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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Your tips on homemade food

29 replies

labamba18 · 13/12/2025 00:05

Inspired by another thread where people said they loved to make meals and even bread and snacks from scratch - how do you find the time? My husband and I work full
time and have pretty on the go lives but I’d love to make more from scratch. I’m not the best cook but have committed in the past 2 years to learning more. I’d love to know if you make the majority from scratch how you do it! (Sorry for hijacking aibu)

OP posts:
murasaki · 13/12/2025 00:20

Make.more portions than I need at the weekend, and freeze. So during the week they are sort of ready meals but not. We made soup and pies, lasagna of different types, cottage pies, stews etc. Freeze in portions for two. A butchers run once a month. Get stuff out the night before to defrost. Veg bought on a weekly basis. We do have oven chips in the freezer, and frozen fish for me, but mash can be done while the meat is cooking and we don't tend to have dinner until around 8.

Plan the week in advance around what you're doing

We never buy shop bought ready meals and only have a takeaway around once a month if that.

Figure out what food.you like, and learn how to do it easily. Stir frys are quick, risottos are easy, that sort of thing, and you can chuck anything in. Have a good store cupboard. Ask chat gpt for advice.

SoLongLuminosity · 13/12/2025 00:23

Habit and simplicity. I don't need to follow a recipe to make a tomato sauce for pasta or pizza. Just fry veg and garlic and chuck in some tinned tomatoes.

Have a good hand blender.

Pizza bases need barely any ingredients. Ideally know what youre having in advance to you can factor in rest time.

Simple sauces like peanut butter and maple syrup for pancakes or porridge.

Batches.

And eating simple. Yes, I eat a lot of homemade but it's almost always the same trusty salad, pizza, pasta, jacket potato, chilli, soup, overnight oats, flapjack, banana bread, pancake recipe etc. I'm rarely fishing out new recipes.

murasaki · 13/12/2025 00:27

Habit is definitely a thing re becoming comfortable doing things. Totally agree re a tomato sauce (add a bit of sugar) learn to make a bechamel (don't make a roux, bung everything in at once and whisk like mad) then you have white sauce and cheese sauce. Jarred stuff is horrid.

174ghxt · 13/12/2025 00:27

I cook from scratch for me and OH almost every night. Takes me 35/40 mins to an hour for "ordinary" meals like pasta/fish/chicken etc, longer for more of a fancy "treat" type dinner. Have just developed range of dishes over the years. I think it's worth investing time in good food. It creates a lot of washing up though!

murasaki · 13/12/2025 00:29

174ghxt · 13/12/2025 00:27

I cook from scratch for me and OH almost every night. Takes me 35/40 mins to an hour for "ordinary" meals like pasta/fish/chicken etc, longer for more of a fancy "treat" type dinner. Have just developed range of dishes over the years. I think it's worth investing time in good food. It creates a lot of washing up though!

True. We have a rule that the cook doesn't wash up. I wash as I go a lot more than he does...

murasaki · 13/12/2025 00:33

Traybakes are very low effort, if a bit of a long time in the oven.

Enko · 13/12/2025 00:33

For bread we use a breadmaker it takes 3 mins to set it up and its ready next day. I take 3 mins less sleep.

For cooking. I calculate iti to my days planning. 30 mins for cooking. 1 gour if complicated dish. 30 mins for eating. I do t not allow many things to override this and nor did i when I had teens that needed to be driven everywhere and I held down a full time job..

Its priorities imo. Its acceptable to have them differently to this but its always about prioritising that time and wanting to.

UpMyself · 13/12/2025 00:37

Basic 'recipe' and a good understanding of how to use different herbs and spices. Same basic stew but different carbs and herbs and spices doesn't seem repetitive.
You can easily knock up a meal in minutes, if you want to.

Keep some store cupboard items that you can use to make a meal from the bottom of the fridge/veg rack. Things like omelettes or pasta and pesto are great for this.

DeftGoldHedgehog · 13/12/2025 00:38

It's about prioritising to find time for things which are important to you. It takes a few hours to make bread but it's only about 20 minutes or less of actual work, you aren't standing over it the whole time. So it's a bit like doing the washing, except more fun, if you find kneading dough therapeutic.

With cooking for a young family, I used to spend probably an hour or more meal planning a week, to find quick, cheap and healthy meals to make before shopping for the ingredients. I have a folder with reams of sheets of paper with meals planned for the week on. After a while I found I could just rotate them. And now I am a more confident cook I do it in my head and buy things in a more random way and make it up. If I get stuck for ideas I put what I have in the cupboard and fridge into ChatGPT or similar and see what it comes up with.

murasaki · 13/12/2025 00:41

If you're a totally unconfident cook, something like a gousto box might help. We've had a few to try different cuisines, and I keep the recipe cards and reuse.

murasaki · 13/12/2025 00:42

Chat gpt is really useful for what you already have in .

PeonyBulb · 13/12/2025 00:45

I make very quick homemade meals when necessary ie after work

like pan fried fish or chicken breast or pork chop and have a baked potato 5 mins in microwave then 15 mins in air fryer. veg approx 4 mins in microwave or fried in pan meat was in

Weekend is for roasts, lasagna etc

DeftGoldHedgehog · 13/12/2025 00:47

Having a blackboard or whiteboard or magnetic paper list and pen on or near the fridge is really helpful for when you run out of things too. As long as someone actually then acts on the list of course 🙂

murasaki · 13/12/2025 00:49

Steaming veg in the microwave is great.

TicTac80 · 13/12/2025 00:50

Like pp have said, figure out your favourite meals and how you can make them simply. I work FT too, so I get how busy life can be!

The DC and I love all sorts of different things, so we have a selection of meals that I’ve frozen into single portions. Soups, pasta in sauces/bolognese, chilli con carne, Thai food, meals from around the world, curries, home made “fakeaway” meals etc. They’re all labelled and we use them for lunches or suppers. My DC have food flasks that will keep food hot for hours (they use these for school/work/days out). They pick what they like and defrost/reheat. I will also get portions of meat/poultry, cook them, portion out and freeze (good for salads, wraps or if we want to make a super quick roast style meal). Porridge or Bircher: I’ll make 6-8 portions worth and put in fridge - just heat up in microwave (and add whatever toppings). I’ll precook jacket potatoes and then freeze them too (they come out really well). I’ve even made a giant sheet pancake and sliced that up/frozen it. Great for morning pancakes 🥞

I can make bread but will often buy yellow sticker bread, slice it up and freeze. I make Greek yogurt in the instant pot. Preserves/chutney is made on days off and when I have fruit/veg that needs using up. I make vegetable stock paste once every 6months (or thereabouts).

Meal prep is done on my days off. I can cook but will use gadgets to make my life easier (Thermomix, slow cooker/instant pot, air fryer).

Maybe start by cooking a large one pot recipe: have some for meal that night, and freeze the rest. Build up some bits that way.

It sounds like a huge faff, but - for us anyway - it means that we always have healthy home cooked meals in the house on hand. Also means a very low food bill, and very low/minimal food waste.

murasaki · 13/12/2025 00:54

Re food waste totally agree. It's much more efficient. With veg , green soup for that which is about to leave this mortal life but hasn't yet, is easily done and tasty with the right herbs and spices.

HeddaGarbled · 13/12/2025 00:54

I’m a big fan of a traybake dinner. Choose one meat or fish, add whatever veg you have in, plus cooking oil and some sort of flavouring, put them all in a baking tray and stick in the oven for half an hour while you sit down with a glass of wine.

Don’t worry about all this, well salmon only needs 20 minutes but the potatoes need 45, bung them all in together - they’ll be fine.

ChocolateCinderToffee · 13/12/2025 01:17

Definitely batch cooking. Don’t just do what you need for the next meal, ever. Even cutting bread, slice the whole loaf. Make soup twice a week, cook rice or pasta for two meals and chill or freeze half, peel half a dozen potatoes and carrots and keep half in cold water in the fridge. Use lots of frozen veg: peas, beans, corn. Plan ahead.

canuckup · 13/12/2025 02:17

I cook for about an hour a day three times a week, in addition to dinner (which usually takes anything from ten mins to an hour)

So I'll do a batch of hard boiled eggs, some muffins, and a soup for example. This keeps us ticking along and stops us resorting to crappy freezer food

canuckup · 13/12/2025 02:20

I'm a huge fan of the cook once, eat twice philosophy.

So make a big batch of Bolognese sauce. First night it's pasta bake (parboil pasta, add half the sauce, put in a baking dish, add white sauce, sprinkle grated cheese on, 45 mins in oven).

Then the rest of the sauce is served with spaghetti another night.

Makes a huge difference to your time.

echt · 13/12/2025 02:22

Lots of excellent ideas here and only one thing to add - no pudding. That's for the weekend for me, if then.

Farticus101 · 13/12/2025 04:09

Get a big freezer. Buy frozen chopped onions, garlic, ginger, vegetables etc. So easy and quick to just throw stuff in.

Also good for freezing leftovers for another day obviously.

Teddleshon1 · 13/12/2025 04:16

Lots of batch cooking as others have said. But also, if time is short just have something such as a grilled chicken breast with bacon and lettuce in a decent bread roll. It will be delicious and far better than any ready meal of takeaway. Likewise experiment with omelettes and frittatas, they take minutes to make.

Liveafr · 13/12/2025 05:22

In addition to the suggestions above:

  • Buy good equipment. We have a Thermomix, it definitely saved time on cooking. It makes it easier to cook large portions and freeze part of them
  • When we don't have time to cook, we pour some frozen mixed vegetables in a pan with some spices and cook some proteins alongside (lentils, meat) and ready that. Easy, no efforts and still homemade.
FestiveBauble · 13/12/2025 05:30

I make sourdough a few times a week - honestly, mixing takes 5 mins, a few stretching sessions and it gets left on the counter for 7+ hours before going in the fridge over night and being baked the next day. Doesn’t take half as long as people make out!

I’m a big believer in prep - I like to prep everything to make my life easier. When I’ve got a few hours at the weekend I’ll make soup / bread / chopped veg / things that can freeze and then use those throughout the week.

I think a lot of it is prioritising too, i have friends that say they can’t cook from scratch due to time but will spend time watching tv / reading / on social media. That time at the weekend prepping could help them with home cooking during the week!

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