DEV Community

Cover image for The Pick 3 Method: A Weekly Meal Plan That Doesn't Burn You Out
Mark
Mark

Posted on • Originally published at forktastic.com

The Pick 3 Method: A Weekly Meal Plan That Doesn't Burn You Out

Pick 3 is the meal-planning method built into Forktastic's weekly planner. It's a deliberately small-scope approach to meal planning that survives real-life schedules better than the seven-day plans most apps push you toward. This post explains why the number is three, how to use it, and what to do on the other four nights.

Why three

Seven-day meal plans look good on Sunday afternoon and feel like a punishment by Thursday night. Life intervenes — a meeting runs late, a kid gets sick, takeout sounds better than the recipe you scheduled, the ingredients you planned around aren't at the store. By Thursday the plan has fractured and you start a tiny shame spiral that bleeds into next Sunday's planning session.

Three is the number that doesn't fracture. If life intervenes one night, you've still cooked two of three planned meals. The plan succeeded. You don't carry shame into the next week.

How to pick the three

  1. Pick a starting point. "Monday and Wednesday and Friday" works as a default. So does "two weeknights and a weekend cook." Don't agonize.
  2. Make one a "for sure" recipe. Something you've made enough times that it's foolproof. Stir-fry, pasta, sheet-pan dinner. Reduces the chance of one night going sideways.
  3. Make one a "stretch" recipe. Something you've been meaning to try. Trying new things on every planned night is exhausting; trying nothing new is boring. One stretch per week is the right rhythm.
  4. Make one a "leftover-friendly" recipe. Soup, chili, casserole, roast. Cooks once, lasts two more nights as leftovers. Effectively covers more of the week.

What to do on the other four nights

Nothing. That's the point. The other four nights are:

  • Leftovers from the cooks you planned.
  • Takeout or restaurant dinner with no shame.
  • A pantry meal (eggs and toast, cereal, beans and rice, frozen pizza).
  • Dinner at someone else's place.
  • Breakfast for dinner.

You don't need to plan these. The week has structure — three planned cooks — and the rest is freedom.

How Forktastic implements it

Open the planner. Pick three recipes from your library; drop them onto three days of the week. That's the entire interface for Pick 3. The other days show as "open" — not "missing", just open. The grocery list builds from the three planned recipes. The Family mode toggle shares the plan with the household.

Plan-to-grocery walkthrough. Meal planning pillar.

When to scale up

If after a month of Pick 3 you find yourself reliably cooking all three meals and wanting more structure, scale to four. Six and seven start to feel like punishment again, so don't. Most households settle at three or four indefinitely.

When Pick 3 doesn't work

Households where cooking happens daily (bakers, food enthusiasts, retirees who cook as a hobby) will outgrow Pick 3. Use the planner more liberally — fill every day. That's fine.

Households where life is so chaotic that even three planned meals is too much should drop to Pick 1: cook one planned meal a week. The point isn't the number — the point is the meal plan being achievable.

Where to go next

For the meal planning pillar, meal planning pillar guide. For the family-shared version, family pillar. For dietary restrictions inside Pick 3, dietary restrictions guide.

Top comments (0)