Uncategorized

Survival & Sanity: Weeks 13โ€“14

Featuring Chicken, Hamburger, and a Whole Lot of โ€œPlease Let Dinner Just Be Easyโ€

Welcome back to another episode of โ€œIโ€™m Too Tired to Cook, But These People Keep Needing to Eat.โ€ This round of Survival & Sanity is brought to you by the dynamic duo of chicken and ground beef โ€” because they’re flexible, affordable, and they donโ€™t give me trust issues like fish or cream-based recipes do.

Weโ€™re cooking three times a week โ€” Sundays, Tuesdays, and Thursdays โ€” and letting the rest ride on leftovers, reserves, or strategic snack dinners that we refuse to feel guilty about.


๐Ÿฝ๏ธ Week 13 Meals

Sunday โ€“ Garlic Butter Chicken

Crockpot comfort food that tastes like effort without requiring any. Serve with mashed potatoes or rice and veg if you’re feeling fancy (or frozen corn if you’re not).
Reserve it: Shred the leftovers for flatbreads or quesadillas.

Tuesday โ€“ Cheeseburger Sloppy Joes

Grown-up nostalgia on a bun. Messy? Yes. Worth it? Also yes. Add chips or frozen fries, call it a meal.
Reserve it: Leftovers go great in a wrap or on top of fries for dirty burger bowls.

Thursday โ€“ Chicken Tacos

Taco seasoning + shredded chicken = foolproof dinner win. Let everyone build their own.
Reserve it: Use leftovers for taco salads, nachos, or rice bowls. The remix potential is strong.


๐Ÿฝ๏ธ Week 14 Meals

Sunday โ€“ BBQ Chicken Sandwiches

Set it and forget it in the crockpot. Toast the buns if you’re feeling extra. Add pickles. Eat in silence.
Reserve it: Flatbreads, baby. BBQ chicken + cheese = chefโ€™s kiss lazy meal.

Tuesday โ€“ Spaghetti with Meat Sauce

A spoonie classic: boil water, dump sauce, survive another day. Serve with garlic bread if the stars align.
Reserve it: Freeze the sauce for later or build a baked ziti-style dish next week.

Thursday โ€“ Pesto Chicken Flatbreads or Wraps

Pesto + chicken + cheese, served on whatever bread-like thing you have nearby. Flatbreads, wraps, naan โ€” we donโ€™t discriminate.
Reserve it: Goes over rice, into a salad, or right into your face cold from the fridge. No wrong answers.


๐ŸงŠ Reserve Meal Ideas (No New Ingredients Needed)

  • Quesedillas
  • BBQ Chicken flatbreads
  • Chicken + rice bowls
  • Spoonie Nachos
  • Keilbasa
  • Eggs
  • Chicken pesto pasta (if youโ€™re feeling bold)

๐Ÿ›’ Grab the Grocery List


Thatโ€™s it โ€” six cooked meals, one crisis averted, and a freezer that doesnโ€™t hate you. Youโ€™ve got flavor. Youโ€™ve got flexibility. And youโ€™ve got enough leftover chicken to feel both mildly accomplished and fully exhausted.

Let me know what worked, what flopped, and what you screamed into the void while cooking it. I’ll be here with your Week 15โ€“16 plan before you know it. Til Next time gang, take care of yourselves, and each other.๐Ÿ–ค

Uncategorized

๐Ÿง  Survival and Sanity Reserve based meal plan: Weeks 11โ€“12

Reserve-Based Meal Planning for When Life is Too Damn Much

Itโ€™s hot. Youโ€™re tired. The idea of cooking three meals a day is laughable. Thatโ€™s why this plan exists โ€” to give you food that actually works when your spoons are low and your executive function has left the chat.

This is Weeks 11โ€“12 of my reserve-based system. We cook three times a week, stretch leftovers like magic, and leave room for takeout without guilt. Because healing takes energy โ€” and not all of that energy should be spent in the kitchen.


๐Ÿ— This Roundโ€™s Sunday Stars:

  • Week 1: Maple Garlic Glazed Chicken
  • Week 2: Crockpot Ranch Chicken & Rice
  • (because if my crockpot could earn a paycheck, it would absolutely be the breadwinner)

๐Ÿ—“๏ธ THE PLAN:

WEEK 1

  • Sunday: Maple Garlic Glazed Chicken – Proof that you can be sweet and salty and still wildly lovable.
  • Monday: Leftovers
  • Tuesday: Chicken Tacos (fajita-style) – Because โ€œchicken tacosโ€ are easier to say than โ€œaccidentally delicious fajitas.โ€
  • Wednesday: Leftovers
  • Thursday: Bacon Tomato Pasta – The holy trinity: bacon, tomatoes, and carbs. Amen.
  • Friday: Reserves
  • Saturday: Leftovers or takeout

WEEK 2

  • Sunday: Crockpot Ranch Chicken and Rice – This one says โ€œI careโ€ but also โ€œIโ€™ve been horizontal most of the day.โ€
  • Monday: Leftovers
  • Tuesday: Pesto Chicken Flatbreads –We eat flatbread now. Weโ€™re fancy like that.
  • Wednesday: Leftovers
  • Thursday: Bacon Fried Rice – Itโ€™s โ€œclean out the fridgeโ€ night but with a glow-up.
  • Friday: Reserves
  • Saturday: Leftovers or takeout

๐ŸงŠ Reserve Meals to Keep You Sane:

  • Taco Pizzas
  • Chicken Flatbreads
  • Peanut Butter & Bacon Sandwiches
  • Eggs
  • Quesadillas with Whateverโ€™s Left I am BRAND NEW to bacon quesadillas, where have they been all my life? I’m disappointed in myself that my stoner ass didnt put this combo together years ago.
    Ok guys, scroll down and click to get the recipes and grocery list and until next time gang, take care of yourselves, and each other.


Uncategorized

Survival & Sanity Weeks 9&10

Another two weeks, another round of What the hell are we eating? Welcome to Survival and Sanity: Weeks 9โ€“10, where the focus is chicken (because itโ€™s cheap), simplicity (because Iโ€™m exhausted), and enough reserves to keep you from spiraling into meal decision burnout.

This plan is spoonie- and budget-friendly. Youโ€™ll find cook-day meals that stretch across multiple nights, plenty of โ€œfend for yourselfโ€ reserves, and recipes that donโ€™t demand your soul in exchange for dinner.

๐Ÿฝ๏ธ Survival and Sanity: Weeks 9โ€“10 Menu

Starting Monday, June 9

Monday (June 9):
Reserves Day โ€“ It’s Monday. You’re lucky there’s food at all.

Tuesday (June 10):
Chicken Stir Fry โ€“ For when you want takeout vibes but need your wallet to calm down.

Wednesday (June 11):
Reserves Day โ€“ Eggs? Sandwiches? Cereal? I support all of it.

Thursday (June 12):
Kielbasa & Veggie Sheet Pan Bake โ€“ One pan, zero shame, and dinner without a meltdown.

Friday (June 13):
Reserves Day โ€“ Official โ€œfind your own dinner and your own forkโ€ night.

Saturday (June 14):
Takeout or Reserves โ€“ AKA โ€œpretend weโ€™re normalโ€ night.

Sunday (June 15):
Bacon-Wrapped Chicken โ€“ Because wrapping anything in bacon is basically therapy.


Monday (June 16):
Mixed Flatbreads (Pesto + BBQ Chicken) โ€“ One of each flavor because decisions are hard and everyone wins.

Tuesday (June 17):
Garlic Ranch-Seasoned Chicken & Potatoes โ€“ No clumpy white sauce here, just herby garlic goodness baked until golden.

Wednesday (June 18):
Reserves Day โ€“ Weโ€™re all just scavengers at this point. Go forth and forage.

Thursday (June 19):
Chicken Tomato Pasta โ€“ Proof that noodles and tomatoes can solve most of lifeโ€™s problems.

Friday (June 20):
Reserves Day โ€“ Not my circus, not my dinner.

Saturday (June 21):
Reserves or Eggs โ€“ Whateverโ€™s in the fridge or however many eggs you can scramble.

Sunday (June 22):
Crockpot Chicken with Garlic Butter Herb Sauce โ€“ A Sunday dinner that feels like someone tried without making you cry in the kitchen.
Til next time gang, take care of yourselves and each other!

Uncategorized

Survival & Sanity: Reserve-Based Meal Plan โ€“ Weeks 7&8

๐Ÿ” Two Weeks of Chicken Dinners (With Bacon, Because Why Not)

Letโ€™s be real โ€” Lately, lifeโ€™s been a whirlwind. Between healing, hustling, and handling a hundred little things that crop up every week, Iโ€™ve been feeling the crunch. Projects pile up, messages go unanswered, and if I don’t write stuff down, it vanishes into the fog of โ€œwhat was I supposed to do today again?โ€

But even on the most chaotic days, we still have to eat. They still have to eat. So when Iโ€™m trying to keep the wheels on, these two-week reserve-based meal plans are my safety net. They let me cook in chunks, plan for the crash days, and feel like Iโ€™ve got something handled โ€” even if that โ€œsomethingโ€ is just dinner.

This round, I leaned into chicken (because it’s versatile and usually affordable), and Iโ€™m making bacon pull double-duty too. Thatโ€™s right โ€” bacon-wrapped chicken one night, bacon fried rice another, and some dreamy flatbreads that taste way fancier than they are. Weโ€™ve even got a baked potato bar thrown in for a choose-your-own-comfort-food kind of night.

I donโ€™t know about you, but Iโ€™ve needed meals lately that come with a side of grace. Meals that donโ€™t guilt-trip me if I need to swap things around or punt dinner to leftovers. Meals that say, โ€œHey, youโ€™re doing your best. Sit down. Eat. Breathe.โ€

So thatโ€™s what this plan is about. Survival, yes โ€” but also sanity. Feeding yourself and your people without feeding the burnout.

๐Ÿฝ๏ธ 2-Week Meal Plan (Starting Monday, May 26)

Week One
๐ŸŸข Monday, May 26: Leftovers/Reserves
๐ŸŸข Tuesday, May 27: Loaded Baked Potatoes
๐ŸŸข Wednesday, May 28: Leftovers/Reserves
๐ŸŸข Thursday, May 29: Garlic Butter Chicken Thighs
๐ŸŸข Friday, May 30: Leftovers/Reserves
๐ŸŸข Saturday, May 31: Takeout or Breakfast for Dinner
๐ŸŸข Sunday, June 1: Bacon Wrapped Chicken

Week Two
๐ŸŸข Monday, June 2: BBQ Chicken & Pesto Flatbreads
๐ŸŸข Tuesday, June 3: Leftovers
๐ŸŸข Wednesday, June 4: Bacon Fried Rice
๐ŸŸข Thursday, June 5: Leftovers/Reserves
๐ŸŸข Friday, June 6: Chicken Bacon Tomato Pasta
๐ŸŸข Saturday, June 7: Leftovers/Reserves
๐ŸŸข Sunday, June 8: Herb Roasted Chicken Thighs

Uncategorized

Survival & Sanity: Reserve-Based Meal Plan โ€“ Weeks 5&6

Lifeโ€™s still life-ing, so this weekโ€™s meals are coming in hot (on the days I can handle it) and chillinโ€™ in the freezer when I canโ€™t. This round of our reserve-based meal plan keeps things doable โ€” weโ€™re talking one-pan bakes, skillet tosses, and recipes that donโ€™t expect you to be a professional chef or have unlimited spoons. I cook every other day (ish), and fill the gaps with reserve meals like eggs, toast, frozen dinners, and soup. Because some days are just not it, and thatโ€™s okay.

Starting Monday, weโ€™ve got seven solid โ€œcook dayโ€ meals that cover two weeks โ€” hearty, comforting, budget-friendly, and picky-eater resistant. If you’re new here, this isnโ€™t about meal prepping ten containers of the same thing. Itโ€™s about creating a plan that works when your energy is spotty and the schedule is chaos. Letโ€™s survive and eat good food while weโ€™re at it. Scroll down for this weekโ€™s cook day menu, plus a grocery list and printable recipe cards to make your life easier.

Grab your grocery list (printable coming right up), and letโ€™s get this plan in motion.


๐Ÿ—“๏ธ Reserve-Based Meal Plan: Weeks Five & Six

Starting Monday, May 12th


๐Ÿฝ๏ธ Week Five

Monday โ€“ Cook Day
Chicken Apple Sausage & Potato Bake
Sweet + savory with minimal brain power: chicken apple sausage, sliced apples, onions, and potatoes roasted together with olive oil and thyme. A sheet pan miracle.

Tuesday โ€“ Reserve/Leftovers
Whateverโ€™s left from Monday or hit the freezer stash.

Wednesday โ€“ Cook Day
Kielbasa & Peppers Stir-Fry Over Rice
Fast, colorful, and full of flavor: kielbasa, bell peppers, and onions tossed in soy sauce with rice. Add garlic and a splash of broth or vinegar if youโ€™re fancy.

Thursday โ€“ Reserve/Leftovers
You know the drill. Leftovers, breakfast for dinner, or peace-out night.

Friday โ€“ Cook Day
Bacon-Wrapped BBQ Chicken Thighs
Chicken thighs wrapped in bacon, slathered in BBQ sauce, and roasted until crispy. Garlic powder and paprika seal the deal.

Saturday โ€“ Reserve/Leftovers
Donโ€™t cook. You earned it.

Sunday โ€“ Cook Day
Kielbasa Skillet
Cheesy Melty gooey goodness.. A one-pan spicy pasta situation with andouille sausage, tomatoes, garlic, and penne. Fast, bold, and satisfying.


๐Ÿฝ๏ธ Week Six

Monday โ€“ Cook Day
Chicken Fried Rice
Leftover rice, scrambled egg, diced chicken, and whatever frozen veg youโ€™ve got. Soy sauce, sesame oil, and boomโ€”better than takeout.

Tuesday โ€“ Reserve/Leftovers
Microwave something. Sit down while it cooks.

Wednesday โ€“ Cook Day
Potato Chicken Sausage and Pepper Bake
Use that leftover rice and whateverโ€™s hanging around. Add diced chicken, eggs, peas/carrots, and soy sauce. Done in 10 minutes if you donโ€™t overthink it.

Thursday โ€“ Reserve/Leftovers
Leftover fried rice tastes even better. Just saying.

Friday โ€“ Cook Day
Pesto Chicken Flat Bread
Tender, seasoned chicken with pesto, melty mozzarella, and juicy tomatoes, all atop your choice of flatbread or naan. Ready in just 20 minutes, suitable for ‘I forgot to tell you the concert is tonight at 5:30’ vibes.

Saturday โ€“ Reserve/Leftovers
Pick your favorite rerun from the week.

Sunday โ€“ Cook Day
Pasta Bake
Comfort food meets mom hack. Pasta with red sauce, sneaky chopped veggies, mozzarella, and maybe some Italian sausage if youโ€™re fancy.

๐Ÿ— Meat & Protein

  • Chicken thighs (for 2 meals โ€” est. 6โ€“8 thighs total)
  • Chicken apple sausage (1 package)
  • Kielbasa (1 package)
  • Andouille sausage (1 package)
  • Bacon (1 package)
  • Eggs (for fried rice)

๐Ÿฅ• Produce

  • Potatoes (4โ€“6 medium)
  • Apples (2)
  • Yellow or white onions (3โ€“4)
  • Bell peppers (3โ€“4, mixed colors)
  • Garlic (1 bulb or pre-minced)
  • Zucchini (1โ€“2) optional for sheet pan
  • Carrots (for roasting or side)
  • Green veggie of choice (for Maple Mustard Chicken side)

๐Ÿš Grains & Pantry

  • Jasmine or white rice
  • Egg noodles or other pasta for sausage & peppers
  • Penne pasta (for Andouille skillet)
  • Soy sauce
  • Olive oil
  • Sesame oil (optional for fried rice)
  • Dijon mustard (skip if youโ€™re omitting for your swap)
  • Maple syrup
  • BBQ sauce (your favorite)
  • Italian seasoning
  • Smoked paprika
  • Paprika
  • Garlic powder
  • Broth (chicken or veggie, carton or bouillon)

๐Ÿง‚ Other

Canned diced tomatoes (1โ€“2 cans)

Frozen peas & carrots mix (optional for fried rice)
Til next time guys, take care of yourselves, and each other!

Uncategorized

๐Ÿฅซ Building a Pantry When I Canโ€™t Build Much Else


(aka, How Stockpiling Became My Quiet Way of Fighting Back)

Some days, my body feels like a traitor.
I can’t bend over very far, I can’t pick up anything off the floor or up high without my grabber thingy. I can’t haul laundry up the stairs. I can’t even promise I’ll be the same “me” tomorrow that I am today.

I’m caught up on reading anyway

Living with chronic illness โ€” especially things like fibromyalgia and ADHD โ€” means my energy, my ability, my very reliability can vanish without warning.
(And nothing says “party” like waking up with zero spoons and an entire day’s worth of responsibilities, right?)

When your body plays dirty, it’s easy to start turning that anger inward.
Itโ€™s easy to start hating yourself for being “unreliable,” for needing help, for “failing” even when you’re trying so damn hard.
And that self-loathing?
It can spiral faster than you’d believe.

But here’s something I want to say โ€” to myself and to you:
You are not unreliable.
You are surviving a body that hands you chaos every morning and expects you to make peace with it by lunchtime.


๐Ÿ›’ Pantry Planning: My Quiet Rebellion

I canโ€™t control how many spoons Iโ€™ll have tomorrow.
I canโ€™t always cook a gourmet meal or deep-clean the house or check every box on my to-do list.

But you know what I can do?
I can plan.
I can stockpile.
I can quietly, stubbornly, prepare for the days I know will be hard โ€” because they will come.

Even if I canโ€™t cook today, I can make sure next weekโ€™s meals are lined up.
Even if I canโ€™t carry groceries, I can still hunt down deals and plan freezer meals.
Even if I can’t do it all, I can still do something.

And that matters. I can be ready and save my family money on groceries if I shop coupons and deals. I love the hunt of finding the good deals (coke 12 packs under 3 dollars? Sign me up!)
That counts.
You count.


๐Ÿง  The Science of โ€œJust Being Readyโ€

Hereโ€™s a wild little truth bomb for you:
โœ… Studies show that having even a small emergency plan (whether that’s for food, money, or time) significantly reduces anxiety, depression, and feelings of helplessness.

A 2017 study published in Disaster Medicine and Public Health Preparedness found that people who felt “prepared” โ€” even just having a few extra essentials on hand โ€” reported higher self-efficacy and lower distress during crises.

Translation?
Planning ahead can actually make you feel more in control, more capable, and less crushed by uncertainty.

As someone who is often referred to as a little bundle of anxiety I can tell you, when shit gets real, and lets face it, if nothing else in life, you’re promised those ‘shit gets real’ moments, (my most recent I think was the school calling me telling me they lost my kid, AGAIN, and asked if I knew where she was! I was thankful my anxiety always makes me have like 20 back up plans lol) prepared people can stand up in times of crisis and fall apart much later after its all taken care of.

Another study in The Journal of Anxiety Disorders found that taking small action steps (like stockpiling shelf-stable foods or creating a “bad day backup” list) built measurable resilience โ€” even in people dealing with ongoing chronic illnesses. Sound familiar? It boils down to an expression I have heard and will try not to butcher from Dr Martin Luther King Jr. “If you can’t fly then run, if you can’t run then walk, if you can’t walk then crawl, but whatever you do you have to keep moving forward.”

Even micro-actions matter.
Even thinking ahead counts.


๐Ÿ› ๏ธ Solutions for the Hard Days (A Tiny Toolkit)

Because let’s be real: Some days are still going to suck.
But we can stack the deck a little bit in our favor.

Here are a few things that help when it feels like you’re drowning:

  • โ€œShelf Stockโ€ Meals: Build a few meals that live completely in your pantry โ€” no fresh ingredients needed. (Cooked chicken + pasta + jar sauce = emergency lasagna.)
  • Backup Spoon Days: Have 3-5 emergency meals that you could make half-asleep with one hand. (Instant rice + microwaveable veggies + rotisserie chicken, anyone? They have individual rice cups, or you can nuke a pouch in 90 seconds and they have a number of flavors, and at our local store whatever rotisseries don’t sell the next day they strip and sell the meat per pound, its amazing to keep on hand, throw it into pasta or rice. I usually do that with sausage and peppers too, makes good dirty rice)
  • Permission Slips: Give yourself permission, in writing if you need to, to just survive some days. “Not today” is a full sentence.
  • Grabber Tools & Adaptations: They might feel frustrating, but they’re not failure โ€” they’re gear. Gear up like the warrior you are.
  • โ€œI’m Still Hereโ€ Reminders: Keep a list somewhere visible of the things you have accomplished โ€” even the tiniest wins. Every day I write lists and lists just so I can check them off then never worry about them again.
    Some days? “I fed myself and stayed alive” deserves a damn standing ovation.

๐Ÿ’ฌ Final Word (From One Battle-Scarred Soul to Another)

Maybe I can’t build the world I dreamed of today.
Maybe my body won’t let me build anything at all.

But I’m still here.
I’m still planning.
I’m still stubbornly, fiercely, stocking a pantry, preparing a home, building a future โ€” even if some days, all I can build is a grocery list and a whispered prayer.

And friend, if youโ€™re reading this?
Youโ€™re still building too.
Even if no one else can see it.
Even if it hurts like hell.
Even if today looks small.

You’re still fighting for yourself.
And that’s enough.
Thatโ€™s always enough. Til next time gang. Take care of yourselves, and each other!

recipe · recipes

Survival & Sanity: 2 Weeks of Reserve-Based Meals (Weeks 3 & 4)

If youโ€™re anything like me โ€” fibro-fogged, recently-hip-replaced, raising a gloriously neurodivergent teen, and running on caffeine, hope, and probably expired groceries โ€” then planning dinner might feel like launching a rocket from your laundry room.

This meal plan is for those of us trying to survive the week without crying into a dish towel. Itโ€™s a real-life, spoon-theory-approved guide with easy cook-day meals and fallback reserves that donโ€™t require your whole brain.


๐Ÿ—“๏ธ Printable 2-Week Meal Menu (with Attitude)

Week Three

DayMeal
MondayMac & Cheese with Sausage โ€” Leftovers from Sunday. Bonus: Only one pan to clean and minimal effort to reheat. Thatโ€™s a win in my book.
TuesdaySausage & Peppers over Egg Noodles โ€” Bright, flavorful, and uses enough veggies to pretend weโ€™re balanced adults.
WednesdayChicken Strips + Knorr Side โ€” Reserve meal MVP. Add a veggie if youโ€™re feeling wild.
ThursdayBaked Chicken + Roasted Veggies โ€” Sheet pan magic. Roast everything at once and act like it was on purpose.
FridayReserves โ€” Classic, comforting, and suspiciously filling for something this lazy.
SaturdaySausage + Eggs + Toast โ€” Breakfast-for-dinner, aka using breakfast foods to emotionally reset.
SundayCoke Pulled Pork + Mac or Egg Noodles โ€” The crockpot does all the work. You take the credit.

Week Four

DayMeal
MondayPulled Pork โ€œTacosโ€ โ€” Leftovers dressed up. Throw in onions, peppers, canned tomatoes, and rice. Tortilla optional. I like to make it a rice bowl or in tortillas, we have also put pulled pork leftovers with some salsa and nachos.
TuesdayMeatballs in Marinara โ€” From the freezer to the table. Zero regrets.
WednesdayEggs + Toast + Hashbrowns or Fruit โ€” Breakfast, again. Because we do what works.
ThursdayChicken Stir-Fry + Rice โ€” Takes 15 minutes and makes you feel like youโ€™ve got your life together.
FridaySoup + Crackers or Sandwiches โ€” More reserves. Less thinking.
SaturdayPasta Bake or Lazy Lasagna โ€” Toss it in a dish and bake until bubbly. Cheesy redemption.
SundayMaple Glazed Chicken + Buttered Noodles โ€” The Pinterest recipe you actually pulled off. Hubby-approved. Next time weโ€™re reducing that glaze for stick factor.

๐Ÿณ Ingredients for the Cook Day Hits (Sarcasm Included)

Sausage & Peppers over Egg Noodles
Ingredients: sweet Italian turkey sausage, red and green bell peppers, yellow onion, garlic, broth (instead of wine), canned diced tomatoes, tomato paste, dried oregano, olive oil, egg noodles. Honestly I tweak this every time. If it sounds like it’d be good in it I’d try.
Mood: Colorful enough to feel like you’re trying.

Baked Chicken + Roasted Veggies
Ingredients: chicken breasts, potatoes, carrots, olive oil, salt, pepper, whatever seasoning makes you feel chef-y.
Mood: Toss it all on a sheet pan. Roasting = pretending you’re fancy.

Coke Pulled Pork
Ingredients: pork roast, 1 can of Coke, BBQ sauce, salt, pepper, onion powder.
Mood: Dump, set, and go live your life.

Meatballs in Marinara
Ingredients: frozen meatballs, jarred marinara sauce, spaghetti or mashed potatoes.
Mood: It’s giving “fake it till you bake it.”

Chicken Stir-Fry
Ingredients: chicken breasts, frozen stir-fry veggies, soy sauce, splash of broth, oil, rice.
Mood: One-pan wonder with zero side-eyes.

Pasta Bake or Lazy Lasagna
Ingredients: cooked pasta, any ground meat, jarred pasta sauce, shredded cheese.
Mood: Layer, bake, and pretend you slaved.

Maple Glazed Chicken
Ingredients: chicken thighs or breasts, maple syrup, soy sauce, garlic powder or minced garlic, BBQ sauce.
Mood: So good your partner eats the leftovers. Sauce could use a glow-up โ€” try reducing it next time.


๐Ÿ† Reserve Staples to Keep on Hand

  • Chicken strips (frozen)
  • Eggs
  • Bread (for toast & sandwiches)
  • Canned soups
  • Frozen vegetables
  • Hashbrowns
  • Knorr sides or boxed pasta mixes
  • Rice
  • Pasta
  • Tortillas
  • Jarred pasta sauce
  • Shredded cheese
  • Bacon or sausage (for breakfast-for-dinner days)
  • Instant mashed potatoes (optional but very sanity-saving)

๐Ÿšจ Final Thoughts

You donโ€™t have to be a perfect parent or domestic goddess to feed your family. This plan makes use of what you already have, lets you lean on frozen staples without shame, and helps reduce decision fatigue. Keep showing up, spoon by spoon. Youโ€™re doing better than you think.

Want more meal plans? Stick around โ€” weโ€™re doing this every two weeks until I run out of freezer space or patience.

Printable grocery list? Right here. Pinterest-worthy recipes? Working on it. Sanity? Pending.

Youโ€™ve got this. Til next time gang!

Uncategorized

๐Ÿฅ˜ Two-Week Flexible Family Meal Plan (with Reserves!)

For the nights when you’re out of energy, out of time, or just plain over it.

Letโ€™s be real: Iโ€™m not living in a Pinterest-perfect kitchen with endless time, energy, or executive function. Iโ€™m not even 50% back to where I WAS, which is to say subpar and inefficient.

So yeahโ€”thereโ€™s a lot going on at any given moment in my house.

Meal planning used to feel like one more thing I was โ€œfailingโ€ at. Iโ€™d write out seven dinners for the week, try to stick to it, and inevitably hit a wall by Wednesday. Leftovers piled up, produce went bad, or we ended up eating cereal because the plan didnโ€™t match real life.

Thatโ€™s when I stopped trying to force a perfect schedule and started building something that actually works for us. I call it my Reserves-Based Meal Planโ€”a mix of flexible structure, intentional leftovers, and reliable โ€œbackupโ€ meals. Itโ€™s made our evenings smoother, saved money, and reduced the constant stress around food. Are you sick and tired of looking in your fridge saying ‘I don’t know what do YOU want to eat?’ We were to the point of it being overwhelming. I am nearly done with week 1 and its gone well and we havent asked the dreaded question yet.

If youโ€™re overwhelmed, neurodivergent, chronically ill, or just busy as hellโ€”this system might help you too.


๐Ÿง‚ What Is a Reserves-Based Meal Plan?

You know how most meal plans assume youโ€™re going to cook every single night like some kind of apron-wearing domestic goddess who enjoys washing cutting boards?

Yeah. No thanks.

A Reserves-Based Meal Plan is built for people with actual livesโ€”and possibly brain fog, executive dysfunction, chronic pain, or a teen who suddenly “doesnโ€™t like chicken anymore” even though it was fine yesterday.

Hereโ€™s how it works:

  • I plan 3โ€“4 solid meals a weekโ€”things I know weโ€™ll probably eat together.
  • The rest of the week is leftovers or โ€œreserves.โ€
  • Reserves = easy backup meals I can make fast with zero emotional commitment. Think: chicken strips, scrambled eggs, or anything that comes out of a box and doesn’t judge me. (Hamburgers, Keilbasa, eggs and chicken strips are pretty well what we stick to)

This plan is flexible on purpose. It gives me room to shift things around when life gets chaotic (which, letโ€™s be real, is always), and it keeps food from going to waste when plans change or I just canโ€™t that night.

๐Ÿ—“๏ธ Two-Week Meal Plan (With Commentary & Chaos)

Welcome to the plan that might save your weekโ€”or at least reduce the number of emergency cereal nights.

This plan assumes youโ€™re cooking about 3โ€“4 times a week, depending on energy levels, surprise IEP meetings, or spontaneous teenage existential crises. The rest of the time is covered by leftovers, reserves, or the ancient rite of takeout.


Week One

DayMeal
SundayHamburger Helper โ€“ Not fancy, but comforting. It’s giving โ€œ90s latchkey kid,โ€ and we respect that energy. I sometimes switch out the burger and go with ground turkey or throw some veggies. Its the only way I can sneak them into her
Ingredients: ground beef, boxed hamburger helper mix, milk, water, and your dignity.
MondayLeftovers or Reserves โ€“ Whatever is easiest to microwave while standing in socks staring into the fridge.
TuesdaySausage & Peppers with Jasmine Rice โ€“ Colorful enough to feel like you’re trying, but simple enough to cook on autopilot. You can also make it without the rice, put it on a hoagie roll (or grinder to my RI friends)
Ingredients: sausage (Italian or kielbasa), bell peppers, onions, canned tomatoes, garlic, olive oil, jasmine rice.
WednesdayLeftovers or Reserves โ€“ The peppers are still in the fridge, but now theyโ€™re suspicious.
ThursdayLeftovers or Reserves โ€“ Try and use up one reserve or another.
FridayChicken Fajitas โ€“ Hot, sizzling, and guaranteed to make the kitchen smell like youโ€™re doing something impressive. (Also a good way to use up the rest of the peppers)
Ingredients: chicken breast or thighs, bell peppers, onions, spices (paprika, cumin, garlic), tortillas. Optional: sour cream, salsa, shredded cheese. Rice
SaturdayLeftovers or Takeout โ€“ Translation: The fridge is now an emotional puzzle, and youโ€™ve earned the right to outsource.

Week Two

DayMeal
SundayChicken & Rice Casserole โ€“ A cozy, low-effort oven hug.
Ingredients: cooked chicken, rice, cream of chicken soup, shredded cheese, broth, optional veggies (peas, carrots, guilt).
MondayLeftovers or Reserves โ€“ Possibly casserole again. Possibly toast.
TuesdayMaple Glazed Chicken with Egg Noodles โ€“ A surprisingly delicious combo that says, โ€œI saw this on Pinterest but made it less complicated.โ€
Ingredients: chicken breast, maple syrup, mustard (optional), garlic, egg noodles, butter.
WednesdayPasta & Meat Sauce โ€“ Always a crowd-pleaser. Or at least a โ€œno one complainsโ€ meal. Use this meal to use up sausage or hamburger.
Ingredients: pasta (penne, spaghetti, whatever), ground beef, jarred pasta sauce, garlic, parmesan if youโ€™re fancy.
ThursdayLeftovers or Reserves โ€“ This is where the fridge becomes a mystery box challenge.
FridayLeftovers + Reserves Remix โ€“ Chicken strip tacos? Egg fried rice? Polish sausage breakfast sandwich? Go wild.
SaturdayFinish All Reserves โ€“ If itโ€™s not gone today, itโ€™s getting freezer-burned or forgotten.
SundayMac & Cheese with Kielbasa โ€“ The grand finale. This meal says, โ€œWe made it. Somehow.โ€
Ingredients: boxed mac & cheese or homemade, kielbasa or smoked sausage, butter, milk, cheese, sense of victory.

๐Ÿ›’ The “I Got Everything, I Think” Shopping List

This is the comprehensive list for the full two-week plan. It includes all the main meal ingredients and reserves. You wonโ€™t need everything every time, so adjust based on whatโ€™s already hiding in your pantry or freezer.

Feel free to highlight the things that are โ€œyes, I must buy thisโ€ and ignore the things that are already fossilized in the back of your cabinet. Also, I’m not going to say its the same for everyone, but this list at Walmart the way I bought everything ended up being roughly 150 dollars. I estimate we MIGHT spend another 100 on snacks any given MONTH, and 400-500 a month for groceries seems ideal for a family of 3-4 to aim for


๐Ÿฅฉ Protein Zone (a.k.a. Things That Should Be Thawed but Probably Arenโ€™t)

  • Ground beef โ€“ 3 lbs (pasta, burgers, hamburger helper)
    1lb fresh, pack of frozen burgers.
  • Chicken breasts or thighs โ€“ 4-5 lbs (fajitas, maple glazed, casserole)
    (if you get frozen breasts you can easily pull out however many you need)
  • Sausage (Italian or smoked/kielbasa) โ€“ 2โ€“3 packs (I buy the horseshoe one and the pack of bun sized ones, you can use either or interchangably.)
  • Eggs โ€“ 2 dozen (reserves, baking, general survival)
  • Pre-cooked chicken strips or tenders โ€“ 1 bag or box (reserves)

๐Ÿฅ• Produce That Will Eventually Get Sketchy

  • Bell peppers โ€“ 4โ€“5 (fajitas, sausage & peppers) OR I get the small bag of sweet peppers or stoplight peppers as they are sometimes called.
  • Onions โ€“ 3โ€“4 (every meal ever)
  • Tomatoes โ€“ 2โ€“3 (general use)
  • Garlic โ€“ 1 bulb (for when you want to feel like a chef)
  • Salad greens โ€“ if you want to pretend you eat salads
  • Optional: carrots, celery, herbs (fancy but not required)

๐Ÿฅ– Bread & Grains (Carb Comfort Section)

  • Hamburger buns โ€“ 1 pack
  • Hot dog buns โ€“ 1 pack
  • Bread โ€“ 1 loaf (toast, sandwiches, life raft)
  • Jasmine rice โ€“ 1 bag (sausage & peppers, casserole)
  • Egg noodles โ€“ 1 bag (maple glazed chicken)
  • Elbow macaroni โ€“ 1 box (mac & cheese)
  • Pasta (penne/spaghetti/etc.) โ€“ 1โ€“2 boxes
  • Knorr sides โ€“ 1โ€“2 packets (reserves)
  • Tortillas โ€“ 1 pack (fajitas, leftover tacos)

๐Ÿง€ Fridge Friends (aka: Things I Steal Bites Of While Cooking)

  • Milk โ€“ 1 gallon
  • Butter โ€“ 1โ€“2 sticks
  • Shredded cheese โ€“ 2โ€“3 cups I get different kinds
  • Cream cheese โ€“ optional, but excellent
  • Parmesan โ€“ optional but classy

๐Ÿฅซ Pantry Staples & Secret Weapons

  • Hamburger Helper โ€“ 1 box (nostalgia in a packet)
  • Pasta sauce โ€“ 1 jar (or make your own if you’re feeling bold)
  • Canned tomatoes โ€“ 4 cans, I like to get petite diced but there are a number of cuts and flavors to try.
  • Maple syrup โ€“ not just for pancakes anymore Use REAL syrup though.
  • Chicken broth โ€“ 2โ€“3 cups or 2 cans
  • Cream of chicken soup โ€“ 1โ€“2 cans
  • Mac & cheese โ€“ 1 box (or ingredients for homemade) I want to do the mac and cheese and sausage in a casserole but you can just make it by frying up the sausage and making the mac and cheese seperate.
  • Cooking oil โ€“ olive or vegetable
  • Salt, pepper, garlic powder, cumin, paprika, Italian seasoning

๐Ÿง‚ Extras / Condiments / Things You Forget Until It’s Too Late

  • Ketchup, (burgers, sandwiches)
  • Salsa, hot sauce
  • Soy Sauce
  • Frozen veggies โ€“ great for sides or stuffing into casseroles โ€“ I put them in EVERYTHING, its the best way to get veggies in front of her without her really noticing.
  • Tortilla chips โ€“ for reserve dinner morale boosts



๐Ÿฝ๏ธ Basic Recipe Rundown

(for all the planned meals โ€” not reserves)
Reserves for this week: Hamburger, sausage, eggs, chicken strips and endless knorr sides.


๐Ÿ” Hamburger Helper (Sunday, Week 1)

Youโ€™ll need:

  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 1 box Hamburger Helper mix (cheeseburger macaroni, stroganoff, etc.)
  • Milk + water (check the box for amounts)

How to:
Brown the ground beef. Drain the grease if itโ€™s swimming. Add in the mix, milk, and water. Stir, simmer, stir again, ignore for a while, then serve. Bonus points if you add frozen peas or shredded cheese. Or depending on the flavor a can of tomatoes.


๐ŸŒถ๏ธ Sausage & Peppers with Jasmine Rice (Tuesday, Week 1)

Youโ€™ll need:

  • 1 lb sausage (Italian or smoked kielbasa)
  • Bell peppers (2โ€“3), onions (1โ€“2), and tomatoes (canned)
  • Garlic, olive oil, salt/pepper
  • 1/2 cup chopped fresh basil leaves
  • 4 garlic cloves, chopped
  • 2 tablespoons tomato paste
  • 1 cup Chicken broth, you CAN use marsala wine but I dont keep that handy
  • 1 (15-ounce) can diced tomatoes
  • 1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes, optional
  • Jasmine rice

How to:
Heat the oil in a heavy large skillet over medium heat. Add the sausages and cook until brown on both sides, about 7 to 10 minutes. Remove from the pan and drain.
Keeping the pan over medium heat, add the peppers, onions, salt, and pepper and cook until golden brown, about 5 minutes. Add the oregano, basil, and garlic and cook 2 more minutes.
Add the tomato paste and stir. Add the Marsala wine, tomatoes, and chili flakes, if using. Stir to combine, scraping the bottom of the pan with a wooden spoon to release all the browned bits. Bring to a simmer.
Cut the sausages into 4 to 6 pieces each, about 1-inch cubes. Add the sausage back to the pan and stir to combine. Cook until the sauce has thickened, about 20 minutes.
Fix the rice per instructions, serve on top of Jasmine rice or put it on a bun.



๐ŸŒฏ Chicken Fajitas (Friday, Week 1)

Youโ€™ll need:

  • 1โ€“1.5 lbs chicken (breast or thigh), sliced
  • Bell peppers + onions, sliced
  • Spices: paprika, cumin, garlic powder, salt
  • Tortillas
  • can of petite diced tomatoes
  • Optional toppings: cheese, salsa, lime
  • Rice (use Jasmine if you want to use it up, but any rice works)

How to:
Toss chicken in spices, sautรฉ in oil. Add peppers and onions and can of tomato with most of the water drained. Cook till soft and a little browned. Wrap in tortillas with rice and top with whateverโ€™s in the fridge cheese and salsa wise.


๐Ÿ— Chicken & Rice Casserole (Sunday, Week 2)

Youโ€™ll need:

  • Cooked or leftover chicken
  • Cooked rice
  • 1โ€“2 cans cream of chicken soup
  • Chicken broth
  • Shredded cheese
  • Optional: peas, carrots, frozen sadness

How to:
Mix everything in a baking dishโ€”rice, chopped chicken, soup, splash of broth, cheese. Stir. Bake at 350ยฐF for 30โ€“40 min. Top with extra cheese if you love yourself.


๐Ÿ Maple Glazed Chicken with Egg Noodles (Tuesday, Week 2)

Youโ€™ll need:

  • Chicken (breasts or thighs)
  • Maple syrup PURE
  • Garlic (minced)
  • Chicken Broth
  • Lemon juice
  • Egg noodles
  • Butter

How to:
Mix maple, garlic, chicken broth lemon juice in a medium bowl. Set aside. Season chicken salt and pepper, sear in a skillet. 3-4 minutes on each side. Set aside and wait for the pan to cool completely. Once cool, add maple sauce mixture. Bring to simmer and scrape all the brown bits off the bottom of the pan. Add in the seared chicken back into the skillet, simmer 5-8 minutes until chicken is done Simmer until cooked and glazed. Remove the chicken and reduce the glaze. That sounds daunting but its not. You just turn the heat on high and simmer for 1-3 minutes, DONโ€™T BURN IT! Stay with it and stir it. Cook noodles, strain leave 1/2-1 cup of starchy water, throw in garlic butter. Slap it all on a plate. Smile faintly.


๐Ÿ Pasta & Meat Sauce (Wednesday, Week 2)

Youโ€™ll need:

  • Pasta (any kind)
  • 1 lb ground beef
  • 1 jar pasta sauce
  • Garlic, onion, herbs (optional)

How to:
Brown ground beef with garlic/onion if using. Pour in sauce. Simmer while the pasta cooks. Drain pasta, mix, serve, top with cheese and relief. You can easily break up the burgers, you can also break up the sausage.


๐Ÿง€ Mac & Cheese with Kielbasa (Sunday, Week 2)

Youโ€™ll need:

  • Boxed mac & cheese or your homemade version
  • Kielbasa/smoked sausage
  • Butter, milk, shredded cheese (if DIY)

How to:
Cook kielbasa separately (sautรฉ or bake). Make mac & cheese. Mix them together or serve side-by-side like a classy cafeteria dinner.

Or for more of a homemade from scratch feel:
Cook and stir the cut-up kielbasa in a large skillet over medium heat for 6 to 8 minutes, until heated through and beginning to brown. Remove the sausage from the skillet, and set aside.

Fill a pan with lightly salted water, bring to a boil over medium-high heat, stir in the macaroni, and return to a boil. Cook, stirring occasionally, until the pasta has cooked through but is still firm to the bite, about 8 minutes. Drain well.

Preheat an oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C). Grease a 9×13 inch baking dish.
Melt the butter in the skillet over medium-low heat, and cook and stir the chopped onion for about 5 minutes, until translucent. Whisk in the flour, stirring constantly to avoid lumps. Cook and stir the butter, onion and flour for 2 to 3 minutes to make a roux, and remove from the heat. Whisk in the milk a little at a time, stirring constantly, until all the milk has been incorporated, and return to low heat. Bring the sauce to a simmer, and cook over low heat for about 2 minutes, stirring constantly, to finish cooking the flour. Whisk in the cheese, most use cheddar but theres no hard and fast rule so I throw in a mix generally, a few cubes at a time, until all the cheese has been incorporated and the sauce is hot and smooth.
Pour the macaroni into the cheese sauce, and stir to combine. Stir in the cooked kielbasa, salt, and pepper.

Spoon the macaroni mixture into the prepared baking dish, and sprinkle the bread crumbs over the top. Bake for about 20 minutes in the preheated oven, until the crumbs are brown and the casserole is bubbling. Let stand for 15 minutes after baking, to set before serving.
The bread crumbs make it FEEL authentically homemade.


๐ŸŽ‰ Conclusion: Youโ€™ve Got This (Seriously)

Look, meal planning doesnโ€™t have to be a perfect science. If it were, weโ€™d all have an army of chefs and a fridge that actually respects us. But Iโ€™ve learned that the most important part is making a plan that fits your life. And letโ€™s be honestโ€”life is messy.

This Reserves-Based Meal Plan is designed to take the pressure off and give you a framework that works around whateverโ€™s going on in your world, from chronic illness to teenage moods. Itโ€™s not about perfection; itโ€™s about giving yourself room to breathe, stay flexible, and get dinner on the table without pulling your hair out.
I also did it to stream line shopping. Our personal plan is twice a month, but you could go weekly or monthly easily.

I know some nights will be leftovers, some will be reserves, and sometimes Iโ€™ll be ordering pizza and pretending itโ€™s part of the plan. And thatโ€™s okay. Weโ€™re all just doing our best.

So, whether youโ€™re juggling multiple schedules, battling a mental health day, or just trying to get through the week without eating cereal at 8 p.m., I hope this plan helps you keep things movingโ€”without making you feel like youโ€™re failing. Youโ€™ve got this. And if you donโ€™t, well, thereโ€™s always takeout.


๐Ÿ“š Final Thoughts

Meal planning doesnโ€™t need to be overwhelming. Use this system to make meals work for youโ€”whether thatโ€™s through leftovers, reserves, or embracing the chaos of real life. And remember: this plan is just a starting point. Youโ€™ll tweak it, adjust it, and make it yours. Start with the easiest things you can, the more versatile the better I tried to make it so I got at least two meals out of everything And thatโ€™s whatโ€™s going to make it actually stick. I might wait until I see whats left over after two weeks before I do the next or I might plan it out today, not like I got much going on lol

If youโ€™ve got questions or want to share your own tricks for surviving busy nights, drop a comment below. Letโ€™s all be in this together. We canโ€™t be perfect, but we can be practical. And trust me, thatโ€™s better anyway. Til next time gang, take care of yourselves, and each other.

recipes

Chicken Tacos

First up, a family favorite from way back. These are not tacos, and they aren’t fajitas, its the best of both, so fajaco? Tajitas? I’m sure there are better names for it, but my family has always gone with chicken tacos. And they are SO easy, and you can make them even easier! Ok here we go:
You’ll need a frying pan, a sauce pan and a spatula or slotted spoon:
1 lb chicken breast
1 onion, small diced
1 pepper sliced
1 can of petite diced tomatoes
Ro-Tel
tortillas
2 cups minute rice
sprinkle cheese as needed
Super easy – Slice and dice the chicken breast then fry on medium high for maybe 10 minutes. I’m bad with time I typically go by sight and the sponginess as I’m pushing it around in the pan. Once its cooked through you add the fresh veggies stirring through out until the onions soften and become kind of translucent.
Then you add the tomatoes and turn the water on for the minute rice
When the water boils you dump the rice in for five minutes, continuing to stir your meat and veggies.
Then we do a taco bar and everyone fixes their own but the only CORRECT way (lol) to make Chicken tajitas (fajacos? I don’t know) is a thin layer of cheese, layer of rice, thin layer of cheese, meat and veg mix, fold and done.
Now, ways to cheat and make this easier
I sometimes will get a rotisserie chicken from Walmart, but even if I were to make one myself, I never eat it all on the first day and this is a brilliant way to use left overs.
Frozen veggies- skip the cutting, you can use frozen veggies, they even have a blend of onion and pepper. If you go this route start with the veggies and add the meat once the veggies are soft, you need to cook it some because there’s a lot of water in them so boil as much of it off as you can.
boil in a bag rice – skip the mess and clean up.
I don’t have a way to get the nutritional info on this, which means I should maybe have checked it first, but like I said, judge it by the taste, and its amazing. Anyone who makes this let me know what you add or take out to make it your own and what you thought of it. Til next time (when I will hopefully be more prepared) be kind to yourselves, and each other!