I want to make as much as I can before the baby comes. The first kid came early and we didn’t get a chance to meal prep…it would have been a huge help.

This time I want to have some things, breakfast, sides, lunch, dinner. Where all I need to do is defrost, heat/cook, and eat.

Can you share your ideas, experience, links, etc?

Thanks in advance!

  • LilWitchyHobbit@alien.topB
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    1 year ago

    Not sure if this is company-wide, though it makes so much sense that it should be, but my local Costco sells vacuum-sealed packages of their rotisserie chicken in a 2-pack. Usually in an end-cap refrigerator by the fresh, prepared meals like wraps and salads.

    • karmagirl314@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      Mine has it too but it’s way more expensive per ounce than the whole chicken, which is understandable because the work is done for you. So it’s really just a question of which is more valuable to you- time or money?

      • Bexlyp@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        Additional advice: if you get the whole chickens, you can use the bones to make stock (especially easy if you have an instant pot or crockpot). Freeze that, and you’ve got an easy soup base if you throw in some veggies, shredded meat, and maybe noodles or rice. You can make a bunch of soups off that frozen base in an hour or less.

      • LilWitchyHobbit@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        Absolutely agree. When meal-prepping for the birth, if you can afford it, I would think that the time-saving would be a very valuable trade-off for having so much of the work done already. Especially if you are trying to create the most meals possible in the shortest amount of time.

        • karmagirl314@alien.topB
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          1 year ago

          Totally. Although I will say if you have close family (or really close friends) living nearby who are always like “what can I do to help?” “Let me know if you need anything!”, putting them to work shredding and portioning chicken is a good use of that goodwill.

      • hobohobbies@alien.topB
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        1 year ago

        If you buy the prepackaged rotisserie meat then you aren’t the one buying all the rotisserie chickens.

        I didn’t think it was that more expensive given the yield of a whole chicken. I’m sure someone has done a full comparison on yield and waste to just meat.

    • AdPuzzleheaded6590@alien.topB
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      1 year ago

      Ohh I would love this. This sounds like a stupid question, but is the chicken cut up or is the full rotisserie chicken vacuum sealed?