Author: Rosalind

  • ADHD Meal Planning Made Simple

    Meal planning sounds amazing in theory—cook once, eat all week, never stare into the fridge wondering what’s for dinner. But if you have ADHD, the whole process can feel like trying to organize a sock drawer during a tornado. Too many decisions. Too much prep. Too overwhelming.

    So let’s simplify it. No color-coded spreadsheets. No hours of chopping. Just a simple, low-effort system to get meals on the table without stress.


    1️⃣ Step One: Stop Trying to Plan for a Whole Week

    ADHD brains struggle with long-term planning. Instead of mapping out seven meals, start with:
    3 go-to dinners you actually like (rotate them each week)
    1 flexible “whatever works” night (leftovers, breakfast-for-dinner, takeout)
    1 backup emergency meal (frozen pizza, mac & cheese, something brainless)

    🎯 The Goal: Less decision fatigue, fewer wasted ingredients, and an actual plan that works.


    2️⃣ Step Two: The ADHD Grocery List Hack

    Forget writing a new list every week—you’ll lose it anyway. Instead, create a Master ADHD Shopping List on your phone:
    📌 Use the Notes app (or a checklist app)
    📌 Save it as a reusable list with your staple foods already written down
    📌 Add only 5-10 extra things each week

    🔹 Bonus Tip: Organize it by store sections (produce, dairy, frozen) so you spend less time wandering.


    3️⃣ Step Three: Prepping for Lazy People (aka Us)

    You don’t need to meal prep like an influencer. Instead, do The Lazy ADHD Meal Prep Method:
    Pre-chop just one thing (onions, peppers, or whatever you use a lot)
    Batch cook protein (grill/bake chicken, brown ground beef)
    Use shortcut ingredients (pre-chopped veggies, frozen rice, rotisserie chicken)

    💡 Remember: Small prep = big wins. Even just cooking extra portions for leftovers is ADHD meal prep.


    4️⃣ Step Four: Make Meals Stupidly Easy

    Instead of following complicated recipes, stick to meal formulas:
    🥘 Protein + Carb + Veg + Sauce = Dinner

    • Chicken + Rice + Broccoli + Teriyaki Sauce
    • Ground Beef + Tortilla + Cheese + Salsa
    • Pasta + Marinara + Sausage + Spinach

    🎯 The Goal: No overthinking, just mix & match what you already have.


    5️⃣ Step Five: Embrace the Chaos (Because Some Nights Will Be a Mess)

    Even with a plan, some nights will be survival mode. And that’s okay. Keep these on hand for no-brainer meals:
    Snack Plate Dinner (cheese sticks, crackers, hummus, fruit)
    Frozen Dump Meals (walmart meals, frozen stir fry kits)
    Breakfast-for-Dinner (eggs, toast, yogurt)

    💡 PRO TIP: Make peace with imperfection. Some nights, cereal is a meal. You’re still winning.


    Meal Planning, but ADHD-Friendly

    The key to meal planning with ADHD? Keep it flexible, low-effort, and brain-friendly. No complex systems, just a few small habits that make life easier.

    💡 What’s your biggest ADHD meal planning struggle? Drop a comment below!

  • 5 ADHD-Friendly Dinners You Can Make in Under 20 Minutes (Without Burning Out or Crying)

    Let’s be real:

    Cooking when you have ADHD is like trying to herd caffeinated squirrels. Too many steps? Nope. Too much chopping? We’re out. Takes longer than an episode of The Office? Forget it.

    So here are five delicious, low-effort dinners that:
    ✅ Require minimal thinking (because we already used up our brainpower on something dumb today)
    ✅ Can be thrown together in 20 minutes or less
    ✅ Are heavily seasoned (because we deserve FLAVOR, not sadness)

    Let’s cook (or, more accurately, let’s aggressively assemble food and heat it up). 🔥


    1️⃣ 15-Minute One-Pan Garlic Butter Chicken & Veggies

    🔥 Why it’s ADHD-friendly: One pan. No stress. No thinking.
    🥄 Ingredients:

    • 2 boneless chicken breasts, cubed
    • 1 cup cherry tomatoes (or literally any veggie you like)
    • 1 zucchini, chopped (or just grab pre-cut veggies—zero shame)
    • 1 tbsp olive oil
    • Seasoning: 1 tsp garlic powder, 1 tsp onion powder, ½ tsp smoked paprika, salt & pepper
    • Bonus: Squeeze of lemon or splash of balsamic vinegar (makes you feel fancy)

    🕒 How to Make It:

    1. Heat olive oil in a pan.
    2. Add chicken, season like a pro (or a tired parent), and cook for 5 min.
    3. Toss in zucchini & tomatoes. Stir for 10 min.
    4. Serve with rice, pasta, or just fork it straight from the pan like a gremlin.

    2️⃣ 10-Minute ADHD “Lazy Tacos” (No Chopping, No Cooking, No Excuses)

    🔥 Why it’s ADHD-friendly: No chopping. No brainpower. Still tacos.
    🥄 Ingredients:

    • 1 lb pre-cooked shredded rotisserie chicken (we don’t have time for raw meat tonight)
    • 1 pack soft tortillas (or hard shells, live your truth)
    • 1 cup pre-shredded cheese
    • ½ cup store-bought salsa (because chopping tomatoes is a crime)
    • Seasoning: ½ tsp cumin, ½ tsp smoked paprika, ½ tsp garlic powder
    • Optional: Sour cream, avocado (if it’s not rock hard or rotten)

    🕒 How to Make It:

    1. Heat tortillas in the microwave for 20 seconds (or don’t, they’ll still work).
    2. Fill with chicken, cheese, salsa. Sprinkle on seasoning to make it taste less sad.
    3. Boom. Tacos in 10 minutes.

    3️⃣ 20-Minute ADHD Pasta (No Draining, No Babysitting, Just Vibes)

    🔥 Why it’s ADHD-friendly: Everything goes in ONE POT. No draining required.
    🥄 Ingredients:

    • 2 cups uncooked pasta
    • 2 ½ cups water
    • 1 jar pasta sauce (whichever one you impulse-bought at the store)
    • Seasoning: 1 tsp garlic powder, 1 tsp Italian seasoning, pinch of red pepper flakes
    • ½ cup shredded cheese (for ✨ luxury ✨)

    🕒 How to Make It:

    1. Dump pasta, water, and sauce into a pot.
    2. Simmer for 15 minutes, stir occasionally. DO NOT DRAIN.
    3. Add seasonings & cheese, stir.
    4. Congrats, you made pasta with 1% effort.

    4️⃣ 15-Minute Cheesy Bean & Veggie Quesadillas (No Egg Ick, Extra Flavor)

    🔥 Why it’s ADHD-friendly: No eggs, minimal thinking, and it’s crispy.
    🥄 Ingredients:

    • 1 can refried beans (or mashed black beans, because protein)
    • 1 cup shredded cheese
    • 2 tortillas
    • 1 tbsp butter (or oil)
    • Seasoning: ½ tsp onion powder, ½ tsp garlic powder, ½ tsp chili powder, salt & pepper
    • Optional: Pre-chopped bell peppers, canned corn, or spinach
    • Dipping: Salsa or sour cream

    🕒 How to Make It:

    1. Spread beans on one tortilla.
    2. Sprinkle cheese + veggies on top.
    3. Add seasonings to make it taste like something.
    4. Cook in a buttered pan for 2 min per side.
    5. Slice, dip, devour.

    5️⃣ ADHD Snack Dinner (Because Cooking is Overrated Sometimes)

    🔥 Why it’s ADHD-friendly: No cooking. No effort. Still balanced.
    🥄 Ingredients:

    • Protein: Pre-cooked deli meats, cheese sticks, Greek yogurt cups
    • Carbs: Crackers, pre-sliced bread, apple sauce pouches, or ricecakes
    • Veggies/Fruit: Baby carrots, cucumber slices, grapes
    • Fun Bonus: Everything Bagel-seasoned cashews (life-changing)

    🕒 How to Make It:

    1. Throw everything on a plate.
    2. Call it “Snack Dinner.”
    3. That’s it. You are a genius. Gordon Ramsay could never.

    📌 Conclusion: ADHD Cooking = Maximum Flavor, Minimum Effort

    If cooking makes you want to cry, you’re not alone. But these quick, low-effort meals can help you eat real food without the overwhelm.

    Try one tonight—or just bookmark this for later when you inevitably forget what you planned to cook.

    💡 Want more ADHD-friendly meal ideas? Subscribe to my newsletter for weekly lazy-but-delicious recipes!