@GemmeFatale it was a bit hit and miss TBH, especially as a book to cook midweek family dinners from. Some things were really lovely and quite easy, e.g. the chicken and orzo one pot, the lamb and aubergine roasted stew. The mezze and the seafood pasta things are nice but a bit of a faff so those tended to be saved for parties/weekend treats. Some of the more stew/slow cooked joint type things didn't really work well, especially when I tried to scale down to cater for fewer people/less meat, I tended to find he massively underestimates the amount of liquid you need and things end up very dry and tough unless you compensate. Probably overall my least favourite of the 3 books I've done TBH, I would perhaps keep it more for cooking an occasional weekend or dinner party dishes.
Re meal planning, the key is being organised in advance, by the time you are getting ready to cook dinner in the evening/at the shops it's too late IMO. I make my meal plan at the same time as I do my big weekly shop (usually online but you could make a list if you shop at the store). I keep an 'audit' list of what we have in the freezer and cupboards, and before I start I make a note of anything hanging around the fridge that needs using up. Then the meal plan usually looks something like:
-1 new meal from my cookbook
-1 or 2 meals which use up things we already have in the fridge/freezer/cupboards
-2 or 3 meals from our regular rotation of family favourites
-1 or 2 meals as easy freezer meals or takeaway or Sunday roast
Then I make a list of what we need, cross referencing with what we already have to avoid duplication, and try and only buy from that list, ignoring random 'bargains' or treats - the beauty of online is there's less temptation for impulse buys and if I do see something I really fancy then I can go back revise the meal plan accordingly.
I loosely write down what day we plan to have each of these based on the schedule, who's in and who's out etc., but it is flexible so if I've had a work crisis or transport disaster and come in late and knackered, I can swap that night to an easy night and cook the planned meal tomorrow...