Latest news with #mealprepping
Yahoo
01-08-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Kylie Kelce Says This Is The Most Difficult Part Of Parenting, And She's So Right
Kylie Kelce knows the hardest part of parenting isn't sleepless nights or dirty diapers ― those stages come and go. But prepping three meals a day for your little ones? That's a whole other ball game. The 'Not Gonna Lie' podcaster got very real about the challenges of meal prepping and planning for her family on the most recent episode of her show. 'I would say that feeding your children is one of the most underrated, difficult parts of parenting,' she said. 'It's difficult because before I had children, I could do 'girl dinner.' I could slice off a few slices of cheese. I could eat a handful of Tostitos chips. I could eat an apple with peanut butter and that could constitute my dinner.' But now? Kelce said that's 'not how the world works anymore.' 'Now we have to eat three meals a day. And the decision-making is overwhelming ― I will tell you that,' Kelce explained. 'Also, the need for being prepared. It's just, it's so much. It's so much. It takes up so much of my brain.' While Kelce said that she does enjoy cooking, she joked she doesn't like the 'short order cook style' her kids require. Kelce regularly keeps followers updated on life with her husband, former NFL player Jason Kelce, and their four girls: Wyatt, 5; Elliotte, 4; Bennett, 2; and Finnley 'Finn' Kelce, born in March. While cooking for the family does seem difficult, it's unclear if Kylie Kelce prefers that to the other 'nightmare' chore she shares with husband ― wiping her kids' butts. Kylie Kelce joked that her kids scream for them to wipe their butts so much, it's 'the soundtrack of my life.' 'This happens probably anywhere from two times minimum, six times maximum a day? It is legitimately something that I hear in my ― I was gonna say dreams ― but let's be honest, that's a nightmare,' she joked. Related... Fans Clocked 1 Thing In Travis Kelce's Reaction To Taylor Swift Buying Back Her Music Kylie Kelce Wants To Ban This 1 'F**ked Up' Pregnancy Phrase Travis Kelce Comes Clean About 'Craziest Thing' He's Faced Dating Taylor Swift Solve the daily Crossword


Telegraph
18-05-2025
- Lifestyle
- Telegraph
I'd rather rent forever than do batch cooking on a Sunday
It's Sunday morning and light is streaming through the curtains, gently mottling your duvet with the promise of a new day. Your favourite newspaper awaits you on the doormat, a coffee (or tea) is moments from your lips and there is a robin offering its sweet song not far from your window. In this moment of bliss, a brief, idyllic respite from the vagaries of life, I offer a simple question: do you know what you're going to eat for dinner on Thursday? Have you already earmarked salmon, potatoes and peas? Is it casserole night? Are you the custodian of a freezer packed with fastidiously labelled boxes to provide the next month's nutrition? For your sake, I hope not. To have sucked the joy from food, one of life's great pleasures, in the name of efficiency, is to be grieved, not lauded. And yet, I'm urged more often than ever to give up that simple daily pleasure in the pursuit of saving time and money. Once the preserve of students and interminably focused gym goers, 'meal prepping' has broken ranks and forced its way to almost fashionable status. Shifting from economic necessity or protein-enforced drudgery, the soul-destroying act has become de rigueur, with social media accounts dedicated to boxing up your sustenance clocking millions of subscribers. Neatly arranged tubs are laid out across a kitchen surface and diligently filled with some combination of protein, greenery and carbohydrate, while victory is declared against having to think about food for the next seven, or even 30 days. But never has a victory been more pyrrhic – what benefit is there to be gained from working to make your life more miserable? Food is magnificent and joyful, and unlike most good things, which are by their nature scarce, expensive or damaging, we are forced each and every day to sustain ourselves, so we should embrace it. It has never been simpler to find quick and easy recipes – the 'easy dinners' portion of the Telegraph's recipe section alone runs to more than 600 ideas. There are a wealth of pasta sauces that can be rustled up in the time it takes to boil your spaghetti, with the simplest requiring only olive oil and garlic. But while I hate meal prepping or (shudder) 'batch cooking', it is only one miserable symptom of a wider, more pervasive trend that deserves even greater ire – the steady redefining of life as one in which efficiency is valued over joy. It is this school of thought that leads a millionaire to take his son's blood in order to live forever, or our government to insist we never take a risk lest we use the NHS. It is the theory espoused by the very people who bang on about their air fryer, never once telling you that their meals are made more enjoyable, only easier, quicker or cheaper. But what am I to do with the 10 minutes of time that the air fryer saves me, or the 6p per use saving over a conventional oven? Sure, I don't have to think about what Tuesday's meal is, but what if I don't want chicken and rice that night? Call me a snob, but there's more pleasure to be had from both cooking and eating than simple efficiency. The time and money we save from other activities must eventually be spent on something, else we'll rattle through our lives at a remarkably effective pace, never having gone to the pub, splurged on the superfluous or eaten what we wanted. If removing the joy from eating is the price of owning a home, I'll happily rent forever. When they bury me, at least my epitaph will read something other than: 'Here lies an efficient man'.