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Tips for Weekly Meal Prep with The Wildflower Chef

6/14/2016

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By Jim Berman
Originally published by The Town Dish. 
Photography: 
Alexandra Whitney Photography

In a perfect world, our refrigerators would be well-stocked bounties of flavorful and interesting meals. In a more perfect world, those meals would be healthy, balanced and created with a very intentional nod to creative flair.

Emily Scott, West Chester’s Wildflower Chef, is all about making that ready-to-eat magic happen. “Menu planning is my job. Cooking multiple meals for multiple families with multiple allergies is what I do every single week. Yet in some ways, the reluctance to plan is a foreign concept to me because I am always thinking about food and my next meal! Food should be something to look forward to and get excited about.”

What are Chef Emily’s tips for the time-crunched and the less-inspired? She offered us her insight to make the daunting task of keeping ahead of the mealtime blues easier.

Getting Started with Meal Prep
Grocery shop on a different day than you do your prep work. “Grocery shopping is exhausting—I should know! My favorite time to go is super early on a weekday—you’ve got the store to yourself,” says Chef Emily.

Don’t worry so much about having the proper containers, a la Instagram meal prep. “I use covered glass bowls and resealable bags to quickly prep and store food.”

Let the seasons guide your ingredient purchases, and don’t be afraid to try something new that you’ve never had before. “I’ve made some really terrible dishes at home when I first started experimenting with things like kohlrabi and dandelion greens,” Chef Emily confesses. The point is to keep on experimenting.

Another tip for staying seasonal: sign up for your local farmers’ market’s email blast so you know what’s going to be available that week and can start thinking about what you’ll buy.
No matter which containers you use, label and date the food clearly so you can safely and easily enjoy the fruits of your labor.

Buy organic ingredients. You’re taking the time to cook meals at home, and you’re saving money by not eating out—now use that money to buy the quality ingredients your body deserves!
Instead of picking meats/proteins first and then following up with vegetable side dishes as an afterthought, focus on your vegetables first. Find an awesome recipe that uses a vegetable in an interesting way, like a butternut squash baked fritter or a shredded zucchini salad, and add a simple protein like baked chicken or shrimp. Starches and proteins are easy—give your veggies some love!

Common Mistakes
“Home chefs often overestimate how much time they’ll actually want to spend doing this each week,” notes Chef Emily. Start off simple and plan for 3-4 recipes on the weekend, plus some really simple tasks like baking a sweet potato in foil or cooking a big pot of rice for the week.

Don’t think that meal prep means that you have to make full-out meals for every night of the week. “I never make full-out recipes ahead of time when cooking for myself,” she adds.

Step-by-Step “Tricks of the Trade” to Make Meal Prep Easier
  1. Pick your recipes, make your grocery list and shop the day before your prep day.
  2. Start by prepping all of your vegetables: wash, chop, dice, and so on.
  3. Get started on any recipes that will take the longest amount of time, like roasts or stews.
  4. Always label and date your food. (Chef Emily uses Avery labels—they can be easily removed from glass and most plastic. The key is to not get them wet before peeling them off.)
  5. Never get too hung up on your recipes. If you can’t find an ingredient, ask someone in the store for a recommendation for a substitute. If you forget to buy something, forge ahead and make it work! Don’t get frustrated—it’s just food.
  6. When planning a bunch of dishes at once for the week, you have to think about what types of dishes you’re making. For example, you don’t want to make multiple dishes with seafood because seafood should be eaten fresh or within one day after it’s prepared for best flavor and quality. Here’s how Emily usually plans meals:
  • Day 1: entree with fish/seafood
  • Day 2: entree with beef/pork
  • Day 3: entree with chicken
  • Day 4 and beyond: vegetarian dishes or things like soups/stews (they’ll hold up the longest).
One final note: Don’t keep leftovers longer than six days in your refrigerator. Freeze things if you won’t get to them in time.

Tips for the Procrastinator
To make your life easier, whenever you are in the kitchen making something, make extra. Making a vinaigrette for tonight’s salad? Make enough for 6 servings and save it for later. Baking sweet potatoes? Throw in an extra 6–8 and enjoy them for breakfast, lunch or dinner for days to come. Chef Emily notes, “I never cook just enough food for that night. I cook lots of extra—it’s so much easier than having to cook that same thing another night.”

Stop being a square when it comes to meals: there’s absolutely no reason why “dinner” should have to be a meat, starch and vegetable. “Some of my favorite dinners are salads with beans, vegetables and quinoa; veggie hash/scramble (any vegetables/potatoes I have on hand, any spices I’m in the mood for); sauteed vegetables with a veggie burger, homemade or otherwise; and pasta with avocado, spinach or kale and pumpkin seeds.”

Remember, too: meatless doesn’t have to just be for Mondays. Vegetables can be so much quicker to prepare than meats.

Take advantage of the season.
In late spring and early summer, marinate vegetables and beans. Make a simple vinaigrette, mix up whatever is on hand and in season and enjoy for the next 5–6 days. Try different spice and herb combinations so you don’t get tired of it.

Salsas are another great idea for summer. Try adding different veggies and herbs for new flavors. Hummus is also one of Chef Emily’s favorites. Make a big batch and enjoy dipping all those great farmers’ market veggies in it all week long.

The rest of the year, when the weather turns cooler, Chef Emily makes use of roasted potatoes and sweet potatoes, prepping enough for 5–6 days at a time. Big pans of roasted vegetables can be thrown into salads, added to eggs, mixed into rice, served over quinoa … The options are limitless, so prep enough for 4–5 days.

During the cooler months, big pots of brown rice, quinoa, millet or lentils will also serve chefs well through the week. Hard-cooked eggs are perfect for throwing on a salad, in a sandwich or mixing into potato salad.

Go-Tos for a Well-Stocked Pantry
If possible, try to keep your pantry stocked with these items. You’ll find yourself turning to them throughout the week to help you pull together a meal:
  • Coconut milk, oat milk
  • Canned garbanzo and black beans
  • Lentil pasta, brown rice pasta
  • Nut butters, tahini for dressings and sauces
  • Seeds: pumpkin, chia, hemp, sesame, sunflower
  • Frozen vegetables (for when you don’t even have time to chop vegetables)
  • Organic veggie burgers (homemade or store-bought)
  • Avocados—“because they just make everything taste better"

Chef Emily’s last bit of advice? “You can’t be perfect every time. Just get into the kitchen and try. You will get better and it’s worth it.” Go forth and start planning!
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Contact Chef Emily online via The Wildflower Chef website, by email or by calling (610) 715-8159.
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Friend of a Farmer + Seasonal Produce Guide

6/3/2016

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I consider myself the friend of a farmer. Metaphorically and literally. I used to work with Mark Nuneviller, owner of Nuneviller Farms in Emmaus, PA. As a farmer and chef, our relationship is incredibly symbiotic.

If you know me, you know that I focus on creating meals out of the best ingredients available. That means sourcing produce that’s organic, seasonal, and local as much as possible. It’s important to understand that these aren’t just labels. These foods are actually grown the way Mother Nature intended. In return, you yield dishes that are:

• Fresher
• Tastier
• Healthier
• More vibrant
• Eco-friendly

Since I'm a fan of organic farming and everything it stands for, when Mark needed helpers to pull plastic on his high tunnels earlier this season, (a job much more easily accomplished with many hands) I was quick to volunteer my time. Many crops are grown in high tunnels to extend the growing season and improve yield and quality. If you want to learn more, check out this video which shows what the process is like.

Now that the farmers market season is here, I've been placing orders for Nuneviller Farms fruits and veggies each week. Mark is kind enough to bring his bounty to the Downingtown Farmers Market, which is my pick-up point—and another great location for high-quality ingredients. That means my personal chef clients will have the freshest possible produce in town.

If you’re heading to your neighborhood farm or farmers market, here’s a short list of my seasonal favorites:

Spring-Summer Produce Guide
Bok Choy
Arugula
Kale
Strawberries
Head Lettuce
Spicy Lettuce Mix
Cucumbers
Chard
Cherry Tomatoes

What’s your favorite farm-fresh find? Let us know in the comments below. Better yet, snap a pic and post it on our Facebook page with the hashtag #friendofafarmer.
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    Chef Scott

    Please enjoy the archived blogs found on this page. For more healthy food inspiration, please head to the Kimberton Whole Foods blog where you'll find my latest work. 

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