Skint Dad

Where Every Penny Counts

  • Home
  • Save money
    • How to save money on groceries
    • Save money on energy bills
    • Save money on water bills
    • Frugal living tips
    • 1p Saving Challenge
    • Sun holiday codes
  • Make money
    • Make money online
    • Best paid surveys
    • Best side hustle ideas
    • Free money
    • Genuine work from home jobs
    • Bank switch offers
  • Manage money
    • Best budgeting apps
    • Average household bills
    • Credit score apps
  • Our Book
  • News
  • Deals
    • Farmfoods offers
    • Blue Light Card discounts list
    • When is the Next sale
    • 25% off wine
  • About us
  • Community
  • Subscribe
You are here: Home / Save Money / 7 Meal Planning Tips and Tricks to Keep You on Track

Skint Dad is reader supported. Purchases through links on our site may earn us an affiliate commission. Learn more

7 Meal Planning Tips and Tricks to Keep You on Track

by Naomi Willis · updated 12 March 2018

You’ve got your meal plan down to a T, but boredom sets in or things just start going wrong! These meal planning tips and tricks should help keep you on track.

You've got your meal plan down to a T, but boredom sets in or things just start going wrong! These meal planning tips and tricks should help keep you on track.

£10 sign up bonus: Earn easy cash by watching videos, playing games, and entering surveys.

Get a £10 sign up bonus when you join today.

Join Swagbucks here >>

Meal planning is a sure fire way to reduce the amount of money you spend at the supermarket. Not only will you feel more organised, but you’ll certainly save time as well.

  • If you’re new to this whole meal planning thing the take a look at our beginner’s guide to meal planning.
  • If you’re a dab hand at meal planning, but want to take your saving to the next level, then you need to read How to Meal Plan Like a Pro!

However, if you need a few meal planning tips and tricks to stop you throwing in the towel for a bowl of cereal or cold beans from the tin, then you’ll want to take a look at these ideas.

Find new recipes

After a few weeks or even months of having meal plans in place, I often find I hit a brick wall.

I simply get bored of the whole process :(

What gets difficult is getting sick and tired of having the same old things week in week out. So, we change our plan up week to week and have different things so it doesn’t get samey.

The best thing to do is simply find more recipes. You can easily find them online and print or write them out, use a good old fashioned budget cook book or use meal planning apps. Take to trust Google or lost an eternity looking on Pinterest.

The more variety of recipes you have on hand, the less likely you’ll get an opportunity to get bored of cooking and eating them.

Free printable: feel free to use our meal planning template

What kinds of meals?

For some reason, I get stuck in a rut. When it’s summer all I want to make are light salads. But when it’s winter, I want big filling soups and casseroles. My mind simply won’t let me think of anything else.

If you’re struggling to think of what to eat, here are some different kinds of meals you could try to mix things up a bit:

  • 15 minute meals – things that don’t take too long to cook and don’t have many ingredients, so you can be in and out of the kitchen in no time (yet somehow the washing up still takes as long!)
  • Slow cooker meals – chuck the ingredients in to the pot first thing in the morning, pop it on low and serve when you’re ready in the evening.
  • Batch cooked meals – the easiest way to batch cook is to double up on all ingredients when you’re cooking anyway and portion it off for the freezer. Then just defrost and reheat when you need.
  • Theme nights – whether it’s Italian, Chinese, Indian or something else, pick a night when you might have a little more time to be creative.

Cut down on waste

As part of your meal plan, it’s worthwhile seeing if you can use the same ingredients over a few different days. On top of making sure there is less food waste, you could buy one big bag of something at a cheaper price per unit.

It’s also worth planning in for any leftovers.

Whenever we cook a chilli or a stew there is far too much. A pot is either added to the fridge for lunch the next day or, if there’s a lot, we’ll put it into the freezer for a meal another time. If you think it’ll be the case for you, then you can use it in your audit as an extra meal.

Plan for the unexpected

We always have something in the freezer (yellow sticker haul!) so can vary what we’ve planned if something *unexpected* happens. Whether that be a random person who shows up at dinner time or something has gone a bit smelly before the use by date (don’t you just hate it when that happens?!)

On top of that, we always make sure the cupboard has herbs, spices and all the essential basics to hand. If we needed to whip up an easy pasta sauce when we’re in a rush one evening it wouldn’t be a hassle.

It goes more than that though. Having basic ingredients in the cupboard will make sure that our weekly food bill overall is lower as we’re not having to get the same foods week in week out.

So essentially, we do follow our meal plan…most of the time…but have a few back ups just in case.

You've got your meal plan down to a T, but boredom sets in or things just start going wrong! These meal planning tips and tricks should help keep you on track.

Pin for later

Cook in bulk

Bulk cooking can be done two ways:

  • Take a day (or a few hours one evening) and cook, cook, cook
  • When you’re cooking something normally, double up on all ingredients

Once it’s cooked and cooled, add it to the fridge for tomorrow and pop the rest into freezer bags. You can either have them for the rest of the week, use them for an “unexpected” day or use the pre-cooked food in a future planned meal.

Bulk cooking can be a real time saver as you’ve done all the prep and cooking in advance. When it comes to a busy evening all you need to do is defrost and reheat the food.

From scratch?

Not everything in a meal plan needs to be cooked from scratch. In fact, sometimes is far easier (and cheaper) to buy ready made food.

While we do prefer cooking from scratch there are many times when a pizza in the oven is a life saver.

Most of us have busy lifestyles and trying to fit in making every last morsel you eat from basic ingredients can sometimes be a stretch too far.

Don’t sweat it!

So what! It goes wrong – for whatever reason.

Dust yourself off, have a cuppa and eat a biscuit. Try to work out why it went wrong and see if you can have something in your arsenal to stop it happening again.

The most important thing is making sure that meal planning works for you. Pick and choose the bits that work and ditch everything else.

The planning needs to fit in with you, your life and your home.

So, forget what everyone else says, find what you like to do then stick with it :)

 

Still struggling to come up with ideas? Why not use some of our budget meal plans:

  • £25 healthy meal plan
  • £40 meal plan to reduce food waste
  • £25 budget meal plan to feed 7 people for 7 days
  • About
  • Latest Posts
Naomi Willis
Naomi Willis
Content editor at Skint Dad
Naomi knows the burden of living on very little and became debt free by following her own money saving tips and tricks. She is an expert on saving money at the supermarket and side hustles.
Naomi Willis
Latest posts by Naomi Willis (see all)
  • TopCashback Sweet Treats Giveaway this Easter 2025: ALL answers - 7 April 2025
  • Tesco clothing sale 2025 – 25% off F&F sale dates - 27 March 2025
  • Next sale dates 2025 and how to book an early VIP slot - 17 March 2025
Newsletter Title

Subscribe to our free newsletter for the latest money saving content

Plus an exclusive £16 cashback offer for new Quidco members.

Comments

  1. Kim Carberry says

    9 September 2017 at 21:31

    Great tips…I meal plan but have been a bit lazy over the holidays and everything has became a bit samey. For this next week I have been on Pinterest & found some new recipes to try.

    Reply
  2. thara says

    10 July 2022 at 05:08

    Great ideas. Whenever I visit the supermarket I have a shopping list and a budget too. I avoid the really expensive stuff. I always discuss meals in advance as a form of preparation. I only like to do a monthly big food shop these days. As stated before I prefer to get my fruit and vegetables from cheaper farm shops rather than at a flashy big supermarket.
    And I tend to only purchase my meat from a independent butcher and cheese comes from a local deli shop instead. You can even borrow leftover meat, eggs, fruit, cheese and vegetables from your close friends and family members.
    The other day a neighbour left some cherries on my doorstep. Try picking your own fruit in addition from the PYO farms. You can buy it cheaply at the end of your trip there.

    Reply
  3. Thara says

    25 March 2024 at 04:15

    I like to have a weekly meal plan in order to save money. This is this week’s meal plan

    Monday breakfast- fried eggs on toast with milk
    Monday lunchtime- two mini sausage rolls and raspberry coulis
    Monday dinner- chicken pie and a peach tart
    Tuesday breakfast- a leftover quiche and some water
    Tuesday lunchtime- baked potato and watercress with cookies
    Tuesday dinner time- tomato and ham sandwiches and cake
    Wednesday breakfast- a omelette with key lime pie for dessert
    Wednesday lunchtime- fish cakes and fresh fruit with ice cream
    Wednesday dinner time- baked apples and smoked salmon with rhubarb crumble
    Thursday breakfast- pancakes and toast with donuts
    Thursday lunchtime- fish and nuts on bread with a sponge cake
    Thursday dinner- roasted chicken and a cheese board for dessert
    Friday breakfast- three muffins and lemonade
    Friday lunchtime- mini pigs in blankets with a dessert
    Friday dinner time- toasted bread and pudding
    Saturday breakfast- leftovers with wine
    Saturday lunchtime- pork belly with strawberries and custard
    Saturday dinner time- ham and cheese pizza with biscuits
    Sunday breakfast- leftovers
    Sunday lunchtime- Chinese food and wine
    Sunday dinner- more Chinese and wine

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Ricky and Naomi Willis

Ricky and Naomi Willis, founders and editors of the Skint Dad website.

We know every penny counts, so we’re sharing resources, tips, tricks, and deals that will keep more money in your pocket.

Read more about us.

Make Every Penny Count by Ricky and Naomi Willis
Skint Dad in the media

Explore

Save money

Make money

Manage money

Buy our book

Budget recipes

Join the community

Information

About us

Contact us

Awards, Media and Press

Affiliate Disclosure

Privacy Policy

Cookie Policy

Terms & Conditions

Sitemap

Skint Dad

K2 Tower
Bond Street
Hull
HU1 3EN
01482 230059

Skint Media Limited
is a registered company
in England & Wales.
Company reg no: 09991508
VAT No: 318 7349 80

Copyright © 2025 · Skint Media Limited · All rights reserved · Registered in England and Wales with company number 09991508

Skint DadLogo Header Menu
  • Home
  • Save money
    • How to save money on groceries
    • Save money on energy bills
    • Save money on water bills
    • Frugal living tips
    • 1p Saving Challenge
    • Sun holiday codes
  • Make money
    • Make money online
    • Best paid surveys
    • Best side hustle ideas
    • Free money
    • Genuine work from home jobs
    • Bank switch offers
  • Manage money
    • Best budgeting apps
    • Average household bills
    • Credit score apps
  • Our Book
  • News
  • Deals
    • Farmfoods offers
    • Blue Light Card discounts list
    • When is the Next sale
    • 25% off wine
  • About us
  • Community
  • Subscribe