Friday, April 19, 2019

Home Chef




A few years ago, I got a meal-box subscription to Blue Apron.  Meal-box subscriptions were a new thing at the time, and Blue Apron was the one that started it all.  Once a week, I would receive one box full of all the ingredients to make dinner for the week.  The box came with everything needed and detailed recipe cards.

I LOVED it.

But eventually we reevaluated our budget and decided to let it go.  And I started meal planning our dinners again for a few years.  Meal planning is necessary, unless you are one of these people that don’t mind going to the store every single day.  It’s nice to have a plan for the week so you can go to the store, get your ingredients, etc.

BUT.  There are sooooo many things I dislike about the whole process.  Figuring out what to make.  Actually shopping for the ingredients.  Not finding what I need while I’m shopping and having to go to TWO (or more) stores.  Buying an entire bottle of a certain spice for $6 when all I need is ½ teaspoon.  Not making good use of the ingredients and throwing out stuff every single week because it goes bad.  Busy stores with clueless people who leave their cart in the middle of the aisle while they browse elsewhere.  I could go on and on.

Work is busy.  Life is busy.  On a typical day, I leave the house at 5:40 a.m. armed with at least 3, sometimes 4 bags (gym bag, purse, lunch bag, and my computer bag if I’ve brought work home the night before).  I then go to Barre, then shower at work (hauling all the bags inside), work for 8-9 hours, and then leave (hauling all the bags back out to the car) around 4:00 or 4:30.  Sometimes, if I’m really ambitious I will take the 4:30 Barre class on Tuesdays and Thursdays.  So I get home anytime between 4:30 – 5:45.  And then even later if I have to go to the store. 

There was a day back in February when I left Barre at 5:30 p.m. and then went to get groceries and bought maybe 8 bags worth?  When I got home (around 6:30 or 7:00) and opened my trunk and saw my grocery bags and all of my other bags that had to be hauled inside and unpacked and dealt with and THEN knowing I had to make dinner on top of that I literally started crying.  And yes….I realize these are not first-world problems.  But I was so incredibly overwhelmed with it all the time. 

So I first looked at our budget and looked what we were spending each month on groceries.  I talked to husband.  He said if I can make it work with our current grocery budget, then to go for it. 

I started researching.  There are probably 15 companies out there (Blue Apron, Freshly, Plated, Home Chef, etc.) and I did a comparison of ALL of them.  I initially thought of going with Blue Apron again, but some of the Blue Apron meals were VERY time consuming.  Like more than an hour for one meal, which is just too long.  While I was doing my comparison, I was looking for freshest ingredients, tastiest recipes, EASIEST recipes (aka less time-consuming), and flexibility with meal choices.  

I checked multiple websites, food bloggers, etc. and hands down the winner was Home Chef.  So that’s the one I signed up for.  The recipes take anywhere from 15 – 45 minutes (30 minutes  usually) to prepare from start to finish.  The ingredients are fresh.  There is minimal prep work.  You do have to chop all of the vegetables, but that’s not an issue.  The meat comes uncooked obviously, but there is no chopping of meat.  If the recipe calls for diced chicken, they send you fresh uncooked diced chicken (be still my heart!).  You can also choose what type of plan you want.  I chose the ‘mostly low-carb’ meal plans.




I signed up for the 2 person, 3 dinners a week plan (6 meals).  Each week you can go into the app and select your dinners.  This is the best part…there are 14 different meals to choose from.  I LOVE that.  Also, you can skip weeks if needed.  When my sister-in-law was visiting, I skipped my delivery that week.  And we’re traveling in a few weeks, so I skipped that week as well (and will obviously not be charged).  They charge by the week.  You can also skip meals…like if you only want 2 dinners that week instead of 3, you can adjust that as well.



As you can imagine, these meal boxes are not cheap:  9.99 per meal.  $60 per week.  $240 per month.  Yes, it’s a lot.  But I don’t care.  I worked it into our current grocery budget.  And here’s why:

1.       Portion sizes.  All of the reviews I read said that Home Chef’s portion sizes were generous.  And they were right.  We always get at LEAST 3 meals out of a 2-meal dinner, and sometimes even 4.  So we’re guaranteed at least 3 extra meals per week (9 meals instead of 6).  This brings the price down to $6.66 per meal (not bad for a generous portion of food that tastes like it came from a good restaurant!).
2.       They have taken the stress out of figuring out that horrible question ‘what’s for dinner’ completely.  And yes…I realize that the box is only 3 dinners and there are 7 days of the week.  But we usually go out once a week, and then for the other 3 nights we do leftovers of some sort or something easy (like tacos or spaghetti or grill out or peanut butter and jelly sandwiches on meeting nights ha ha).  I made a list of ‘go-to’ easy dinners for our in-between nights. 
3.       They have done all of your shopping.  I hardly ever go to Target anymore (which is a big money saver especially with impulse purchases). 
4.       They send you things in individual containers that are the perfect portions.  There is no measuring.  EVER.  The only thing I had to do one time was cut a pat of butter in half ha ha. 
5.       I actually enjoy cooking now.  This is HUGE!  This is what I remember the most about Blue Apron.  It made me enjoy cooking and I felt like a fancy chef.
6.       The food is GOOD.  We have yet to have a ‘stinker’ meal.  And here’s what we’ve made so far:

Marsala mushroom chicken skillet with broccoli and peas
Korean pork noodle bowl and green beans and Fresno chile
Sirloin steak with balsamic sauce and fingerling potatoes and Brussels sprouts
Steak with garlic-herb butter and buttermilk-cheddar mashed potatoes and zucchini
Cajun chicken thigh & Italian sausage dirty rice with poblano pepper
One-pot creamy chicken chowder



Everything has been delicious!  My stress level regarding ‘what’s for dinner’ is completely non-existent now.  I’m going to continue with Home Chef for as long as I can!

Tuesday, April 16, 2019

March Reads (7)



Two stars = eh, it was okay
Three stars =  liked it
Four stars = really, really liked it
Five stars = absolutely loved it

1-Star (0)

2-Star (1)
***The River (Fiction, P. Heller)
This book had so much potential.  Two college friends take a canoeing trip in Canada, and along the way they find themselves dodging forest fires and crazy people.  This book reminded me a lot of the movie The River Wild.  Only it was SO BORING.  Up until the last 20 pages or so.  The descriptions of the forest, the water, the fishing, the equipment used (which was noted by brand name even), just went on and on and on.  The last 20 pages were completely amazing and it’s just a shame that the whole book couldn’t have been that way.  Peter Heller has the writing chops, he just didn’t use them in the first 90% of this book.

3-Star (4)
***The German Girl (Fiction, L. Correa)
I would have liked this book more if it didn’t feel like a YA.  And don’t get me wrong, I love a good YA book, but this one was not YA….yet it felt like it.  I hope that makes sense though.  But it gets all 3 stars for mentioning JWs multiple times and the suffering they endured during WWII along with the Jews.

***A Beautiful Mystery (Fiction, L. Penny)
This one was a little slow for me, but still a good read.

***A Faithful Place (Fiction, T. French)
Another good one.  It seemed to drag in certain places, but I still totally enjoyed it.

***Spineless (Non-Fiction, J. Berwald)
Too much memoir.  I learned a lot about these amazing creatures, but I found the authors memoir portions of this book ruined the flow of this book.

4-Star (2)
****A Trick of the Light (Fiction, L. Penny)
I love these books, even the mediocre ones.  I love Inspector Gamache and his deadpan humor (which really comes through on the audiobooks).  I want to live in Three Pines!  Actually…I don’t.  Lots of bad things happen there.

****Outer Order Inner Calm (Non-Fiction, G. Rubin)
I am a fan of Gretchen Rubin and her books.  While this one was sparse on content (it more like each page had it’s own ‘tip’), it was still really good.  She really focused on how if things at work and home are orderly, you will feel calm on the inside.  She also stressed that there is no right way to declutter and organize…you do what works for you.  A quick read.

5-Star (0)

Total Books Read: 7 (5 fiction, 2 non-fiction)

DNF (Did Not Finish) :
The Terror (not good)

Crazy Rich Asians (a younger friend of mine – 16 – told me I “must” read this book….I tried, I really did, but it’s just nonsense.  I think I gave it 30 pages.)

Renegades (I had high hopes for this one because Marissa Meyer wrote the Lunar Chronicles series I loved so much last year…but I couldn’t get into this one)

Killers of the Flower Moon (I made it more than halfway but I found it incredibly boring)

20 Years of Reading

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