Cooking
Cooking
Food preparation focused on single-serving, whole food meals
Philosophy
The approach emphasizes meat-free whole foods and keeping good food around instead of counting calories. Much like wearing a uniform saves cognitive overhead, having a limited menu of go-tos that are always stocked is step zero for eating well.
Because cooking is often for one and leftovers get old, most of this is oriented around cooking or assembling single meals fresh.
Breakfast
Getting protein into your body in the morning matters—ideally within 30 minutes of waking.
Greek Yogurt & Granola
Packed with protein, healthy fats, and complex carbohydrates. Greek yogurt keeps you full longer; granola provides sustained energy.
Oatmeal & Granola
Complex carbohydrates and fiber for sustained energy. Granola adds crunch and a protein boost.
Toast & Greek Yogurt
Thick slice of sourdough with fresh greek yogurt, topped with honey, olive oil, and big flakes of sea salt. Simple and luxurious.
Eggs & Toast
Classic combination—quick, tasty, nutritious. Add hot sauce or chili oil.
Hardboiled Eggs
Pre-cook on weekends, store in fridge for quick breakfasts during the week.
Lunch
Just have a salad. It's not that complicated.
Salad Components
| Lettuce | Baby spinach, romaine, spring greens |
| Protein | Chickpeas, black beans, pre-cooked chicken/fish, tofu, hardboiled eggs |
| Toppings | Sliced cucumber, tomatoes, purple cabbage, sprouts, sliced citrus |
| Dressings | Caesar, oil & vinegar, greek yogurt |
Seasoning
From Ideas in Food: season at 0.5% of the weight of what you're cooking. Calculate necessary salt content based on total weight of ingredients.
Equipment Principles
- Keep it minimal
- One good pan beats five mediocre ones
- Cast iron for everything that doesn't need non-stick
See Also
| Daily Life | |
|---|---|
| Sustenance | Food · Coffee · Cooking · Foraging |
| Body | Exercise Philosophy · Habits · Winter Training |
| Place | Hudson Valley · Weather · Local Resources |
| Systems | Supply Chain · Quantified Self · Automation |