Daily News (Los Angeles)

Meals gotten boring? MIX THINGS UP

- LeeAnn Weintraub is a registered dietitian. She can be reached at RD@halfacup.com.

Do you ever get tired of cooking and eating the same thing? It's easy to fall into a food rut, eating the same few meals on repeat. Daily planning, particular­ly for busy folks and parents with hectic schedules, can lead to decision fatigue and burnout. However, healthy eating doesn't have to be boring, bland or repetitive. Plus, eating a wider variety of foods is better for nutrition, helping to prevent nutrient deficienci­es and boost energy. Here are some strategies to make imaginativ­e and delicious home-cooked meals that are anything but boring.

Try

out new recipes

Whether you reach for a cookbook or search food blogs, trying out new recipes is a sure way to spice up your meal planning. Some types to consider include sheet pan meals, slow cooker dishes, hearty grain bowls and Mason jar salads. These recipes all cater to healthy meal planning and can be useful for easy make-ahead meals and batch-cooking ingredient­s for the week.

Shop the farmers market

While it's OK to have favorite foods, sticking to the basics can get in the way of trying new foods and experiment­ing. Visiting a farmers is an excellent way to explore unfamiliar fruits and veggies while supporting local farms. Try adding new vegetables into a staple meal. For example, if you usually make green beans and rice alongside chicken, change it up with Japanese sweet potatoes and eggplant instead.

Explore culinary resources

A plethora of high-quality cooking resources is available via various media sources to help inspire meal planning. Food magazines, newspaper food sections and television cooking shows and documentar­ies, to name a few, offer more than just recipes, including unexpected ingredient­s, creative cooking methods, inspiring food stories and more. Taking a cooking class is another way to build your repertoire and learn cooking skills first-hand from trained chefs.

Join the club

Most likely you are not the only one tired of eating the same old thing. For some folks, cooking can feel like a necessary evil that is more enjoyable with company. Consider engaging others in your community to create a sort of cooking club. Ask friends, family, co-workers, neighbors or other parents at your children's school, for example, if they would like to form a supper club, soup club or meal planning group. One approach is to cook or bake together. Another option is for each club member to cook a large batch of one recipe and share portions with others in the group. This way everyone goes home with a variety of new meals to enjoy.

Know when you need more support

Cooking fatigue can go beyond being in a rut and turn into total cooking burnout. Of course, mental health concerns and life stress can also interfere with the multistep tasks involved in making meals. Taking a step back and giving yourself a break can help reinvigora­te your cooking routine. Convenienc­e and frozen products, meal delivery kits and home-delivered groceries are some tools that can reduce the burden of planning meals and cooking.

Reach out to a medical or mental health profession­al for help if burnout makes self-care tasks feel too overwhelmi­ng for an extended period of time.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Online resources like recipe sites can help families add variety to meals. Also, farmers markets can be a source of novel ingredient­s.
GETTY IMAGES Online resources like recipe sites can help families add variety to meals. Also, farmers markets can be a source of novel ingredient­s.
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