Plan
Review the week ahead and select two to three components to produce.
One focused prep session can support four to five days of assembly meals. This page covers sequencing, storage, and rotation — practical planning education without nutritional prescriptions.
Effective prep sessions typically run 45 to 90 minutes depending on household size. The goal is component production — not fully finished meals for every day. Components mix and match across templates throughout the week.
We advise against marathon sessions exceeding two hours. Fatigue leads to poor labeling and storage mistakes that undermine the entire system.
Review the week ahead and select two to three components to produce.
Buy only what the plan requires. Avoid surplus that creates waste.
Follow the sequencing order described below to minimize idle time.
Label containers with contents and preparation date before refrigerating.
Cook items with the longest passive time first. While grains simmer or main components roast, handle washing and chopping tasks in parallel.
Grains, legumes, or root vegetables that require 25–45 minutes of mostly unattended cooking.
Prepare vegetables that store well when chopped: peppers, carrots, cabbage varieties.
Batch-cook primary ingredients using your preferred method. Portion immediately after cooling slightly.
One versatile sauce can connect multiple templates through the week.
Complete storage before cleanup. Labels prevent mid-week guesswork.
Proper storage extends component usability through the work week. These are general food safety awareness guidelines — not substitutes for official food safety authority recommendations.
Refer to Finnish Food Authority (Ruokavirasto) guidance for specific storage durations. Our content addresses organizational habits, not food safety certification.
Well suited for sauced items and reheating. Heavier but durable across seasons.
Lightweight for chopped produce. Choose BPA-free options with airtight seals.
Reserve one component type for freezing when schedules are unpredictable week to week.
Rotate which components you batch each week to prevent monotony without expanding your overall system complexity.
One person handles washing, another manages stovetop items, a third labels containers. Parallel work reduces total session length.
Each household member can own one template type they assemble during the week, using shared prepped components.
Maintain a single list linked to the prep plan. Duplicate purchases waste refrigerator space and budget.
A five-minute Sunday conversation about schedule changes prevents prepping components nobody will use.
Longer indoor sessions suit root vegetable batches and slow-cooked grains. Shorter daylight hours make Sunday afternoon a common prep anchor for Helsinki households.
Lighter components with shorter storage windows. Consider twice-weekly mini-prep instead of one long session.
Local market seasons influence component selection. Build flexibility into templates so ingredient swaps do not require system redesign.
Elaborate gadgets are unnecessary for effective prep. These items support the sequencing workflow described above.
Planning decides what to eat and when. Prep produces the physical components that make daily assembly possible. Both layers are necessary for a functioning system.
Fall back to the pantry tier described on our 10-Min Meals page. Missing one session does not require abandoning the system — adjust the following week instead.
Yes, through our consulting service. Sessions review your kitchen layout and schedule to design a realistic prep workflow. This is paid educational guidance with scope and pricing confirmed before booking — not an outcome-based program.
Contact us for details on consulting and educational documents. Pricing from €89 for sessions — confirmed in writing before purchase.