Using Your Freezer To Make Meal Prep Easy

Using Your Freezer To Make Meal Prep Easy

Using Your Freezer To Make Meal Prep Easy

Blueberry Meal Prep

It’s probably safe to say that most people want to be healthy. They want to eat healthy, live healthy, and feel healthy. Despite this overwhelming desire, most don’t actually live up to their potential when it comes to planning and preparing healthy meals.

Think about the typical weekly mealtime routine of many, many people: wing it for breakfast and rely on take-out for either lunch, dinner, or possibly both.

Why is this the case? Some say there’s not enough time, others say it’s too hard, but the reality is more likely a failure to plan.

Let’s first differentiate the difference between meal planning and meal prepping. Meal planning is the process in which you decide what meals you’re having on what day (e.g. Monday: turkey burger with roasted potatoes and salad, Tuesday: salmon with basmati rice and spinach).

Meal prepping is the process of actually cooking and preparing those meals (e.g. you spend a few hours on Sunday cooking to set yourself up for the week). Now that we’ve established the basics, let’s get to your freezer…

Your freezer is by far the best and most under-utilized aspect of the kitchen. Where else can you store the components of a healthy meal for months without spoilage? Healthy meals should always incorporate high-quality protein, healthy fats, and complex carbohydrates (think vegetables, grains, etc.). With the exception of healthy fats (they’re usually on your countertop or in the fridge) we can stock your freezer with high-quality protein and complex carbohydrates to ensure you always have nutrient-dense food available to plan and prepare healthy meals.

While frozen vegetables typically get a bad rap, the truth is, they actually can be more nutritious than their fresh, grocery store counterparts!

Frozen vegetables are typically picked at the height of their ripeness when they’re bursting with vitamins and minerals1. The process of flash freezing locks in those precious nutrients and halts the process of enzyme activity that begins to break down (and spoil) food. Frozen fruits and vegetables are superior nutritionally to those that are canned because the canning process tends to result in nutrient loss2.

When it comes to protein, there are some great services out there that ship high-quality frozen meat and wild-caught fish, but you can also ask your local butcher or fishmonger to pack up your protein to go straight to the freezer. The benefit of having frozen protein, again, is the fact that it won’t spoil for quite some time and you’ll always have this meal staple available. The one potential downside of frozen protein is the time it takes for said protein to defrost, but that’s where a weekly plan comes in handy (or an instant pot to cook from frozen!).

Sleep Better
Blueberry Meal Prep

The best way to start your meal planning efforts is to be organized! Take inventory of what you have in the house, write it down, and match up days to meals. Going back to the example above where we have a turkey burger on Monday and salmon on Tuesday, all you’d need to do is take both out on Sunday to ensure they’re defrosted and ready for cooking on their respective days. You’ll never have to defrost frozen vegetables, so they’ll be ready when you need them.

I hope you see how valuable your freezer could be in creating healthy meals on a regular basis. The truth is, you can only be as healthy as your kitchen allows, so prioritizing healthy meal-time staples is a really important first step!

Safe and Unsafe Cooking Fats

Safe and Unsafe Cooking Fats

Safest for Cooking

Great for frying, baking, broiling, grilling, and roasting

  • Coconut Oil (organic, virgin) – approximately 92% saturated, 6% monounsaturated, and 2% polyunsaturated
  • Lard – approximately 40% saturated, 48% monounsaturated, and 12% polyunsaturated
  • Ghee – approximately 65% saturated, 25% monounsaturated, and 5% polyunsaturated
  • Beef and Lamb Tallow – approximately 52% saturated, 44% unsaturated, and 3% polyunsaturated
  • Red Palm Oil, Palm kernel oil (organic, sustainably harvested virgin) – approximately 86% saturated, 12% monounsaturated, and 2% polyunsaturated

Animal fats should ideally be sourced from organically raised, grass-fed pastured animals.

Tropical vegetable fats in this category should ideally be organic and unrefined in nature.

Ghee oil stored inside a jar
Avocados on a wooden table

Quick stir-frying, light sautéing, and slow/low simmering are appropriate forms of heat for these oils. Again, notice the commonality of these fats. All except sesame oil contain a majority of monounsaturated fatty acids.

  • Olive Oil (unfiltered, domestic) – approximately 14% saturated, 75% monounsaturated, and 9% polyunsaturated
  • Peanut Oil – approximately 18% saturated, 48% monounsaturated, and 34% polyunsaturated
  • Avocado Oil – approximately 12% saturated, 76% monounsaturated, and 12% polyunsaturated
  • Macadamia Nut Oil – approximately 12% saturated, 79% monounsaturated, and 2% polyunsaturated
  • Sesame Oil – approximately 14% saturated, 40% monounsaturated, and 42% polyunsaturated

Unsafe for any kind of Heat Exposure!
DO NOT use for Cooking!

These oils should ALWAYS be extracted via expeller-pressing! Read the label first!

Flax seeds and flax seed oil sitting on a table
  • Flax Oil – approximately 9% saturated, 18% monounsaturated, and 73% polyunsaturated
  • Hemp Oil – approximately 7% saturated, 11% monounsaturated, and 76% polyunsaturated
  • Pine Nut Oil – approximately 8% saturated and 89% polyunsaturated
  • Pumpkin Seed Oil – approximately 20% saturated, 24% monounsaturated, and 55% polyunsaturated
  • Safflower Oil – approximately 7% saturated, 75% monounsaturated, and 12% polyunsaturated
  • Sunflower Oil – approximately 7% saturated, 83% monounsaturated, and 4% polyunsaturated
  • Grapeseed Oil – approximately 9% saturated, 16% monounsaturated, and 69% polyunsaturated

These oils are primarily composed of PUFAs, so should not be heated. If you do wish to consume these oils, do so in small doses. You can find these oils in dark, glass, or thick plastic containers in a refrigerated section of most health food stores. PUFA dominant oils should never be refined or processed, and unfortunately, finding truly unprocessed versions of these oils can be a difficult task. Corn and soybean oils are best avoided due to their genetically modified status and heavy pesticide levels.

Use omega-3 rich oils like flax oil sparingly in homemade condiments such as salad dressings, mayonnaise, freshly prepared smoothies, or lightly drizzled over soups, dips, and hors d’oeuvres.

There are many conflicting opinions about the safety of cooking with grapeseed oil. Like sesame oil, it has a higher smoke point due to its antioxidant content. Regardless, grapeseed oil is very high in PUFA’s and should not be used for cooking.

Unsafe to Consume Under any Circumstances

  • Canola Oil/Rapeseed Oil – approximately 7% saturated, 63% monounsaturated, and 28% polyunsaturated
  • Corn Oil – approximately 12% saturated, 27% monounsaturated, and 54% polyunsaturated
  • Cottonseed Oil – approximately 25% saturated, 17% monounsaturated, and 51% polyunsaturated
  • Soybean/Vegetable Oil – approximately 7% saturated, 75% monounsaturated, and 12% polyunsaturated
  • Vegetable Shortening
  • Partially Hydrogenated Fats/Oils (all)

Don’t Forget About Butter!

Cut up pieces of stick butter on a plate

Finally, we want to reserve a special place for the queen of cooking fats, real butter.

Butter is re-gaining a positive place in nutrition lexicon, and our ancestors prized butter for its life-giving nutrients! Raw, unprocessed butterfat from grass-fed cows has a comprehensive fatty acid profile that protects its consumer from developing imbalances such as hardening of the arteries, calcification of organs, glands and joints (arthritis), and cataracts.

Quality raw butter contains:

  • Omega-3 and Omega-6 fatty acids in small amounts in a healthful ratio.
  • CLA (Conjugated Linoleic) fatty acids to support weight management, muscle growth, and may protect against cancer.
  • Fat soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K to help us absorb and properly assimilate naturally occurring trace minerals also found in raw butter (zinc, selenium, iodine, chromium, manganese, etc,).
  • Butyric fatty acids that may help protect against fungal infections and tumor growth.
  • Arachidonic fatty acids for proper inflammatory and anti-inflammatory responses to heal effectively.

Also, butterfat enhances brain function and increases cell membrane integrity. With all these health benefits, raw organic butter can be a dietary fat consumed each and every day.