Whether you're trying to lean out, bulk up, or just hit your daily macros, meal prep is the ultimate cheat code for nutritional consistency. We’ve all seen the options, from the viral ground beef and cottage cheese bowls that took over the internet to the classic chicken and rice containers bodybuilders have sworn by for decades. But while the concept is great, the execution is where most guys fail.
Between time constraints, zero motivation, and decision fatigue, actually making the food can feel like a chore. To help you get over the hump, we asked professional chefs and meal prep pros to share their best hacks for making batch cooking effortless.
5 Master Hacks to Streamline Your Meal Prep
Ditch the Weekend Marathon (and Split Your Sessions)
Meal prep is often pictured as a massive, grueling marathon session that kills your entire Sunday afternoon, but it doesn’t have to be. If you don't have a massive block of weekend time to dedicate to the kitchen, the secret is simply splitting your cooking across different days of the week.
“The biggest barriers I see are time, overwhelm, and the belief that meal prep has to be all-or-nothing," says Nick Quintero, founder of Meal Prep on Fleek. "A lot of people think they need to prep every single meal or spend their entire Sunday in the kitchen, which just isn’t realistic."
Instead of treating it like an absolute ordeal, break the schedule down to fit your life. If taking a few hours on a Tuesday evening to prep your mid-week lunches relieves the pressure, do that. The best routine is the one that aligns with your calendar.
“Even preparing just two or three meals ahead of time can make your week feel significantly easier,” Quintero adds.
Shop with Ingredient Overlap to Slash Costs and Waste
Toby Amidor, MS, RD, a Wall Street Journal bestselling cookbook author, suggests building your grocery list at home so you can check your pantry inventory before heading out.
Quintero agrees, adding that shopping with intention and choosing recipes with overlapping ingredients is a recipe for success. Think about buying grilled chicken for taco bowls, then using the leftovers for quesadillas the next night. Or, bake extra potatoes for dinner and turn the leftovers into a breakfast hash the next morning. Even a versatile, protein-packed staple like Greek yogurt can pull double duty in overnight oats and as a base for homemade tzatziki sauce.
To streamline the trip even further, organize your shopping list by grocery store section so you aren't backtracking down the aisles. If you would rather avoid the store altogether, consider a grocery delivery service where you can easily compare prices to save cash. However you decide to procure your food, Quintero recommends leaving a little wiggle room on the page.
“Allow yourself one impulse buy so you don’t feel restricted,” he says.
Related: 18 Dietitian-Approved Foods to Help You Hit Your Protein Goals and Stop Mid-Day Cravings
Bulk-Cook Your Carb and Protein Bases
It takes just as long to make one serving of rice or roasted potatoes as it does to make ten. Prepping base ingredients in large quantities is a massive time saver. Chef, author, and food photographer, Sara Haas, RDN, LDN, makes weekly batches of grains and beans—an electric pressure cooker works wonders for this—so there are always effortless additions ready to go.
“I can easily use them throughout the week to throw on salads, into tacos, or in bowl-style meals,” Haas says. “Any extra can be frozen and thawed for later use.”
Build a 3-Meal Recipe Rotation
Figuring out what to cook can be the hardest part of meal prep, but you don't need to reinvent the wheel every week. To manage the endless options, start by leaning into a few reliable classics.
“I recommend starting with a small rotation of go-to meals you already know you enjoy, then building from there,” says Quintero. Once you are ready to branch out, tap into digital resources, but do it with a strategy.
“Blogs like Workweek Lunch and Meal Prep on Fleek focus on approachable recipes that are designed to work as leftovers, which makes a big difference," he adds. "You can also use platforms like Pinterest or Instagram, but do it with intention. Look for recipes with 10 ingredients or [fewer] that make multiple servings. That’s where meal prep really becomes sustainable."
And don’t forget about cookbooks. Whether you opt for Kindle versions or prefer going analog by flipping through physical pages, look for high-performance titles like Fit Men Cook or The Fighter’s Kitchen. If you have specific nutritional goals, consider specialty titles like DASH Diet Meal Prep for Beginners or Anti-Inflammatory Diet Meal Prep to keep your health targets locked in.
Master the Mini-Prep
Meal prep doesn’t require full meals! Consider prepping ingredients that tend to be a little more labor-intensive as soon as you get them home from the store–the meal prep version of set it and forget it. This can be chicken breasts tossed in a marinade or defrosting and peeling frozen shrimp. Mini prep is also a great strategy for fruits and vegetables.
“When I get home from the store, I take the time to prep any veggies,” shares registered dietitian and exercise physiologist, Dr. Chris Mohr. “Pulling together a salad, side veggie, or just eating them for snacking is a lot more likely when they’re already done."
Amidor also encourages meal preppers to pay attention to cook times on any desired recipe. “Start preparing recipes that take 20 minutes or longer," she says. "When those are cooking, you can whip up shorter recipes like dressings or sides.”
Blueprint for Success: The 3-Meal Master Plan
To put these strategies to the test, we built a streamlined 3-meal blueprint stratight from my book DASH Diet Meal Prep for Beginners that maximizes ingredient overlap, slashes your time in the kitchen, and delivers high-performance fuel for the entire week.
Shopping List
Produce
- 1 bunch carrots
- 1 bunch celery
- 1 bunch fresh basil
- 1 bunch fresh chives
- 1 bunch fresh thyme
- 1 butternut squash
- 1 head garlic
- 1 qt raspberries
- 1 zucchini
- 12 oz green beans
- 2 red bell peppers
- 7 apples (for daily snacks)
- 7 sweet potatoes (for daily dinners)
Dairy
- ½ gallon 1 percent milk
Eggs, Meat, Fish & Poultry
- 1 dozen eggs
- 1 lb ground turkey (90 percent lean)
Pantry
- 1 (15 oz) can kidney beans
- 1 (15 oz) can white beans
- 1 (28 oz) can diced tomatoes
- Canola oil
- Dark chocolate
- Ditalini pasta
- Dried apricots
- Dried bay leaf
- Dried oregano
- Ground black pepper
- Kosher salt
- No-salt-added chicken or vegetable broth
- Olive oil
- Peanut butter
- Plain panko breadcrumbs
- Raw pumpkin seeds (for trail mix)
- Slivered almonds
- Unsalted almonds
- Whole-grain crackers
Week 2: Meal Prep Game Plan
- Prepare minestrone.
- Make and bake egg cups. Place sweet potatoes in oven on rack below.
- While things are baking, make burgers on stovetop or grill.
- Make trail mix.
- Make green beans.
Daily Menu
Breakfast
- Zucchini & Bell Pepper Egg Cups
- 1 cup 1 percent milk
- 1 cup raspberries
Lunch
- Slow Cooker Minestrone
- 10 whole-grain crackers
Dinner
- Greek-Style Turkey Burgers
- Baked Sweet Potatoes
- Green Beans with Basil & Chives (+ 1 tbsp olive oil)
Snacks
- Almond & Apricot Trail Mix Packs
- 1 apple (with 2 tbsp peanut butter, optional)
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