dinner planner, week of January 11 | pamela salzman

Welcome to Week 2 of the Dinner Planner!  I am so encouraged by all your comments on Instagram and Facebook this past week!  Thank you for sharing your feedback with me and others.  It seems like this new weekly post is helpful for many of you and I’m so happy bout that!

Today I want to discuss leftovers and planning for leftovers.  As I mentioned in last week’s planer, everyone will have different needs, preferences, number of people for whom to cook, etc.  This dinner planner is just a guide, but ultimately you’ll have to look at your calendar and decide what is best for you.  I don’t usually use dinner leftovers for another night, because I try to make only enough for our dinner with minimal leftovers.  Whatever leftovers there are get packed up for school lunch the next day or my lunch if I eat at home.  Sometimes I even repurpose leftovers into breakfast, like cooked rice and vegetables can get turned into a Rice Bake, Italian Fried Rice or a Frittata, for example.  Cornbread on Monday will be offered at breakfast Tuesday with yogurt and fruit.  Of course many foods freeze well, too.  Think about freezing soups and stews, grilled or roasted chicken, grains and lentils.
There are more options and permutations on this planner than I can efficiently write about without begin overwhelming.  But just to give a few ideas, you can easily serve the Vegetable Chili over the course of two nights — one night in a bowl and one night on top of a baked potato or sweet potato.  You can serve with or without garnishes like tortilla chips, avocado, radishes and cilantro.  Cheese and sour cream are certainly options, too.  You can make a double batch of roasted squash on Tuesday and use it the next night in a salad.  All the grains can technically be cooked a few days in advance and reheated if you are really short on time at the end of the day.  Although soaking grains and legumes not only maximizes digestibility, it cuts down on cooking time, too!  If you have leftovers of the lentils and sausage, add stock to it the next day and turn it into a soup.  Throw the leftover sautéed cabbage in there, too.

When choosing vegetables for the rice bowls on Friday and the maple-mustard roasted veggies, see what you have in the refrigerator and need to use up.  If you do want to make the broccoli stalk soup on Saturday, then buy broccoli for the rice bowls.

Monday:  Vegetable chili, cornbread, (optional) green salad with Everyday Salad Dressing #2

Tuesday: Broiled filet of white fish or baked fish depending on what I can find that looks good  (here’s a good basic recipe for baking a white fish — I use white wine instead of sherry), butter lettuce salad with shaved fennel and Parmesan(optional if you’re DF) with Everyday Salad Dressing #1, roasted winter squash such as Delicata OR use leftover chili on baked potatoes or sweet potato for a leftovers meal

Wednesday:  Lemon-thyme chicken cutlets, sauteed kale, herbed barley (cook barley in plenty of salted water, like you would pasta, drain tender barley and toss with a little butter or olive oil and a handful of minced fresh herbs like parsley and chives)

Thursday:  Smoky braised lentils with turkey sausage, sautéed cabbage (you can use purple cabbage if you have some from last week)

Friday:  Forbidden rice bowls with roasted veggies (broccoli – save the stalks for tomorrow’s soup), avocado, sesame seeds, soy-ginger dressing* (basically this is a rice and veggie bowl:  take a scoop of forbidden (aka black) rice, add roasted veggies, avocado, sesame seeds and drizzle with dressing.)

Saturday:  Broccoli stalk soup, slow cooker pulled bbq chicken sandwiches or serve pulled chicken over baked potato or sweet potato (unless you did that another night earlier in the week)

Sunday:  Onion Braised Beef Brisket, Maple-mustard roasted vegetables (when deciding on vegetables, see what you already have in the fridge)

*Here’s an easy and basic soy-ginger dressing that would be good here:

3 Tablespoons unseasoned rice vinegar

2 teaspoons pure maple syrup or honey

2 ¼ teaspoons organic shoyu or gluten-free tamari (I like Ohsawa brand)

3/8 teaspoon ground ginger

3/8 teaspoon dry mustard

1 ½ Tablespoons toasted sesame oil

1 ½ Tablespoons unrefined extra-virgin olive oil

 

Sunday prep:

Make all salad dressings for the week

Soak and cook beans for chili if not using canned

Wash greens for salads, as well as kale

Prep winter squash for Day 2 and refrigerate

Wednesday prep:

In the morning, soak barley for the evening (optional, but makes the barley more digestible)

Prep cabbage

Cut veggies for rice bowl

Make stock for soup

Thursday:

soak lentils prior to cooking for maximum digestibility

Friday:

soak forbidden rice prior to cooking for maximum digestibility

Saturday:

Make brisket for next day

 

Freezer-friendly:  chili, cornbread, broccoli soup, pulled chicken, cooked grains and lentils, brisket

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12 Comments

  1. Looks Super again! Can I ask a favor? Can you list the day of the week and actual menu for each night just like last week? Also, it would be great if there is a way to link back to the recipe when you click on the beautiful picture? I am so in love with all your dressing recipes so I do not have to buy bottled any more! Frees up the fridge of all the extra bottles of half used things.

    • Hi Barbara, Thanks for your suggestion. I changed it to the actual days of the week. I need to figure out how to connect a link with an image in a collage. Stand by for that. Thanks!

  2. Hi Pamela!
    I just wanted to thank you for these new weekly meal plans. I’ve been a fan of your blog for a while now, and I have a similar cooking style so I am always looking for new inspiration. The few recipes I made last week were a huge hit (and I have 4 little ones, 7 and under!).
    Thank you , thank you, thank you!
    Martha

    • Hi Martha! Thanks for that! 🙂 And how blessed and lucky you are to have 4 little ones! All the best, Pamela

  3. I love this idea and I’m planning on basing meals off this again this week! 🙂 do you have any recipes or suggestions for where to find a good guide on making the forbidden rice bowls? Thanks!!

    • SO glad to hear that! A rice bowl is literally just rice, roasted veggies, and whatever else you want to put on it, like a dressing or sauce or avocado and sesame seeds like I’m suggesting. Look at my roasted veggie buddha bowl for an example of what a rice bowl is and then use black (aka forbidden) rice instead and the soy-ginger dressing instead of the tahini. But you can use whatever rice you want, if forbidden rice doesn’t interest you. Bowls have endless possibilities! https://pamelasalzman.com/roasted-veggie-buddha-bowl-lemon-tahini-dressing-recipe/

  4. Thank you!!! Your recipes are amazing. Where I can order grass feed meats?

  5. Thank you so much for this plan! It was amazing last week and I’m really excited about this week’s recipes too!

    • Thank you! So thrilled to hear that! Have a great week. 🙂

  6. Thank you! Week 1 was amazing! Way fewer trips to the grocery store, delicious food and no dinner stress. A win-win- win experience. I am looking forward to week 2!

    • That’s the idea! Thanks, Jennifer 🙂


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