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Kitchen Management and Meal Planning
by Crystal Miller
Busy homemakers can find managing the kitchen and meal planning
and preparations a large challenge. The trend towards fast foods and convenience
foods is common today as a solution to deal with this challenge. I walk into a
nearby grocery store and find the deli loaded with "old-fashioned" goodies like
roasted chicken, mashed potatoes, apple pies and any other item one could want
for making meal time a breeze. This could seem like an answer to prayer!
I am not so convinced that these types of helps for the
homemaker are answers to prayers. The food is loaded with bad fats, MSG, sugar
and poor quality ingredients in general. They add preservatives and coloring so
it is shelf stable and looks appealing. Perhaps the answer lies more in
improving the skills of managing the kitchen so as to give us the extra time we
need in our days and to be able to feed our family better quality food.
When you are looking at where to start in managing your kitchen
remember that every homemaker must have a plan. As managers of our homes we
can't be tossed about and pulled by our daily lives as though we were victims of
whatever may come our way. We need to work on a plan to be prepared to handle
the feeding of our families.
Food and eating are major issues of both finances and health,
and worth the time and effort that is necessary to be organized in this area. I
have found that having a weekly menu has been the main key to good kitchen
management. Making menus, grocery lists from those menus and keeping my pantry
stocked with needed items makes meal time much easier to deal with.
The first step is to make a menu. If you have not done this
before, begin by writing down all the meals that are your family's favorites.
Keep this list posted somewhere (perhaps in a 3-ring organizer/binder, on the
back of cupboard door, your computer, etc). Each week take out the list and pick
about 5 meals from it. Pull out all the recipes for that week and put them in
one place for easy access. Fill in your calendar with the meals you want to eat
on their proper night. Make sure you consider what types of things are happening
during the week. If you will be gone all day, don't plan a complicated meal like
lasagna. Pick an easy crock pot meal instead and prepare it before you leave.
Save two nights each week for eating up leftovers, trying out a new recipe,
having a sandwich night or a "cook's night off". Take time each evening to look
at the next day's menu and see what needs to be done that night. Do you need to
take anything out of the freezer? Do you need to cook some beans in the crockpot
overnight so they will be ready the next morning?
Make a grocery list from your recipes making sure to check your
pantry for any of the needed items. There's nothing like running out of baking
powder when you are trying to quickly make a batch of cornbread. Or finding that
your recipe called for a can of tomato sauce that you thought you had.
Having a well stocked pantry is helpful for good kitchen
management. Begin by creating a pantry list for yourself. Find lists on the
internet to help you get started (I have one on my site,
http://www.thefamilyhomestead.com/pantrylist.html
). Add to this and remove items to suit your cooking style and needs. Watch
for when these commonly used items to go on sale and then stock up on them.
If you feel you just don't have the time to spend to organize
this area let me encourage you that as we look at our roles as wives and mothers
and put the things of our lives into priority we realize the care and feeding of
our family is pretty high on the list. How wonderful it is to be able to feed
them better quality home cooked meals and not over do the budget in the process.
We will spend time at the grocery store and in the kitchen anyway, so we might
as well spend a little extra time organizing this area of our life and receive
the benefits of being an organized homemaker!
Crystal Miller ( mailto:crystal@thefamilyhomestead.com
) is a mother of 8 children and enjoys her God given role as wife,
homemaker and mother! She has a homemaking and country living web site
called The Family Homestead
http://www.thefamilyhomestead.com
and has a free monthly newsletter called Homestead Happenings. You will
find sign up information on her website.
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