One of the hardest things about cooking every day is simply the act of cooking every day.
“It gets harder,” Alyssa Brantley, Seattle-based blogger at “Everyday Maven” and author of the new “ ‘I Don’t Want to Cook’ Book,” says with a laugh.
In addition to breakfast and dinner, Brantley’s also making lunches daily during the school year, because her two kids attend a school without a cafeteria. As summer flexibility gives way to fall routines, it’s always around the middle of September that she realizes that when it comes to meal planning and cooking, “This is actually not ending.”
Even if you don’t have kids, spending every evening putting together an elaborate meal seems impossible. We inevitably fall into patterns and routines, relying on the same handful of recipes to keep us fed with minimal effort. But what happens when those recipes start to feel tired, and we moan to ourselves and our loved ones something along the lines of “I just don’t want to cook!”?