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​Want to always eat good food? 6 meal prep secrets every busy person should know​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Aug 22, 2025, 13:00 IST
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Want to always eat good food? 6 meal prep secrets every busy person should know

The hardest part of eating well isn’t cooking – it’s deciding what to eat when you’re already tired. That’s where meal prep comes in. It’s not about stacking identical boxes of grilled chicken and broccoli; it’s about small tricks that make food easier, fresher, and faster all week long. With a little planning, you can walk into your kitchen after a long day and still eat something that feels like care. Here are six secrets that actually work.

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Plan one “base” meal for the week

Instead of trying to cook everything in bulk, pick one versatile base that you can transform into multiple meals. For example, a large pot of simple boiled rice, roasted vegetables, or a batch of cooked lentils. Throughout the week, mix it with different sauces, spices, or proteins to create completely different meals. One base, many variations – minimal effort, maximum payoff.

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Chop once, eat many times

Vegetables slow most people down. If you set aside thirty minutes to peel, chop, and store them in glass boxes or zip bags, you’ll thank yourself all week. You can cube carrots and beans for curries, slice onions for quick tadkas, or prep greens for salads. The trick is not to pre-cook them – just cut and store. Then you can add them straight into a pan or bowl and get food on the table in minutes.

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Keep a “ready-to-go” spice kit

Sometimes the hardest part of cooking isn’t the peeling or the chopping – it’s the moment you stand over the stove wondering what the food should taste like. That’s where a little spice kit can save you. Fill a few jars with your own ready blends: one for dal with turmeric, cumin, and coriander; another for curry with garam masala, red chili, and fennel; maybe one for quick stir-fries with black pepper and curry powder. Then, on a tired evening, all you need to do is reach for a jar, sprinkle, and stir. The flavors take care of themselves, and suddenly dinner feels less like a chore and more like comfort.

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Build a flavor base

Instead of starting from scratch every time, you can prepare a couple of all-purpose bases. One could be a tomato-onion masala cooked down with ginger, garlic, and spices; another could be a herb pesto or chutney. Stored in jars, these can be stirred into rice, spread on bread, or turned into a quick curry. The heavy lifting is already done – all you need is the final flourish. Think of them as shortcuts without compromise.

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Prep proteins smartly

Protein is where most meal prep collapses, but it doesn’t have to. You can marinate chicken with spices and freeze it raw, ready to be added and cooked. Boil a dozen eggs at once and keep them in the fridge for salads, sandwiches, or curries. Cook a batch of chickpeas or beans, then portion and refrigerate. With these on hand, you’re never scrambling for substance. The point isn’t to cook everything in advance – it’s to make the cooking step so small you can’t skip it.

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Don’t skip snacks

Meal prep isn’t only about lunch and dinner. The moment you’re most likely to cave to junk is when you’re hungry between meals. If you take ten minutes to roast chickpeas, chop fruit, or portion out trail mix, you can reach for something ready instead of rummaging for chips. Keep it visible in the fridge or on the counter, and you’ll find yourself eating better without trying too hard.

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