Read time: 6 min

Between classes, work, clubs, and sports, where is there time to eat? In a recent CampusWell survey, 45 percent of students said they don’t feel like they have enough time to cook each day, let alone eat. Sure, you can grab an overpriced noodle bowl at the dining hall or a few Oreos from the cabinet and call it dinner. Or you could meal prep and actually eat something of substance.

Besides being a more nutritionally sound option, setting aside one day to prep your meals has a slew of benefits:

  • Save time not having to cook every single day
  • Save money by avoiding takeout, eating out, and dining hall costs
  • Stress less over what to eat; everything’s planned for you
  • Eat healthier more consistently

To make your venture into meal prepping easy, we’ve put together a step-by-step guide. Set aside about two hours at the beginning of the week to get everything ready.

Meal plan for Monday through Friday: Breakfast option of egg cups or overnight oats, Lunch is burrito bowl, and Dinner option of veggie burgers or chili

Here’s exactly what to do during prep

fresh ingredients on cutting board

Part 1: Take care of the most time-consuming stuff

The key is to start with the thing that’s going to take the longest amount of time. In this case, the egg cups take 25 minutes, so heat the oven to 325 degrees for those first.

Start by dicing up your tomato and sautéing it in a pan until cooked, or use raw, if desired. Note: You can also add spinach, ham, mushrooms, and whatever veggies you’d like to the egg cups. Set the cooked ingredients aside while you whisk together your eggs and milk, and divide into muffin tins. Top with veggies/cooked ingredients and cheese, and pop them into the oven for about 25 minutes or until the top looks firm and they appear to be cooked through.

Now it’s time to prep your chili. Our recipe calls for a slow cooker, but if you don’t have that, brown your ground turkey or beef in a pot on the stove with your spices. Add the rest of your ingredients and let simmer.

At this point, you can also start making your rice/quinoa for the burrito bowls. You can use a quick microwaveable rice or one that requires a stove or rice cooker. Feel free to make extra for the chili!

Note: Your egg cups might be done at this point, so set those aside to cool. Turn off your oven—you’re done with that for now. 

Part 2: Prep it and forget it

As your chili and rice are cooking, place some greens in your burrito bowl containers. Rinse and dry your black beans and portion them out atop the greens.

Note: Check in on your rice/quinoa, it’s probably done.

Quinoa being rinsed

Add the rice/quinoa to your bowls, followed by the rest of your toppings. If using avocado, be sure to add that on the day you’re going to eat it to avoid browning. (Tip: Switch up your bowls by using different add-ins for each day of the week.) Burrito bowls are done!

Note: Check on your chili. If it’s done, turn off the stove and let it cool.

Time to throw together your overnight oats. Measure out your oats into jars or bowls, followed by your milk and add-ins. Into the fridge they go.

For your last meal: Prep your beans and greens burgers. Form these into patties, wrap them in plastic wrap, and keep them in the freezer. This makes it easy to pop on the stove for dinner on the nights you’re having them. The recipe makes four to six burgers. 

Part 3: Organize the fridge 

For easy grab-and-go meals, organize your fridge so that you have your breakfast, lunch, and dinner for each day stacked and ready.

“Meal prepping is absolutely amazing. Meals can be made in advance, so if you’re a late sleeper, you can run out the door with a premade breakfast wrap. Also, if you often find that you’re tempted to eat out, meal prep can save you a ton of money—[it’s] probably much healthier too.”
—Ewan C., second-year undergraduate student, Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Surrey, British Columbia, Canada

“It allows me to [have] one less thing on my plate. Since I know I already have food ready, I don’t have to stress about where my next meal is coming from.”
—Reese A., third-year undergraduate student, University of Kansas, Lawrence

“It helps me eat healthier and have time to eat at all. It also saves me a massive amount of money vs. eating out. Between homework, school, and my actual job, I tend to skip a lot of meals. With meal prepping, I can ensure I eat healthy meals.”
—Cordel G., second-year student, Wake Technical Community College, Raleigh, North Carolina

“Meal prep gives me peace of mind in high-stress situations. It saves time, helps me eat healthier, helps me manage my time better, and helps keep me focused.”
—Caroline H., first-year graduate student, Dominican University, River Forest, Illinois

“Meal prepping helps me manage my hectic schedule. During my busiest weeks, I find that meal prepping ensures that I eat regularly, I eat healthy and I save money by avoiding fast alternatives like vending machines and fast food.”
—Ericka C., recent graduate, University of Wyoming, Laramie

GET HELP OR FIND OUT MORE

Other recipes that lend themselves well to meal prep:

Breakfast
French toast (Make, freeze, and pop into the toaster when you’re ready to eat)

Lunch

Soup
Salad

Dinner
Orange chicken
Pasta



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Article sources

CampusWell survey, October 2018.

Staff. (2018). Meal prep: A helpful healthy eating strategy. Harvard T.H. Chan: School of Public Health. https://www.hsph.harvard.edu/nutritionsource/2017/03/20/meal-prep-planning/

Diana Whelan is a senior copywriter at CLEAResult. Previously, she was the managing editor at Student Health 101, and has written and edited articles for condition-specific publications distributed in physician offices nationwide. She holds a BA in Rhetoric & Professional Writing from the University of Hartford.