After you聽finish my 100-mile bike ride you'll eat a salad with grilled chicken and quinoa,聽you told yourself.聽
But here you are standing in the kitchen, still in Lycra, polishing off that Costco-sized bag of tortilla chips. So much for a salad.聽
The good news is this: even professional athletes struggle with the post-ride eat-the-first-thing-I-see聽thing. 鈥淎t the end of a hard workout it鈥檚 like, ugh, I don鈥檛 have the energy to make a salad. So I find that I have my best eating weeks when I make big batches of things ahead of time,鈥 says , a professional Ironman-distance triathlete. Wassner, along with her twin鈥攆ellow pro triathlete Laurel Wassner鈥攁nd food writer Melissa Lasher are the food prep gurus behind , a recipe blog stuffed with energy-rich dinner ideas and easy meal planning advice.聽
Athletefood.com is among a growing cannon of recipe and food sites dedicated to helping harried weekend warriors put more than heat-and-eat burritos on the table. Unlike your typical food blogs, these repositories don鈥檛 care if a dish photographs like a Pinterest pin-up model, or if it鈥檚 going to go viral on social. 鈥淔or a recipe to work we have to be able to make it fast or ahead of time, make it fit, and make it taste really good,鈥 says Lasher, who is a graduate of Tante Marie's Cooking School in San Francisco and also interned at Tartine Bakery. If the trio can鈥檛 nail those three criteria, the dish won鈥檛 ever see the light of day.聽
But you can have the best recipes at your fingertips and still find yourself holding a packet of frozen-solid chicken and fighting off a serious case of runger at 10 p.m. 鈥淧lanning really is key, it makes life so much easier,鈥 says Susan Harrell, a professionally trained personal chef who runs the site . The more you can shop, chop聽and cook before the frenzy of the workweek begins, the more time you鈥檙e going to have for training.
Here are some pro tips from the pros鈥攂oth athletes and chefs鈥攐n how to minimize your kitchen time while maximize your meal output.聽
Stop Loathing Leftovers
鈥淎mericans are really nervous about leftovers,鈥 says , a cooking instructor, nutrition and health coach and author of the forthcoming book FL!P Your Kitchen. But leftovers are essential for getting through an entire week without cooking every single night. 鈥淪omething like 40 percent of the food Americans buy is wasted,鈥 says Barker, and that鈥檚 a shame, since it not only , but it鈥檚 also a total money suck.聽
If eating the same thing night after night bothers you, Barker suggests you start freezing half of everything you make. The trick here is to label religiously鈥攚ith both what鈥檚 in the container and the date it was prepared. Also, stock your freezer the way a grocery store stocks its shelves: with the newest items in the back. This eliminates the chances of pulling out a hunk of mystery meat that may or may not be from before Y2K.聽
Never Cook Just One Meal
If you鈥檙e going to go through the work of slicing, dicing and roasting, you might as well get a few meals out of it, says Barker. 鈥淢y family of four can finish a roast chicken in one meal, which doesn鈥檛 leave much in the way of leftovers, so I roast two chickens.鈥 It makes sense鈥攜ou鈥檒l be tied up for the hour it takes the birds to roast, so why not get several day鈥檚 worth of protein out of it? Keep your seasoning on the second chicken simple, so that you can easily work it into tacos, soup, curry鈥攜ou get the idea.聽
Meat isn鈥檛 the only thing to do this with, either. For example, Barker always cooks extra rice or quinoa. If she doesn鈥檛 use it as a side dish within a few days, she turns it into fried rice or adds milk and makes it into hot rice cereal for breakfast.聽
Pencil In Your Shopping Time
As a professional triathlete and mom of two little kids, Rebecca Wassner鈥檚 time is mostly spoken for. 鈥淚 look at my workouts and figure out when I鈥檓 going to have time to shop and when I鈥檓 going to have time to cook,鈥 she says. Then, she blocks off that time and refuses to schedule anything else in those hours.聽
You also need one comprehensive list of all your ingredients for the week. Being one egg short of a souffl茅 is the easiest way to end up calling peanut butter from the jar dinner. Harrell suggests using an app like or . These apps will import recipes from sites around the web and pull all the ingredients you need into one tidy list. 聽
Have An “Oh Sh*t”聽Standby
For Harrell, this is egg tacos. 鈥淚 love tacos and I always have eggs and an onion [and a few tortillas] on hand,鈥 she says. If she鈥檚 got a lot of veggies but no real plan she throws them all into a wok, 鈥渘ever underestimate the power of a veggie stir fry,鈥 she says, adding that it can work with pretty much any flavoring and any protein. 聽
While it鈥檚 good to have something you can always rely on, it鈥檚 also important not to fall into a recipe rut. Every few weeks Baker cooks something new and fun, even if it鈥檚 time-consuming and will use every dish in the kitchen. 鈥淏ut I still am cooking for more than one meal,鈥 she says of these experiments鈥攎eaning she鈥檒l double the recipe or cook something extra that she can use at a later date.聽
Understand Your Timelines
Proteins that you鈥檝e cooked will keep in the refrigerator for up to a week. So too will cooked veggies. Raw veggies are trickier. Harrell says that if you prep your salads over the weekend, you鈥檒l get three days max before the carrots, green onions and cucumber go just a bit limp. However, 鈥測ou can still throw them into a stir fry or soup,鈥 she suggests.
Make Adding in Veggies Easy
For Rebecca Wassner, the easiest way to make sure she meets her daily requirement of greens is to always keep a mixed veggie 鈥渟uccotash鈥 in the fridge. Usually she spends one day each week throwing together a combo of fresh and frozen peas, carrots, peppers鈥攚hatever she has on hand really. 鈥淭hen I can just grab some during the week. I鈥檒l mix pesto in with it some days,鈥 she says, adding that other days she鈥檒l throw some in with a bowl of curry or use it atop a salad.聽