggies.

Creating the Menu
While making the grocery list, I write out the week’s menu on some cute stationery.  Philip bought me a cute magnetic pad like this that I have on the fridge. 

I use it to make my to-do lists and write out our weekly menu.  I’ve found that writing out the days of the week with what we’re having for dinner each night holds me accountable to making that day’s dinner.  Having a plan means that we eat out less often and we waste less money on food that we don’t eat.  It translates into smaller waistlines and more fun money.  I write out the main dish, any sides, where I found the recipe, and any important notes like “crockpot recipe” or “marinate meat for 6 hours before prep.” 

Take Time to Edit
During or after each meal, Philip and I talk about things we’d do to change the meal for next time.  Next to or directly on the recipe, I add ingredients, cross out ingredients, adjust amounts, etc.  This ensures that we’re eating the recipe exactly to our liking for next time.  Very rarely, we’ll decide that the recipe isn’t worth making again, so I’ll write a big “X” over it if it’s in a cookbook.

What do you do?
So, what’s your system?  I’d love to hear it. 

Someday, my dream is to do the shopping like my mom used to.  She could go to the store with several recipes in her head, three (or more) kids in tow, and manage to get every ingredient she needed.  How do you do that?!   

What's this blog about?

What's this blog about?

First, why in the world did I call the blog “Hallelujah Is My Song”?  This is a reference to Blessed Pope John Paul II’s quote: 

“Do not abandon yourselves to despair. 

We are the Easter people, and hallelujah is our song.” 

Blessed Pope John Paul II was an important presence in my relationship with my husband from the first days.  (I’ll write a future blog post about his impact on our early relationship.)  I chose this quote because, well, it’s easy to forget the joy we should have in the Resurrection despite any suffering we might experience now.  It’s my Catholic version of “Don’t worry.  Be happy!”

  
 This is a blog dedicated to documenting the everyday occurrences in our “domestic church” with our daughter, Janie (20 months), our son, Walt (5 months), and our dog, Monty (2 years).  I used to teach high school Spanish.  Now, I’m a stay-at-home mother to our two beautiful children.  My husband, Philip, is a pediatric resident.  

 Here’s our latest family pic from Halloween.  
I love how both of the babies (Walt the monkey and Jane aka Elmo) are giggling.

In addition to writing about our family and what we’re up to, I will post about my interests which include: anything and everything related to Catholicism, cooking, home organizing, education, crafts, reading, and keeping up with current events.  I’m sure I’ll come up with more as time goes on!  If I’m organized enough, maybe I’ll figure out a way to categorize my posts.

I hope to use this blog as a creative outlet and an opportunity to network with other people who are passionate about the same things I am.  Here’s to hoping that I can stay dedicated to this blog and not let it fall by the wayside.  Third time’s a charm, right?  

Better go!  Jane’s emptying the pantry and just ran off with the vanilla extract bottle!  Stay tuned for more…       

What’s this blog about?

What’s this blog about?

First, why in the world did I call the blog “Hallelujah Is My Song”?  This is a reference to Blessed Pope John Paul II’s quote: 

“Do not abandon yourselves to despair. 

We are the Easter people, and hallelujah is our song.” 

Blessed Pope John Paul II was an important presence in my relationship with my husband from the first days.  (I’ll write a future blog post about his impact on our early relationship.)  I chose this quote because, well, it’s easy to forget the joy we should have in the Resurrection despite any suffering we might experience now.  It’s my Catholic version of “Don’t worry.  Be happy!”

  
 This is a blog dedicated to documenting the everyday occurrences in our “domestic church” with our daughter, Janie (20 months), our son, Walt (5 months), and our dog, Monty (2 years).  I used to teach high school Spanish.  Now, I’m a stay-at-home mother to our two beautiful children.  My husband, Philip, is a pediatric resident.  

 Here’s our latest family pic from Halloween.  
I love how both of the babies (Walt the monkey and Jane aka Elmo) are giggling.

In addition to writing about our family and what we’re up to, I will post about my interests which include: anything and everything related to Catholicism, cooking, home organizing, education, crafts, reading, and keeping up with current events.  I’m sure I’ll come up with more as time goes on!  If I’m organized enough, maybe I’ll figure out a way to categorize my posts.

I hope to use this blog as a creative outlet and an opportunity to network with other people who are passionate about the same things I am.  Here’s to hoping that I can stay dedicated to this blog and not let it fall by the wayside.  Third time’s a charm, right?  

Better go!  Jane’s emptying the pantry and just ran off with the vanilla extract bottle!  Stay tuned for more…       

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