Batch Cooking: The Complete Guide to Smart Cooking
Batch cooking means cooking once to eat all week. Not sad reheated meals—versatile bases that you assemble into different meals every day. In 2 to 3 hours on the weekend, you free up your weekday evenings. Here is the step-by-step method.
Steps
Plan 5 base recipes
Batch cooking relies on versatile "bases," not full meals. Choose one protein (e.g., roast chicken), one starch (e.g., rice), two vegetable preparations (e.g., ratatouille + roasted vegetables), and one sauce or dressing. These 5 bases combine into 10+ different meals.
Do your shopping in one trip
Once your menu is set, do the shopping in one go. Buy everything you need for the 5 bases plus a few extras for daily garnishes (fresh herbs, lemons, seeds). One trip to the supermarket per week saves time and gas.
Cook proteins first
Start the oven for your proteins as soon as you begin. Roast chicken takes 45-60 minutes, lentils simmer for 20-25 minutes. These are the elements that take the longest to cook. While they're in the oven or on the stove, you prepare the rest in parallel.
Prepare starches in parallel
While the proteins are cooking, start the rice, pasta, or potatoes. Cook them al dente because they will be reheated during the week. Overcooked rice on Sunday will be mushy by Wednesday. Same principle for pasta and grains.
Prepare sauces and seasonings separately
Sauces are the secret to batch cooking that doesn't get boring. Prepare 2-3 different sauces or dressings: an Asian dressing (soy, sesame, ginger), a homemade pesto, a yogurt-herb sauce. By changing the sauce, you completely change the dish even with the same bases.
Assemble and store smartly
Store each base separately in airtight containers. Don't mix proteins with starches or sauces—it gets soggy and limits combinations. Label and date each container. At mealtime, assemble in 5 minutes: base + starch + sauce + fresh garnish.
Batch cooking vs meal prep: the real difference
Meal prep produces complete meals ready to reheat: you open the container and eat. Batch cooking prepares separate components that you assemble differently each day. Batch cooking is more flexible because you combine bases according to your mood. Meal prep is more convenient because everything is already assembled. The ideal is often a mix of both: a few full meals in the freezer for lazy nights, and bases in the fridge for normal days.
Kitchen organization for batch cooking
The key is to work in parallel, not sequentially. Before starting, get out all ingredients and utensils. Start the longest-cooking items first (oven, simmering). Use cooking time to prepare quick elements (sauces, raw veggies). Clean as you go—a cluttered workspace slows everything down. By the end of the session, you should have 8-10 containers ready and a clean kitchen.
Storage times by food type
In the refrigerator (4°C max): cooked proteins 3-4 days, cooked rice and pasta 3-5 days, cooked vegetables 3-4 days, homemade sauces 5-7 days, dressings 7-10 days. In the freezer (-18°C): cooked meats 2-3 months, soups and stews 3-4 months, cooked rice 1 month, blanched vegetables 6-8 months. The golden rule: if food has spent more than 2 hours out of the fridge, don't keep it. Cool your preparations quickly before refrigerating.
FoodCraft Tip
FoodCraft's Freezable Recipes Filter
Look for recipes with the "freezable" tag in FoodCraft. These recipes have been tested to withstand freezing and reheating well. You'll know exactly how long each dish keeps in the freezer.
Batch Prep Tags to Save Time
Recipes tagged "batch prep" are designed to be easily multiplied. Instructions include batch prep times and storage tips. You can confidently triple quantities without risking the recipe.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a batch cooking session take?
Is batch cooking cheaper?
Can you do batch cooking for just one person?
How to keep meals from all looking the same?
What are the best dishes to start batch cooking with?
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