Beans and Bulgur {recipe}

I had some free time over the weekend, so I sat down with my laptop, opened up Excel, and scheduled out every hour of my work week in a beautifully color coded spreadsheet.

Did I mention I’m an accountant?

Right.

Anyway, once I factored in sleep, work, exercise, commute, time to eat, and bathing/primp time, I found I have about three hours of “free” time each work day.  THREE.  I have big aspirations each week—home cooked meals, coffee with friends, blogging,  Wheel of Fortune, flossing, plus 30 minutes of reading before bed—but with these dismal findings, it’s clear I can’t squeeze all of that in every night.

Years ago, in an effort to increase my workweek free time, I started batch cooking food on Sundays.  Sunday morning, while I sip my coffee and listen to NPR, I get to work in kitchen cooking meals for the workweek and portioning them into single-serve containers.  The single-serve containers are KEY.

A typical Sunday cooking session includes:

  • 5 servings of steel cut oats with almonds, blueberries, and cinnamon
  • 2 servings of quinoa (for sprinkling on salad)
  • salads.  Lately it’s mixed greens, tomatoes, onion, cucumber, feta cheese, and half a serving of cold quinoa plus balsamic vinaigrette (in a separate container).  I only prepare salads two at a time because I HATE soggy veggies.  Blegh.
  • snacks.  My go-tos are hummus & veggies, Greek yogurt and fruit, or a loaf of sprouted bread that I keep at work along with some PB to make sandwiches at my desk.  Don’t judge.  I also keep a container of almonds in my desk drawer.
  • The wild card:  something, ANYTHING, I can use for workweek dinners

On a normal work day, I make myself eggs and toast before heading to the office, but when I’m really crunched for time I’ll cook a large batch of scrambled eggs or an egg casserole on Sunday that I can quickly heat up each morning before heading out the door.

I can get by eating the same breakfast, lunch, and snacks most days of the week, but when it comes to dinner I honestly get depressed if I eat the same boring thing every night.

beans and bulgur (4)

Dinner ideas usually come from brainstorming ways to use up leftovers from the weekend.  Other times I’ll cook a big batch of something that I can use in many different ways, so I don’t get stuck eating the same thing four nights in a row.  That could be a giant roasted spaghetti squash, a batch of black bean burgers, or a pot of some sort of grain.  This week, my dinners will revolve around a big ole batch of beans and bulgur.

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