What if you cooked twice a week instead of every day? What if Sunday afternoon meant freedom from “what’s for dinner?” from Monday through Friday?
That’s batch cooking. And it is the single most effective thing I’ve ever done for making weeknight dinners less stressful. Not meal prep in the Instagram sense — the kind where you spend six hours making seventeen different dishes in matching containers. The real version. The busy mom version. Two to three hours on Sunday or Saturday that buys you back your weeknights.
Here’s exactly how to do it.
What batch cooking actually means
Batch cooking means cooking large quantities of food at once so you have meals or meal components ready to use throughout the week. Unlike meal prep where you plan specific dishes, batch cooking gives you building blocks — proteins, grains, sauces — that you can assemble into different meals each night.
✅ Why Batch Cooking Changes Everything
The biggest myth about batch cooking is that it takes longer. It doesn’t — it shifts the time. Instead of cooking 30-45 minutes every single night (7 nights × 35 minutes = 4 hours of weeknight cooking), you cook for 2-3 hours once on the weekend. Same total time. Completely different experience.
Weekend cooking is fundamentally different from weeknight cooking. On Saturday or Sunday you have more energy, more time, fewer people demanding things from you at the exact wrong moment, and no school morning ahead of you tomorrow. The same tasks that feel impossible at 5:30pm on a Tuesday feel completely manageable at 11am on a Sunday.
Batch cooking also significantly reduces food waste because you use ingredients before they go bad, saves money because you buy in bulk and use everything, and means fewer decisions — one of the most depleting aspects of weeknight cooking.
📋 The Best Foods to Batch Cook
Grains — the foundation
Cook a large batch of rice, quinoa, or farro. Lasts 5 days in the fridge. Use as a base for bowls, stir fry, fried rice, or alongside any protein. This one task alone is worth doing every single week.
Roasted vegetables — the versatile workhorse
Toss any combination of vegetables in olive oil and salt, roast at 425°F until caramelized. Use in grain bowls, pasta, frittatas, wraps, or alongside protein all week. Broccoli, sweet potato, zucchini, cauliflower, and bell peppers all work beautifully.
Shredded chicken — the most versatile protein
Cook 4-6 chicken breasts in the Instant Pot (15 minutes) or oven (25 minutes), then shred. Use in tacos, pasta, salads, wraps, grain bowls, quesadillas, or soup throughout the week. Batch-cooked shredded chicken is the most useful thing you can have in your fridge.
A big pot of soup or stew
Make a large batch of soup, chili, or stew. It feeds the family for two nights minimum and freezes beautifully for a future week. This is your insurance policy — the dinner you reach for when everything else falls apart on a Thursday.
Hard boiled eggs and prepped snacks
Hard boil a dozen eggs while everything else cooks. Wash and cut fruit and vegetables for snacks. Portion out anything that needs to be portioned. These things take almost no active time but make the entire week easier.
🗓️ Christie’s Sunday Batch Cooking System
10am
Start the Instant Pot
Put chicken breasts in the Instant Pot with broth and seasoning. Set to pressure cook 15 minutes. Walk away. While it cooks, make your coffee and look at what you’re making this week.
10:20
Get the rice going and prep vegetables
Start a big pot of rice on the stove. While it simmers chop your vegetables for roasting and for snacks. This is your most active 20 minutes of the session.
10:40
Roast vegetables and make soup
Put vegetables in the oven. Start a pot of soup on a back burner — this mostly takes care of itself with occasional stirring. Shred the chicken that’s been resting from the Instant Pot.
11:10
Container everything
While the vegetables finish roasting put the rice and chicken into containers. Label them with the date. Put snack items into individual portions. Everything is almost done.
12pm
Done. Fridge stocked. Week sorted.
Two hours. Shredded chicken, cooked rice, roasted vegetables, a pot of soup, snacks prepped. Your weeknight dinners just became assembly projects instead of cooking projects.
❄️ Freezer Batch Cooking — Level Up
Once you’re comfortable with weekly batch cooking the next level is freezer cooking — making double or triple batches of meals to freeze for future weeks. This is how you handle holidays, illness, busy seasons, or just those weeks when Sunday didn’t happen the way you planned.
Best meals to freeze: Soups and chilis, meatballs, marinated raw proteins (freeze in the marinade), casseroles, pasta sauces, and cooked grains.
Label everything with the date and contents. Use within 3 months for best quality. Thaw in the fridge overnight. Having 4-6 freezer meals ready at any given time is genuinely life-changing when the week goes sideways.
Free Download
The Weekly Reset Checklist Has Your Meal Prep Section
Plan what you’re batch cooking, write your grocery list, and set your meal prep intentions — all in one Sunday checklist. Free to download and print.
GET THE FREE CHECKLIST →
Common Questions
Batch Cooking Questions Answered
What is batch cooking and how does it work?
Batch cooking means preparing large quantities of food at once — usually on a weekend — to have ready-to-use meals and ingredients throughout the week. Instead of cooking from scratch every night you assemble dinners from components you already prepared.
How long does batch cooking last in the fridge?
Most batch cooked food lasts 4-5 days in the fridge. Cooked grains last 5 days, cooked proteins 4 days, and soups and stews 4-5 days. For anything you won’t use within 5 days freeze it immediately after cooking.
How much does batch cooking save?
Batch cooking typically reduces food costs by 20-30% by reducing food waste and impulse takeout orders. The time savings are equally significant — replacing 30-45 minutes of daily cooking with one 2-3 hour weekend session saves roughly 2-4 hours of weeknight time.
What equipment do I need for batch cooking?
The essentials are a large pot, sheet pans, a good knife, and airtight storage containers. An Instant Pot significantly speeds up batch cooking proteins and beans but is not required. Freezer-safe containers or silicone bags are worth having if you’re doing freezer cooking.
Is batch cooking worth it for a small family?
Absolutely. Even for a family of two or three, batch cooking removes the daily decision fatigue and time cost of cooking from scratch every night. Scale your batches down slightly but the system works for any family size.
Two Hours Now. Freedom All Week.
Batch cooking isn’t about being organized or domestic or having your life together. It’s just front-loading the work to a time when you have more energy and fewer demands on you — so the rest of the week is easier.
Start with just one thing this Sunday. Cook extra rice. See how it changes your week. Then add one more thing the following Sunday. That’s how the habit builds — one batch at a time.
You don’t need a perfect system. You just need to start. 💛
Do you batch cook on weekends?
What’s the one thing you always batch cook? Drop it in the comments — I’d love to add more ideas to my Sunday rotation!
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