A calm routine so your week stays varied
Short planning, light prep, and friendly one-to-one talks—built for real Dutch kitchens and busy schedules.
Fifteen minutes on Sunday
Open the fridge and see what must be used. Look at the week ahead—late meetings mean a stir-fry night; a free evening means a tray-bake. Write three main foods for the week: one grain, one protein, one vegetable you want to focus on. Take a photo and share it in your household chat.
There is no shame in repeating meals. The goal is one intentional swap—rice instead of pasta, or fennel instead of cucumber. People who keep the photo on their phone often cook fewer “same as yesterday” dinners by Wednesday.
Prep without spending Sunday in the kitchen
Forty minutes once, or twenty minutes twice, is enough. Cook one grain, wash salad leaves, boil four eggs. You do not need full ready-made meals unless you enjoy that. Partial prep keeps dinners flexible—you still choose the vegetable on the day.
Label boxes with the food name—“barley,” “roasted peppers”—not Monday or Tuesday. Then Wednesday soup can use Monday’s barley without a fixed plan.
What happens in a consultation
We meet for about 45 minutes at Herengracht or online. You describe what you usually eat; we notice what repeats. Together we draft a simple food swap list for home cooking—not a clinical diet plan or weight-loss programme.
Bring a rough shopping list and photos of typical meals if you have them. We do not label foods “good” or “bad” and we do not promise specific health or body-weight outcomes. We focus on time, taste, and practical variety. Fee and cancellation terms are sent before you confirm a booking.
A simple check at the end of the week
Five minutes on Friday or Sunday is enough. You are not grading yourself—you are noticing patterns so next week can include one small, realistic swap. No calorie counting required.
Five-minute review
What to count (tick boxes mentally)
If your list looks short
Save your one swap on the same note as your weekly food list or starter shopping list so shopping and cooking stay connected.
When the week goes off track
Travel, deadlines, and tired evenings happen. Keep one simple breakfast and one fast dinner idea for those weeks. When things calm down, change one food on the first easy night—barley instead of rice, or a new herb on the same bowl.
Common questions
Many people book every six to eight weeks, or when the season changes. A short call also works if your work hours shift.
We give patterns and swap lists, not a rigid menu for every meal. Flexibility is what keeps variety going long term.