Quick answer: Pick 2 proteins, 2 grains, and 3 vegetables. Cook them all on Sunday in this order: grains first (they take longest), then proteins, then veggies. Portion into 5 containers. Total time: about 90 minutes to 2 hours. Weekly food cost drops by 40-60% compared to eating out.
The average person spends $10-15 per meal eating out — that’s $200-450 a month just on weekday lunches. Meal prep for the week cuts that to $3-5 per meal, saves 5-7 hours of daily cooking decisions, and stops the 6 PM “what should I eat” spiral that ends with ordering delivery.
The problem? Most beginners overcomplicate it. You don’t need 7 different recipes. You need one simple system.
The 5-Container Meal Prep System
Forget planning a different meal for every day. This system uses mix-and-match components:
- Pick 2 proteins. Choose two that cook differently — one baked (chicken thighs, salmon) and one stovetop (ground turkey, eggs, tofu). This gives you variety without doubling your effort.
- Pick 2 grains or starches. Rice + pasta, quinoa + sweet potatoes, or couscous + bread. Cook both in bulk — most grains are set-and-forget.
- Pick 3 vegetables. One roasted (broccoli, bell peppers), one raw (cucumber, carrots, cherry tomatoes), one leafy (spinach, mixed greens). Three textures keep meals interesting.
- Pick 1 sauce or dressing. This is the secret weapon. The same chicken + rice tastes completely different with teriyaki versus peanut sauce versus salsa. Buy 2-3 sauces and rotate daily.
- Portion into 5 containers. Each container gets: 1 palm-sized protein + 1 fist-sized grain + 2 fists of vegetables. Done.
Five containers. Five weekday meals. Two hours of work on Sunday. That’s it.
The 2-Hour Prep Schedule
Order matters. Start with what takes longest:
- 0:00 — Start grains. Put rice or quinoa on the stove or in a rice cooker. Set timer and forget it. Boil pasta water if needed.
- 0:05 — Prep and start proteins. Season chicken/salmon and put in the oven at 200°C (400°F). Or start browning ground meat on the stovetop.
- 0:15 — Chop all vegetables. Everything that needs cutting — do it now while proteins cook. Toss roasting veggies onto a sheet pan and into the oven alongside protein.
- 0:40 — Cook eggs or second protein. While the oven batch finishes, do your stovetop protein. Hard-boil eggs, cook tofu, or sauté ground turkey.
- 1:00 — Everything comes out. Grains done. Proteins done. Roasted veggies done. Let everything cool for 10-15 minutes.
- 1:15 — Assemble containers. Portion everything into 5 containers using the palm/fist method. Add raw vegetables and dressing on the side (keeps things fresh).
- 1:30–2:00 — Label, stack, refrigerate. Write the date on each lid. Stack in the fridge. Clean the kitchen. Done for the week.
Starter Grocery List (Under $30-40)
| Category | Budget Option | Mid-Range Option | Approx. Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein 1 | Chicken thighs (1 kg) | Salmon fillets (500g) | $5-10 |
| Protein 2 | Eggs (12-pack) | Ground turkey (500g) | $3-6 |
| Grain 1 | Rice (1 kg bag) | Quinoa (500g) | $2-5 |
| Grain 2 | Pasta (500g) | Sweet potatoes (1 kg) | $1-3 |
| Veg — roast | Broccoli + bell peppers | Zucchini + mushrooms | $3-5 |
| Veg — raw | Carrots + cucumber | Cherry tomatoes + snap peas | $2-4 |
| Veg — leafy | Spinach bag | Mixed greens | $2-3 |
| Sauces | Soy sauce + hot sauce | Teriyaki + peanut sauce | $3-5 |
Total: roughly $20-40 for 5 meals. Compare that to $50-75 for the same 5 meals from delivery apps.
5 Storage Mistakes That Ruin Your Meal Prep
- Storing dressing inside the container. Wet sauces make everything soggy by Wednesday. Keep dressings in small separate containers or zip bags and add them right before eating.
- Using cheap containers that don’t seal. Invest in glass or BPA-free containers with snap-lock lids. A $15-25 set of 5 lasts for years. Flimsy takeout containers leak and crack within weeks.
- Not letting food cool before refrigerating. Hot food raises the fridge temperature and creates condensation (soggy meals + food safety risk). Let everything cool for 10-15 minutes at room temperature first.
- Forgetting to label with the date. Meal prep stays fresh for 3-4 days in the fridge. After that, quality drops fast. Label each container with the prep date so you know what to eat first.
- Prepping 7 days at once. Unless you freeze meals 5-7, the last two days will taste stale. Prep 5 meals max for the fridge. If you want 7 days, freeze 2 containers and thaw them mid-week.
Meal Prep for the Week — FAQ
How long does meal prep last in the fridge?
Most prepped meals stay fresh for 3-4 days in the fridge at 4°C (40°F) or below. Rice-based meals should be eaten within 3 days. If you need meals for 5+ days, freeze the extras and thaw mid-week.
Is meal prep actually cheaper than eating out?
Yes. Meal prepping costs roughly $3-5 per meal versus $10-15 for takeout. That’s a savings of $150-300 per month on weekday lunches alone — over $1,800-3,600 per year.
What containers are best for meal prep?
Glass containers with snap-lock lids are the gold standard — microwave-safe, dishwasher-safe, and they last years. BPA-free plastic works as a cheaper option. Avoid thin takeout containers and anything without a proper seal.
Can you meal prep if you’re vegetarian or vegan?
Absolutely. Swap proteins for tofu, tempeh, chickpeas, lentils, or black beans. The 5-container system works the same way — 2 protein sources, 2 grains, 3 vegetables, 1 sauce. Legumes actually store better than meat.
What if I get bored eating the same thing every day?
That’s what sauces fix. The same chicken-rice-broccoli container tastes like a completely different meal with teriyaki on Monday, hot sauce on Tuesday, and peanut sauce on Wednesday. Prep the base components identically, vary the sauces daily.
Do I need to meal prep on Sundays?
No — Sunday is just the most popular day. Any day works as long as you do it 1-2 days before you need the meals. Some people prefer Wednesday evenings for a mid-week reset instead of doing everything at once.
Meal prep doesn’t have to mean eating sad, bland food from plastic tubs. Start with the 5-container system this weekend — pick your 2 proteins, 2 grains, and 3 veggies, and give yourself 2 hours. After the first week, you’ll wonder why you ever paid $15 for a delivery lunch.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does meal prep last in the fridge?
Most prepped meals stay fresh for 3-4 days in the fridge at 4°C (40°F) or below. Rice-based meals should be eaten within 3 days. If you need meals for 5+ days, freeze the extras and thaw mid-week.
Is meal prep actually cheaper than eating out?
Yes. Meal prepping costs roughly $3-5 per meal versus $10-15 for takeout. That’s a savings of $150-300 per month on weekday lunches alone — over $1,800-3,600 per year.
What containers are best for meal prep?
Glass containers with snap-lock lids are the gold standard — microwave-safe, dishwasher-safe, and they last years. BPA-free plastic works as a cheaper option. Avoid thin takeout containers and anything without a proper seal.
Can you meal prep if you're vegetarian or vegan?
Absolutely. Swap proteins for tofu, tempeh, chickpeas, lentils, or black beans. The 5-container system works the same way — 2 protein sources, 2 grains, 3 vegetables, 1 sauce. Legumes actually store better than meat.
What if I get bored eating the same thing every day?
That’s what sauces fix. The same chicken-rice-broccoli container tastes like a completely different meal with teriyaki on Monday, hot sauce on Tuesday, and peanut sauce on Wednesday. Prep the base, vary the sauces.
Do I need to meal prep on Sundays?
No — Sunday is just the most popular day. Any day works as long as you do it 1-2 days before you need the meals. Some people prefer Wednesday evenings for a mid-week reset.
