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Batch cooking means preparing large quantities of food when you have time, making meals quicker when you are busy later.
It’s a great way to ensure you know what is in the food you are eating too. Especially important if you have food allergies and intolerances.
It’s a great way to cook for a crowd and have leftovers, but also to cook once and have options.
If you are planning a party it will enable you to prepare ahead of the day and spend more time with your guests on the day.
It is great for those who are planners, but also for those who are more spontaneous as it will give you something in the freezer for those unexpected occasions. Initially it may seem somewhat daunting, but it’s the exact kind of planning that allows for spontaneity.
A batch of homemade desserts can be perfect for guests, gifts, or an unexpected coffee visit. Learning batch cooking provides convenient, home-cooked options for both yourself and others.
For sweet treats, batch cooking also helps with portion control, allowing you to freeze smaller amounts and avoid unnecessary temptation while following a healthy eating or weight loss plan.
You need to consider time spent batch cooking as an investment in you. And who is the most important person to you… yes YOU. If you are running ragged all the time looking after everyone else and not coming up for air you will soon burn out one way or another Remember you cannot serve others if you are burnt out.
There is an old saying cook once and eat twice. Batch cooking saves you money and, down the line, time. Spend a weekend making a large batch of meat sauce to freeze for quick and easy dinners throughout the week. Also, useful if all the family members don’t eat at the same time. Now I know this isn’t ideal BUT life isn’t always ideal. Shift workers living with non-shift workers often find their mealtimes are at odds with each other, for example.
Is batch cooking right for You?
There are several reasons that you may be considering batch cooking. The most likely is that you simply want to make your midweek meals easier. There is nothing worse than getting home late and still needing to cook a meal from scratch for yourself or your family.This is often when unhealthy, high-calorie takeaways become the easy option, costing both money and long-term health.
If you know you have a busy schedule always, it helps you to plan your weekly nutrition. It will also give you variations rather than eating the same thing day in and out for a week. Even batch cooking a sauce can give you the option of adding different protein options or vegetable mixes.
Batch cooking is a great technique that can save you time and money. Spending an afternoon batch cooking may seem time-consuming, but it can become enjoyable family time when everyone gets involved.
When I embark on a batch cooking session, I love to get some tunes lined up that keep my mood upbeat. While waiting for food to cook or the kettle to boil, I have a little dance to keep my activity levels up.
Preparation.
Take a look at the week or month ahead and work out how many days you are likely to be busy and not have sufficient time for cooking from fresh. Choose recipes you enjoy or find inspiration from family favourites, cookbooks, TV chefs, or your current nutrition programme. If you follow a programme, many recipes suit batch cooking, provided you have time to prepare them and enough freezer space. If this means eating up a few odds and ends or using ingredients from here to make space this may decide which recipes you go for.
Before you run out to the shops check your store cupboard for any essentials or ingredients you may already have. Check your recipes and make a list of missing ingredients. Usually if the recipe serves 4 or 6 you can double the quantities but be careful with spices and especially chilli. Always err on the side of caution when adding the spices and condiments. Taste and allow the flavours to mature a bit before you decide to add more to a batch… this avoids expensive mistakes.
Equipment for batch cooking
You don’t need any special equipment for batch cooking. Some find a slow cooker or soup maker helpful, but they are not essential. Just check you have pans large enough for the quantity of recipe you plan to cook to fit into. One large pan will give you better power economy rather than using two smaller pans.
Slow cookers are great for saucy recipes or cheaper cuts of meat that respond better to a long slow cooking process. Also if you do have a slow cooker, preparing this meal first means that the cooker hob is available for your next recipe. Utilising your time well if you’re preparing lots of meals at once.
You don’t need a huge amount of space either. It is possible if you utilise your cooking space effectively to cook two or three variations at the same time. If you cover and protect delicate surfaces you can use dining tables and side boards for dishing the end results into freezer friendly containers in the desired sizes, idividual or family sized portions.
Tips for Successful (easy) Batch Cooking?
Ideas for Batch Cooking
Cook things you know you like. This is important to avoid expensive mistakes.
Favourites like an Italian tomato-based sauce with beef or vegetable foundation is a good option because you can vary its presentation… bolognaise, lasagne, pasta bake, cannelloni… many options. By personal experience I wouldn’t freeze Gluten free precooked pasta unless it is al-dente. Overcooked you may know it goes very gloopy. The fiddly sauce is done and you only have to cook the pasta fresh reducing preparation time.
Casseroles are great, slow cooked pulled meats, things that are wrapped, rolled or stuffed are also great options to consider. I have a favourite basic… chicken pieces, lemon, olive oil, garlic base that I batch cook and add either a simple gravy, ginger, a curry sauce or coconut based creamy sauce to.
Don’t forget about deserts too though. Even cakes and cut them into singly wrapped portion slices. Tray bakes and brownies freeze well… you do need to eat them the day they are defrosted though as I find they get a bit dry more quickly than fresh baked. A plain cake can be defrosted and served with multiple topping options or served as a pudding for a winter warmer with custard, drizzle or sauce.
A word of caution…
Whilst cooking for a party for example at Christmas or for a birthday is a good idea, complicated dishes can prove an expensive mistake if it is the first time you have attempted it so do a trial run before bulking up the recipe size. Don’t precook steak unless it is sliced into a stir fry type dish. KEEP IT SIMPLE wherever you can.
Here are a Few Ideas
You can just add your chicken breasts to your zip-lock bags and then add the rest of the ingredients (Put the bag inside a large container like a bowl to make it easier and less messy). When everything is in the bag, give it a good squish to mix them together, let them marinade for a while and then pop in the freezer.
(Or… chop the chicken breast and cook once marinated, then portion up and freeze. This reduces meal-time cooking times.)
When you’re ready to cook the meal, let the bag thaw in the fridge overnight and then transfer to an ovenproof dish or the slow cooker – if you’re cooking the chicken in the oven, you want to cook them at around 180 c for between 25 and 35 minutes whereas cooking them in the slow cooker will take around 6 hours. Make sure the chicken is cooked through and not pink before you eat it!
Additional ideas
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