Tag: “weekly meal plan UK”

  • Aldi High Protein Weekly Meal Plan UK — Full Week for £28

    Aldi's own-brand range delivers the same macros as premium meal kit services at roughly one-fifth of the price, and the UK food industry doesn't want you to notice. A full week of high-protein meals in the UK — built entirely from Aldi products, with real named items and actual shelf prices — costs under £28. That works out to £4 per day. People pay £60–£80 per week for meal prep boxes that contain chicken thighs, oats, and Greek yoghurt with nicer packaging. The Aldi aisle contains the same foods. This post gives you the complete 7-day Aldi high-protein weekly meal plan for the UK: every product named, every price listed, and the macro totals to prove it works.

    An Aldi high protein weekly meal plan UK built on Ashfield Farms chicken thigh fillets, own-brand eggs, Brooklea Greek yoghurt, Everyday oats, tinned tuna, and frozen veg delivers 130g+ of protein daily for 7 days at a total shop cost of approximately £27–£30. No protein powder, no supplements, no premium cuts. Named products, real Aldi shelf prices, full macro breakdown.

    The Full Aldi Shopping List for the Week

    A single Aldi shop covering 7 days of high-protein meals costs approximately £27–£30 when built around own-brand chicken, eggs, dairy, oats, and tinned fish — all available at every Aldi store in the UK.

    Protein staples

    Product Size Approx Aldi price
    Ashfield Farms chicken thigh fillets 1.5kg £4.35
    Ashfield Farms chicken breast mini fillets 500g £3.49
    Own-brand tuna in brine (4-pack) 4 × 185g £1.85
    Own-brand mackerel in brine 125g × 2 £1.58
    Free-range eggs 12 £3.10
    Brooklea low-fat cottage cheese 300g £1.39
    Brooklea Greek-style yoghurt 1kg £2.38

    Protein subtotal: approximately £18.14. These seven items form the protein backbone of the entire week. The British Nutrition Foundation's protein guidance confirms chicken, eggs, fish, and dairy are all complete protein sources covering all essential amino acids — no single-source dependency in this plan.

    Carbohydrates and staples

    Product Size Approx Aldi price
    Everyday Essentials oats 1kg £0.89
    Long-grain rice 1kg £0.89
    Everyday Essentials pasta 500g £0.69
    Wholemeal bread 800g £0.89
    Everyday Essentials red lentils 500g £0.69

    Carb subtotal: approximately £4.05.

    Vegetables and extras

    Product Size Approx Aldi price
    Frozen mixed vegetables 1kg £1.25
    Frozen broccoli 1kg £1.09
    Salad bag (mixed leaves) 100g £0.79
    Bananas 5-pack £0.59
    Tinned tomatoes (4-pack) 4 × 400g £1.09
    Own-brand olive oil 500ml £2.49

    Veg and extras subtotal: approximately £7.30.

    Total shop: approximately £29.49. For two people, double quantities and the total stays under £55 — still under £4 per person per day.

    Day-by-Day Meal Plan: Monday to Wednesday

    The first half of the week front-loads chicken thighs and eggs as the primary protein sources, establishing the daily macro pattern before introducing tinned fish variety mid-week.

    Monday

    • Breakfast: 40g oats + 200g Brooklea Greek yoghurt + 1 banana. Protein: ~18g. Cost: ~55p.
    • Lunch: 1 tin tuna in brine (drained) + 150g cooked rice + half a salad bag + olive oil drizzle. Protein: ~42g. Cost: ~88p.
    • Dinner: 200g chicken thigh, baked with paprika + 200g frozen mixed veg + 150g boiled rice. Protein: ~52g. Cost: ~£1.10.
    • Snack: 2 boiled eggs + 150g cottage cheese. Protein: ~26g. Cost: ~72p.
    • Monday total: ~138g protein, ~£3.25 food cost.

    Tuesday

    • Breakfast: 3-egg scramble + 2 slices wholemeal toast. Protein: ~22g. Cost: ~67p.
    • Lunch: 200g chicken thigh (batch cold, sliced) + salad bag + wholemeal bread. Protein: ~52g. Cost: ~£1.00.
    • Dinner: Lentil soup (100g dry red lentils, tinned tomatoes, frozen veg, garlic) — makes 2 portions. Protein per portion: ~22g. Cost per portion: ~55p. Add 2 eggs on top: +13g protein, +26p.
    • Snack: 200g Greek yoghurt. Protein: ~20g. Cost: ~48p.
    • Tuesday total: ~129g protein, ~£2.96 food cost.

    Wednesday

    • Breakfast: 40g oats + 200g Greek yoghurt + 1 banana. Protein: ~18g. Cost: ~55p.
    • Lunch: 1 tin mackerel in brine + 200g cooked pasta + frozen broccoli (steamed). Protein: ~35g. Cost: ~£1.00.
    • Dinner: 200g chicken breast mini fillet (baked) + 200g frozen mixed veg + 150g rice. Protein: ~48g. Cost: ~£1.50.
    • Snack: 2 boiled eggs + 150g cottage cheese. Protein: ~26g. Cost: ~72p.
    • Wednesday total: ~127g protein, ~£3.77 food cost. (The NHS Eatwell Guide recommends at least 2 portions of fish per week, including one oily — mackerel today and mackerel later in the week satisfies this.)

    Day-by-Day Meal Plan: Thursday to Sunday

    The second half of the week rotates protein sources and introduces the second fish day, maintaining protein targets while using the remaining weekly shop without waste.

    Thursday

    • Breakfast: 3-egg omelette + 1 slice wholemeal toast. Protein: ~22g. Cost: ~54p.
    • Lunch: 1 tin tuna in brine + 200g rice + half salad bag. Protein: ~42g. Cost: ~88p.
    • Dinner: 200g chicken thigh (last of the fresh batch) + frozen broccoli + boiled potatoes (if any remain) or rice. Protein: ~52g. Cost: ~£1.05.
    • Snack: 200g Greek yoghurt + 30g oats dry mixed in. Protein: ~23g. Cost: ~55p.
    • Thursday total: ~139g protein, ~£3.02 food cost.

    Friday

    • Breakfast: 40g oats + 200g Greek yoghurt + banana. Protein: ~18g. Cost: ~55p.
    • Lunch: Remaining lentil soup (second portion from Tuesday cook) + 2 eggs. Protein: ~35g. Cost: ~81p.
    • Dinner: 200g chicken breast mini fillet + pasta + tinned tomato sauce + frozen mixed veg. Protein: ~48g. Cost: ~£1.30.
    • Snack: 150g cottage cheese + 1 tin tuna. Protein: ~40g. Cost: ~£1.04.
    • Friday total: ~141g protein, ~£3.70 food cost.

    Saturday

    Saturday is the flexible day — use any remaining items. A common structure: 3-egg omelette for brunch (39p), tinned mackerel with salad and wholemeal bread for lunch (£1.00), and a larger dinner of pasta with the remaining chicken, tinned tomatoes, and frozen veg (~£1.40). Approximate total: 130g protein, £3.50 food cost.

    Sunday

    Batch cook day. Use Sunday to prep for the following week. While prepping: breakfast is overnight oats made Saturday evening (oats + yoghurt in a jar, 50p); lunch is eggs scrambled with any remaining bread; dinner is the start of the new week's batch — a roasting tray of chicken thighs that doubles as Sunday dinner and the Monday lunch portion. Approximate food cost: £3.00 from items already in the shop.

    Macros, Costs, and the Weekly Summary

    The Aldi high-protein weekly meal plan delivers an average of 133g protein per day at an average food cost of £3.25 per day — total weekly spend approximately £22.75 in daily food, against the one-off shop cost of £29.49 for the full ingredient set.

    Weekly macro overview

    Day Protein (g) Food cost (£)
    Monday 138 £3.25
    Tuesday 129 £2.96
    Wednesday 127 £3.77
    Thursday 139 £3.02
    Friday 141 £3.70
    Saturday 130 £3.50
    Sunday ~120 £3.00
    Weekly total 924g ~£23.20
    Daily average 132g £3.31

    The weekly shop cost (£29.49) is slightly above the daily food cost total because some items (oil, spices, lentil bag) carry into the following week. By week two, the repeat shop costs approximately £24–£25 as staples are already stocked.

    How this compares to alternatives

    A basic weekly shop at Tesco buying similar (but mostly branded) equivalents would cost approximately £38–£45 for the same food categories. A meal prep delivery box covering 5 working days of lunches and dinners only costs approximately £50–£70 from most UK providers. The Aldi plan covers 7 full days of all meals for under £30. Money Saving Expert's analysis of meal planning vs convenience food consistently shows that own-brand batch cooking is the highest-return food cost intervention available to UK adults.

    Who this works for

    This plan is designed for a single UK adult eating at home for at least 5 days per week. It works for gym goers, people in calorie deficit, and those simply trying to reduce food spend. The macro targets (~130g protein, ~2,200 kcal) suit an adult weighing 70–85kg who is moderately active. For higher body weight, increase the chicken portion to 250g and add an extra egg at one meal.

    Making This Plan Work Week After Week

    The Aldi weekly plan becomes automatic after two weeks — the shopping list doesn't change, only the protein rotation and seasoning vary.

    Building Aldi's Special Buys into your nutrition

    Aldi's weekly Special Buys include nutrition-relevant items periodically: own-brand protein powder (£12.99/500g when available), nut butters (peanut, almond, ~£1.99/340g), protein bars (£0.89 each), and Greek honey varieties. These are not necessary for the base plan but add variety when they appear. The base protein-food plan — chicken, eggs, tuna, dairy — is always in Aldi's permanent range and never subject to availability gaps.

    Handling weeks when the plan slips

    Some weeks the batch cook doesn't happen. In those weeks, the fallback is tinned tuna on rice (5 minutes, ~90p, 42g protein) and yoghurt with oats (5 minutes, ~55p, 18g protein) at breakfast. Two meals covering 60g of protein from the base Aldi items, no cooking required, under £1.50 — still aligned with the plan. Imperfect weeks don't undo the system; they just require the two reliable fallbacks.

    The argument against switching to a different supermarket

    Lidl is a comparable alternative and prices are similar across most categories. Tesco and Sainsbury's own-brand products are nutritionally equivalent but typically 15–40% more expensive per item. The Aldi own-brand range — Ashfield Farms for chicken, Brooklea for dairy, Everyday Essentials for dry goods — is the consistent budget standard in the UK. There is no nutritional reason to pay more for branded equivalents.


    FAQ

    Q: Is Aldi chicken as good quality as branded supermarket chicken for high-protein meal prep?
    Aldi's Ashfield Farms chicken (fresh and frozen) is Red Tractor-assured, meaning it meets UK welfare standards. Nutritionally, chicken thigh fillets from Aldi and branded equivalents from Tesco or Sainsbury's deliver the same protein content — approximately 25g per 100g. The British Nutrition Foundation confirms that sourcing method does not materially affect the amino acid profile of chicken. At roughly £2.89/kg versus £5–£7/kg for branded equivalents, Aldi is the rational choice for a budget meal plan.

    Q: How do I keep the Aldi meal plan interesting week after week?
    Rotate the protein source every week within the same structure: week one is chicken thighs; week two is steak mince plus tinned fish; week three is Aldi's frozen basa fillets (~£3.49/kg) plus eggs; week four returns to chicken breast. The carbohydrate base (oats, rice, pasta) can rotate daily without affecting cost. Varying seasoning — paprika, cumin, soy sauce, lemon — adds flavour without adding cost or complexity. Money Saving Expert's batch cooking guides suggest rotating one new cheap ingredient per week to prevent boredom.

    Q: Can I follow this Aldi meal plan in a calorie deficit to lose fat?
    Yes. To lose fat while preserving muscle, keep protein at 1.6–2.0g/kg and reduce total calories by 300–500 kcal below maintenance. In practice, reduce the rice and pasta portion sizes while keeping all protein portions the same. The NHS Eatwell Guide supports higher protein intake during calorie restriction to reduce muscle loss. The Aldi plan as written sits at approximately 2,100–2,300 kcal; reducing carb portions by 30% brings it to approximately 1,750–1,900 kcal while maintaining 130g+ protein.

    Q: Are Aldi's own-brand dairy products (yoghurt, cottage cheese) as high in protein as branded versions?
    Aldi's Brooklea Greek-style yoghurt (£1.19/500g) typically delivers 9–10g of protein per 100g — the same as Fage 0% or Chobani plain, which cost £2.00–£3.00 for 500g. Aldi own-brand cottage cheese (~12g per 100g) is nutritionally equivalent to Longley Farm or Tesco Finest equivalents at roughly half the price. Always check the label: own-brand dairy in the UK typically matches branded specs within 1–2g per 100g of protein, with the difference well within measurement tolerance.

    Q: How do I hit 150g+ protein on the Aldi plan if I'm over 90kg?
    Add one extra tin of tuna at lunch (46p, +40g protein), increase the dinner chicken portion to 250g (+12g protein), and swap the afternoon snack from yoghurt alone to yoghurt plus cottage cheese (combined +12g protein). These three additions increase daily protein to approximately 155–165g for approximately 90p more per day — still under £4.20 total food spend. For gym-going adults over 90kg, this is the most cost-efficient protein escalation available from a single UK supermarket.


    Kira Mei's Nutrition Blueprint gives you the macro framework, meal prep system, and UK supermarket strategy — one purchase, no subscription, no meal plan to follow forever. Get the Nutrition Blueprint at kiramei.co.uk for £49.99.

    Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical, nutritional, or professional fitness advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your diet or exercise routine.

  • What Does a Week of Budget Meal Prep Look Like UK? Full Plan

    Most budget meal prep content in the UK shows you a list of ingredients and calls it a plan. That is not a plan — it is a shopping list missing the method. A real week of budget meal prep in the UK looks like this: 90 minutes on a Sunday, six meal-prep containers filled and labelled by 6 pm, five days of structured breakfasts, lunches, and dinners produced for under £25 at Aldi and Tesco. Every meal has a named ingredient, an approximate £ price, and a macro target. Nothing is left to guesswork. The system looks repetitive from the outside; from the inside it is structured freedom — you never have to decide what to eat after a 10-hour day.

    A week of budget meal prep in the UK typically means one 90-minute Sunday prep session producing five days of cooked protein, carbohydrate, and vegetables for £20–£25 using Aldi and Tesco own-brand staples — covering lunches and dinners with a daily macro target of approximately 100–140 g protein per person, aligned with BNF protein guidance for active adults.

    Sunday: The Prep Session in Full

    A Sunday meal prep session for a budget week in the UK takes 90 minutes when you run oven, hob, and a second ring simultaneously — and produces six labelled containers of cooked food before the evening is done.

    This is the only real labour investment in the whole week. Everything after Sunday is assembly and reheating — two minutes per meal. The session succeeds or fails based on parallel cooking. If you cook linearly (rice first, then chicken, then vegetables), you double the time. Everything must be running at once.

    The shopping list: what to buy and where

    For a single adult — five days of lunches and dinners:

    • Aldi chicken thighs, 1 kg: approximately £3.29
    • Tesco Everyday Value basmati rice, 1 kg: approximately £1.20 (use 400 g this week)
    • Aldi dried red lentils, 500 g: approximately £1.09
    • Aldi frozen broccoli florets, 2 × 500 g: approximately £2.18
    • Lidl frozen mixed peppers, 500 g: approximately £1.29
    • Aldi tinned chopped tomatoes, 4-pack: approximately £1.39
    • Asda own-brand oats, 1 kg: approximately £1.10 (breakfasts)
    • Tesco semi-skimmed milk, 2 litres: approximately £1.75 (breakfasts + cooking)
    • Tesco own-brand eggs, 12-pack: approximately £2.69 (breakfasts + dinners)
    • Lidl soy sauce, 150 ml: approximately £1.09
    • Aldi garlic and onion net: approximately £0.79

    Running total: approximately £17.87. Add a lemon (Tesco, approximately £0.35) and a jar of Aldi own-brand curry paste (approximately £0.79) and you're at under £20 — with leftover oats, rice, and milk carrying into the following week.

    The cooking sequence, minute by minute

    0 min: Preheat oven to 200°C. Rinse 400 g basmati rice, bring to boil with 800 ml water. Season 1 kg chicken thighs, place on sheet tray, into oven. Set timer 35 minutes.

    10 min: Add 300 g frozen broccoli to a saucepan with a splash of boiling water. Cover and leave on medium heat.

    20 min: Bring 500 g dried lentils to boil in 1.5 litres water. Reduce to simmer for 25–30 minutes.

    35 min: Chicken out of oven to rest. Drain rice. Drain broccoli. Lentils continue.

    50 min: Portion chicken, rice, and broccoli into six containers (150 g chicken, 150 g rice, 120 g broccoli per container). Label with date.

    65 min: Drain lentils. Add tinned tomatoes and fried onion for dal. Portion into four separate dinner containers.

    90 min: Done. Total food in fridge: six lunch containers, four dinner portions. Remaining lentils refrigerated in bulk for Wednesday/Thursday dinners.

    Monday to Wednesday: What You Actually Eat

    For the first three days of a UK budget meal prep week, every meal comes directly from Sunday's session — no cooking required beyond a two-minute microwave.

    This is the payoff window. You have already done the work. Monday morning is 30 seconds: scoop 80 g oats into a container, add 200 ml Tesco semi-skimmed milk, refrigerate overnight for overnight oats. Breakfast is ready in the morning. Lunch is a container from the fridge, reheated for two minutes. Dinner is a portion of lentil dal, reheated with a splash of water.

    Monday

    Breakfast: Overnight oats — 80 g Asda oats, 200 ml semi-skimmed milk, thawed Aldi frozen berries (approximately £1.49/500 g for the bag). Approximately 380 kcal, 14 g protein.

    Lunch: Chicken thigh, basmati rice, broccoli with soy sauce. Approximately 480 kcal, 35 g protein. Reheat 2 minutes, eat in 10.

    Dinner: Lentil dal with chopped tomatoes and onion. One soft-boiled Tesco egg added on top. Approximately 420 kcal, 28 g protein.

    Daily total: approximately 1,280 kcal, 77 g protein from prepared meals — supplement with a snack (Aldi yoghurt approximately £0.49 per pot, 10 g protein) to reach daily targets.

    Tuesday

    Same macro structure, different flavour signal. Lunch container gets curry paste (Aldi, £0.79 per jar) instead of soy — a 30-second change with no additional prep. Dinner is a second dal portion with a different garnish: a squeeze of lemon and dried coriander from the Aldi herb rack (approximately £0.79 per jar).

    Wednesday mid-session top-up

    By Wednesday evening the fridge containers are almost gone. This is normal — it does not require a second full prep. A 20-minute top-up session covers it: boil four eggs (Tesco 12-pack, already in the fridge), rinse and heat a tin of Asda own-brand chickpeas (approximately £0.55), cook a small pot of rice. Thursday and Friday are covered.

    Thursday and Friday: The Top-Up Window

    A 20-minute mid-week top-up on Wednesday or Thursday using eggs, tinned pulses, and pre-cooked rice extends a single Sunday session to cover a full five-day work week — without a second major prep.

    By Wednesday, the chicken is gone. What remains: lentil portions, a half-empty bag of frozen broccoli, eggs, and dried rice. The mid-week session is not a full prep — it is replenishment. Four boiled eggs (10 minutes, no supervision), a tin of heated chickpeas with Tesco hot sauce (approximately £1.50), and a 150 g portion of microwaved rice. Total active time: under 10 minutes.

    Thursday

    Breakfast: Two scrambled Tesco eggs on one slice of Tesco own-brand wholemeal bread (approximately £1.10 per 800 g loaf). Approximately 280 kcal, 16 g protein.

    Lunch: Chickpeas, rice, and frozen peppers (Lidl, reheated from the Wednesday microwave steam) with Tesco hot sauce. Approximately 450 kcal, 22 g protein.

    Dinner: Remaining lentil dal, reheated — add a soft-boiled egg from the Wednesday batch. Approximately 400 kcal, 24 g protein.

    Friday

    By Friday, the system has delivered four days of consistent eating for approximately £3–£4 per day in food costs. Friday is the most flexible day — the fridge has odds and ends rather than complete portions. A fried egg on the last portion of rice with a side of frozen spinach (Aldi, approximately £1.29 per 900 g bag) is a two-minute dinner. The Friday evening slot is a natural point to plan the following Sunday's shop rather than improvise an expensive convenience meal.

    The Weekly Macro Breakdown

    A full UK budget meal prep week using this system delivers approximately 1,500–1,800 kcal per day and 100–130 g protein per day — within the range the NHS Eatwell Guide recommends for a balanced diet, at roughly £3–£4 per day in food spend.

    These figures are approximations based on the ingredient quantities above. Individual calorie targets vary by weight, height, and activity level. The system is designed to be calibrated, not followed blindly — if you are actively trying to lose weight, reduce the rice portion; if you are trying to maintain or build muscle, add a protein snack (a tin of Tesco tuna in brine, approximately £0.71, adds 30 g protein for under £1).

    Tracking without obsessing

    A kitchen scale and a free app like Cronometer (free UK version available) make the first two weeks of tracking straightforward. After two weeks of the same ingredient quantities, you will know the macro totals by memory and can stop logging. The goal is calibration, not a permanent logging habit. Money Saving Expert notes that household food spend is one of the highest-variability line items in a UK budget — a prep system like this makes it predictable rather than reactive.

    Adjusting for higher protein targets

    If your daily protein target is above 150 g — common for UK adults doing regular resistance training — add one tin of Tesco tuna per day (approximately £0.71 per tin, 32 g protein) as a standalone snack. This adds approximately £3.55 to the weekly food cost and pushes daily protein to 130–160 g without changing the prep session at all.

    What Changes Week to Week

    The system stays constant; the proteins rotate every two weeks to prevent the boredom that ends most meal prep habits within a month.

    The shopping list structure, the 90-minute Sunday session, and the container format do not change. The protein source does. Week one and two: chicken thighs. Week three and four: Aldi tinned tuna (four tins of 145 g, approximately £2.60 for the set) used cold in rice bowls. Week five and six: Tesco frozen salmon fillets (4 fillets, approximately £5.00), oven-roasted on Sunday. Week seven and eight: a vegetarian week using only eggs and Aldi dried lentils (total protein source cost approximately £3.78).

    Adding one seasonal item per week

    Every week, swap one frozen vegetable bag for a seasonal fresh item at a UK market or the Aldi fresh aisle. In spring: a bag of Aldi new potatoes (approximately £1.29). In autumn: a butternut squash (Tesco, approximately £0.89) roasted on the Sunday tray. This small variation costs under £1.50 and meaningfully changes the sensory experience of the week's meals.

    The rule for eating out during a prep week

    Budget meal prep does not require you to refuse every social meal or work lunch. The rule is: eat from prep Mon–Thurs, eat socially or flexibly on Friday and Saturday, and treat Sunday prep as a non-negotiable reset. This structure means the system absorbs real life without collapsing — you are not rigid, you are structured.


    FAQ

    How much does a full week of budget meal prep cost in the UK?
    Using Aldi, Lidl, and Tesco own-brand products — chicken thighs at approximately £3.29/kg, dried lentils at £1.09/500 g, frozen vegetables at £1.09–£1.49 per bag, and basmati rice at £1.20/kg — a week covering five days of lunches and dinners plus seven breakfasts costs approximately £18–£25 per person. This excludes condiments and cooking oil, which are bought less frequently. The NHS Eatwell Guide confirms this food structure meets nutritional recommendations without premium-priced products.

    What are the macros in a typical UK budget meal prep week?
    A week built on Aldi chicken thighs (150 g cooked per meal, approximately 30–33 g protein), Tesco basmati rice (150 g cooked per meal, approximately 40 g carbohydrate), and frozen broccoli (120 g, approximately 3 g protein and 3 g fibre) delivers approximately 1,500–1,800 kcal per day and 100–130 g protein. Adding two eggs at breakfast and a tin of tuna as a snack pushes protein to 140–160 g — within the range BNF recommends for adults doing resistance exercise.

    Do you have to eat the same thing every day with meal prep?
    No. You cook components, not finished meals. The same chicken, rice, and vegetable base becomes five different meals by varying the sauce: Lidl soy sauce (approximately £1.09), Aldi curry paste (approximately £0.79), Tesco hot sauce (approximately £1.50), lemon and dried thyme, and Asda pesto (approximately £1.20). The macro profile stays identical across all five. This is the principle that makes meal prep sustainable — the structure stays fixed, the flavour varies.

    How long does budget meal prep stay fresh in the fridge?
    Properly stored at 5°C or below in airtight containers, batch-cooked chicken, lentils, and rice stay safe for three to four days. Anything intended for day five or beyond should be frozen immediately after the Sunday session and transferred to the fridge the morning you plan to eat it. A basic fridge thermometer (Tesco, approximately £4) confirms your fridge is actually running at the right temperature — many UK fridges run warmer than their dial suggests.

    Is batch cooking on a budget realistic for people who work full time?
    Yes — it is specifically designed for full-time workers. The entire week's cooking investment is a single 90-minute Sunday session. Every weekday meal is a two-minute microwave. The system removes daily decision-making and the post-work cooking effort that causes most people to revert to takeaways or convenience food. A mid-week 20-minute top-up on Wednesday covers days four and five without a second major prep session.


    Kira Mei's Nutrition Blueprint gives you the macro framework, meal prep system, and UK supermarket strategy — one purchase, no subscription, no meal plan to follow forever. Available at kiramei.co.uk for £49.99.

    Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical, nutritional, or professional fitness advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making changes to your diet or exercise routine.