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Weeknight dinner planner · weekly reset for busy home cooks
A weekly planner for busy home cooks. One repeatable layout for dinners, a grocery-list page that matches your plan, and a prep-at-a-glance system that turns scattered recipes into a workable routine.
Today
Free
Start your next week with a clear dinner plan, a grocery list that matches it, and prep notes you can actually follow.
For busy home cooks who keep ending up at 6 p.m. with no plan—and want a calm, repeatable dinner structure without spending all Sunday managing recipes.
Dinner falls apart when you’re making decisions too late, recipes are scattered across notes and bookmarks, and shopping/prep don’t connect to the actual week you planned. The result is extra mental load, forgotten ingredients, and nights where you’re improvising when you’re already tired.
Choose dinners first, fill the grocery list from your actual kitchen, and mark prep tasks before the rush. By the time Wednesday hits, you’re cooking from a clear plan—not from memory—so fewer last-minute takeout decisions and a stocked kitchen feel like the default.
A plan only helps if you can see it and trust it when the day gets busy. This planner gives you one place to find your dinners, one list that matches what you chose, and one prep view that prevents the “full recipe, no time” problem.
Turn scattered recipes into a dinner plan you can see.
Choose dinners, fill the grocery list, and mark prep ahead—so weeknights feel calm instead of improvised.
You’ll receive the planner format so you can run the weekly reset on repeat: plan dinners, shop once, prep what matters, and cook from the page.
The goal is speed. You’ll choose dinners first, then fill the grocery list and add only the prep notes that change what you do during the week. If it takes too long, you won’t repeat it—so the layout is designed to keep decisions simple and visible.
Use the planner as your single weekly structure. Pull the dinners you want into the weekly layout, then let the grocery list and prep-at-a-glance pages do the “sorting” work—so you’re not relying on memory across multiple apps and notes.
If your weeknight dinners keep turning into last-minute decisions, this gives you a simple structure you can follow—starting this week.
Your weeknight dinner reset
Free · no card · instant access after email confirmation
Yes. The grocery-list page is meant to be filled after you check your pantry, fridge, and freezer. That way, the list reflects your kitchen—not a blank slate—and you’re less likely to pay for ingredients you already have.
It separates what can be done ahead (like chopping, marinating, cooking grains, or washing greens) from what must happen at dinner time (like boiling pasta, heating tortillas, or searing). The goal is to spot bottlenecks early so you’re not scrambling at 6 p.m.
That’s exactly what the prep notes are for. If a recipe requires long marinating, a special trip, or multiple separate steps, it shouldn’t sit in a slot that needs to be easy. The layout helps you decide whether to move prep earlier or choose a simpler fit for that night.
Absolutely. At the end of the week, you’ll review what was easiest to repeat, what ingredients were left over, and where the plan broke down. Then you can move meals, bring prep tasks earlier, or swap in simpler options for next week.