Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

MOB Kitchen: How to avoid making your weekly meal prep boring

By Wednesday, you can’t stand the sight of it – but with a little imagination, you’ll waste less and enjoy it more

Ben Lebus
Friday 31 July 2020 12:16 BST
Comments
These dishes will ward off the temptation to nip to a local sandwich joint
These dishes will ward off the temptation to nip to a local sandwich joint

Making one big batch of food for the rest of the week helps manage your food waste.

But the same meal tends to get boring by day three. To resist the temptation of nipping to your local sandwich joint, we’re going to show you how to keep those one-person meals fresh all week.

Bolognese

A MOB classic. If we are going to eat a little high-quality beef, then making it last over the course of a week is the best way to really enjoy this treat and make it as sustainable as possible.

Bolognese with sweet potato mash

Chop 1 skin-on sweet potato into chunks. Put it into a microwaveable container with ½ a lime.

Cook for 8-10 minutes until completely soft. Carefully remove the lime, squeeze all the juice over the potato, then mash. Season to taste. Can be made the night before and then reheated and served with one portion of bolognese.

The ultimate chilli con carne

Heat some oil in a saucepan. Add spices of your choice (we like chilli powder, ground cumin and smoked paprika).

Cook for 30 seconds, then tip the remaining two portions of bolognese into a saucepan.

Add a 400g can of drained beans of your choice and a square of dark chocolate if you have any.

Cook for 5-10 minutes, seasoning and adjusting the spice to your taste. Can be made the night before and reheated – save one portion for the following day.

Tacos

Make a salsa/guac of your choice. Serve with the remaining chilli con carne and some hard taco shells or tortillas.

Curry

Be it veggie or otherwise, we know that everyone loves a cuzza. These are our hacks for keeping it fresh.

Ramen

Heat a portion of curry in a saucepan. Add enough water to make the curry into a soup consistency, then drop in your noodles. Simmer until the noodles are just cooked.

Serve with hot sauce or chilli oil if you like. Can be made the night before and then reheated.

Curry chickpeas

Mix the remaining two portions of curry with a 400g tin of drained chickpeas. Save half for tomorrow, then mix the rest of the curried chickpeas with a dollop of yoghurt and some mango chutney/fresh coriander if you have any. Reheat to eat.

Paneer or halloumi wrap

Mix a splash of oil of your choice with some ground turmeric.

Chop some paneer or halloumi into cubes.

Toss the cheese with the turmeric and fry until bright golden and crisp.

Divide the remaining curried chickpeas between wraps along with the fried cheese and some spinach leaves. Boom.

Roast veggies

One of the simplest, cheapest and most sustainable forms of meal prep. A pile of roast veggies can set you up.

Pesto pasta

Cook a portion of any pasta. Blitz any fresh herbs you have with 1 small garlic clove, olive oil and any nuts or seeds to make a pesto. Mix pasta and ½ pesto with a portion of roast veggies. Tastes good hot or cold the next day.

Tart

Cook off a sheet of puff pastry at 180C for 20 minutes until crisp.

Spread over the remaining pesto, top with a portion of roast veg and anything else you may fancy. Make the night before for lunch for the next two days.

Cheat’s parmigiana

Preheat the grill to medium. Pour some passata into a roasting dish. Add the remaining roast veggies and some chilli flakes.

Season and mix together, then tear over some mozzarella and any bread you may have.

Grill for 5-10 minutes until the cheese is melted and bubbling and the bread is crisp.

‘Earth MOB: Reduce waste, spend less, be sustainable’ by MOB Kitchen is published by Pavilion Books and available now

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in