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AIBU?

DH should plan some meals? It's not that hard

140 replies

Laserbird16 · 23/10/2017 13:32

I'm currently on maternity leave and often i'm not hungry in the evening...as I have made umpteen sumptuous dishes to delight DD (14 months) which she doesn't eat so I scoff.

After settling her this evening (which I do every evening as she loves breastfeeding to sleep) I emerge from the bedroom at 7pm to hangry DH. We end up making pizzas and he complains that he wishes I planned our evening meals... and possibly cooked them.

I already do the shopping, plan all of DDs meals and cook them. He knows where the kitchen is so AIBU to think plan your own meals DH, or am I just being lazy? He seems to go through fads of gluten free/no nightshades (which don't apply if he wants KFC for lunch etc). We could be more organised but I don't really want this to become another one of my tasks as I happen to have the ovaries in the relationship.

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araiwa · 23/10/2017 13:34

You do all the shopping but only buy food that you and dd eat?

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GreenFingersWouldBeHandy · 23/10/2017 13:35

Lazy git! Tell him to cook his own tea.

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Laserbird16 · 23/10/2017 13:37

I buy all the food for the household but I don't plan specifically what we'll cook each night. There are usually ingredients to make a meal but apparently if I don't explicitly state what meal it is , how to make it and what day to consume it on then it's too hard for DH

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Shoxfordian · 23/10/2017 13:39

How did he cope before you lived together?!

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gunsandbanjos · 23/10/2017 13:40

How do you know what to buy if you don’t know what you’re making?
Do you just buy a random selection and hope for the best?

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Laserbird16 · 23/10/2017 13:41

He chicken and salad, we have chicken and salad!

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sirfredfredgeorge · 23/10/2017 13:41

So you're cooking umpteen scrumptious meals for two members of the family, yet somehow don't cook anything for the third? Why not just cook one scrumptious meal, for all of you?

Yes he could plan and cook his own, but given you are planning and cooking meals, not including him in them isn't very family-like.

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gunsandbanjos · 23/10/2017 13:43

I love cooking for my partner. Maybe because he’s very appreciative and definitely takes his turn.

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SometimesMaybe · 23/10/2017 13:43

Given that you are at home and therefore with more opportunity to go to the shops I think you should do the shopping but perhaps on a Sunday sit down and ask what he wants for the week, you then buy it, he then cooks it.
Or you and DC eat earlier and you make enough for him and he reheats when he gets in.

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pigsknickers · 23/10/2017 13:44

No meal planning in our house, we just buy the sort of stuff we usually have in and then make what we fancy out of it (note "we"). OP yanbu but some people are really unconfident in the kitchen and need a script to work from.

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Laserbird16 · 23/10/2017 13:44

I usually get in staples for dishes we like e.g stir fry, saag paneer, pizza, but things I used to make and have in the freezer DH can't eat e.g spag Bol, curry. I just don't have the motivation to think of other things he might like instead

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MovingOnUpMovingOnOut · 23/10/2017 13:47

Unless we have planned to eat together it's expected that whoever is free sorts themselves out in our house*. Sometimes that means going shopping Shock

Unless there's something physically or mentally wrong with him so that he can't feed himself and you've agreed to take on that caring responsibility for him yanbu.

You've fed the dc and done bedtime so they very least he could do is look after himself.

*sometimes dh has toast for dinner. Like he did before we were together. He's still alive.

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Laserbird16 · 23/10/2017 13:49

I doubt he wants the tiny and varied things I try to expose DD to in the hope she'll eat. 3 sugar snap peas, a half a corn on the cob, hummus, yoghurt, broccoli, a strawberry etc anyone? It gets quite filling over a day but I don't think DH wants it for dinner

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MrsBartlettforthewin · 23/10/2017 13:52

Get him to do a meal plan for the week of what he wants then build your shopping list on that. Then he can cook what he planned.

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Justanothernameonthepage · 23/10/2017 13:53

Tell him you agree that meals should be planned. Either he plans and presents you with a list for when you do the shop, or you alternate weeks where you each plan, shop and cook for the household. Ask which he'd prefer.

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5foot5 · 23/10/2017 13:54

Personally I would find it hard to shop without having planned the meals. It is just the way we have always done it. I/we plan a whole weeks of meals and write them down then shop accordingly. The weeks meal plan is in the kitchen for everyone to see so whoever gets back first can consult the plan and start to cook.

Mind you I would find it hard to live with someone as faddy as your DH. What is a nightshade when it is at home?

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SpinnerDryer · 23/10/2017 13:55

Get the Jamie Oliver 5 Ingredient Cookbook.

Im not Jules

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MovingOnUpMovingOnOut · 23/10/2017 13:56

We don't bother with meal plans either. We might have a conversation about what to cook.

I might occasionally say "ffs dh can you read the dates and use the old stuff up first?" when he's fed the kids pizzas with a week to run but not the leftover shepherds pie that anyone with eyes can see needs eating but that's about it.

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Laserbird16 · 23/10/2017 13:58

I think I'll just take my usual 'wtf is wrong with you, you're a grown man' approach. He can plan what he wants, I'll buy the ingredients. It just pisses me off that apparently it isn't possible to cook yourself dinner when you're hungry and have a fridge full of food without your wife directing you to do so.

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Laserbird16 · 23/10/2017 14:00

Nightshades are potatoes, tomatoes, chillies, peppers. They do aggravate his eczema but he'll sometimes take the itchiness for the hit of hot chips and tomato sauce

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MovingOnUpMovingOnOut · 23/10/2017 14:02

Sounds hard work.

Let him make his own damn dinner :)

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jarhead123 · 23/10/2017 14:02

YABU in my opinion.

He has been at work all day. You do the food shop, surely you can make a loose plan of what meals you'll have/shop for. If you're cooking for your daughter, can't you cook for the both of you too?

I'm confused why you're being difficult about this tbh

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Santawontbelong · 23/10/2017 14:03

We take turns. One week he plans and shops. Next week I do. He cooks during the week and I do week ends!!

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PurpleMinionMummy · 23/10/2017 14:03

Yanbu in principle. There's no reason he can't cook if you are settling dd.

It would probably just be easier to cook you all the same meal though. We all ate the same when mine were that age.

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MovingOnUpMovingOnOut · 23/10/2017 14:05

The op has been working all day too. Except she doesn't get paid.

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