Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Emeals Review


So I promised to report back about emeals.

About a year ago, I joined emeals and tried a few meals from their regular plan. I found that almost every meal included either pasta, rice, or bread. That was just too many carbs for my body so I cancelled it.

Recently, I saw they now have a low carb plan so when a Groupon showed up I decided I’d try it. I printed out 2 weeks worth of low carb menus and couldn’t find anything on the list I wanted to eat. Sure, there were some I could suffer through, but there wasn’t anything exciting.

After deciding the low carb plan wasn’t going to work, I took a chance and switched back to the regular Walmart family plan. I figured any food prepared at home would be better for us than eating out. I was surprised when I printed out it out. There were far less carbs in the meals with a lot more fresh veggies and fruit!

So I decided to really give it a try for 1 week. I purchased 5 complete meals on Sunday. I bought everything the list said including fresh ginger, which I’ve never done before. They give you 7 meals each week, but I know our family enjoys a couple of nights out so I only bought supplies for the 5 that matched our tastes the best.

Since then we’ve eaten at home 5 out of past 9 days, which is a record for us. Three of the meals were dates with friends so eating out was our only option. So when we were at home we only chose to eat out 1 night instead of cooking. Wow!

Random Thoughts:

It was so nice to already have an answer to “Mom, what’s for dinner?”

I didn’t have to run to the store for forgotten supplies.

I liked that it was easy to cross off the meals we didn’t want from the supplies list.

Shopping was easier since everything was already grouped by sections.

It took 1.5 hours to shop for 5 dinners. I was by myself with an 8 year old and a 4 year old.

The 5 meals cost around $85, but I had to buy a lot of basics most people would already have in the pantry.

I decided I will need to split our weekly shopping into 2 trips. 1 for dinner supplies and 1 for breakfast and lunch supplies.

The list included one super fast and easy meal which worked perfectly after church Wednesday night.

None of the meals were fantastic. We had 3 we rated great and 2 rated good. None of them were terrible. I'd eat them all again.

I had to give up my perfectionist expectation that everything I cook has to be delicious. I just followed their directions and if it wasn’t yummy, it wasn’t my fault!

Meals that include lettuce should be eaten first. 1 bag was the only thing I bought that went bad before we used it.

Meat that was purchased on Sunday had to be frozen by Thursday.

The regular plan feels like it is one our family can stick with long term. It isn’t the healthiest, but it’s way healthier than fast food and the few “bad” splurge items help us look forward to eating meals at home.  

With our hectic schedule of church, ballgames, dance class, etc. we decided it would work best for us to buy the supplies for 4 dinners each week. Then if we need another we can make a quick run to the store.

Here’s how it’s been working for our family:

1. I print out the weekly menu and automatically cross off the meals I know we wouldn’t like (it’s averaged only 1 per week).

2. Then I choose our 4 from the remaining 6. If I don’t see 4 we’d like I flip back to previous weeks and pull a meal from there.

3. I make sure to only choose meals we would WANT to eat so we are motivated to get in the kitchen and make it.

4. The day of the meal I try to chop everything in the morning or early afternoon and toss it in the fridge. When it’s dinner time I know everything will come together quickly so there’s no need for fast food.

Overall, I don’t see me planning a meal from scratch any time in the near future. That’s just way too much thought and planning for me. I really STRUGGLE with meal planning so for us, emeals is here to stay!

13 comments:

  1. Oh I forgot to add that I print my weekly menus double sided on a sheet of cardstock. I hole punch them then put in a binder. It's much easier and durable than dealing with 2 separate flimsy pieces of paper while shopping.

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  2. I was surfing for some honest reviews of e-meals and I thankfully landed on yours! You've made the decision easy for me now...e-meals it is!!

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  3. Yes - I too appreciate your honest review

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  4. I herald the earlier replies. I struggle with a very thin Irish husband who can eat ANYTHING so loves his meat and potatoes while I need to watch my intake. Sounds like I can make some adjustments and some healthy grain options to make this work. I am very happy to have some help with my daughter's lunch...I have to start making those soon and was like, sandwich, really, every day? Now I am going to use the lunches for my daughter AND me so I won't go to the bad places around my office...that are just so easy. :) Thanks again!

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  5. Thank you all so much for the sweet comments. I'm glad my review could help. Recently, I've found that Walmart produce section has been gross. It kills the appetite to find bugs and flies all over your fruit and veggies. So I stopped wanting to cook at home. Today, I switched my emeals menu to the Publix Family Plan. Even though Publix is more expensive, I'm hoping with my emeals menu plan I can keep the cost down. I'm looking forward to grocery shopping again!

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  6. Bought in at 30% off for a year, ($3.38 per mo.) Clean eating plan for two food cost $67.00 for my first week, this plan uses almost no processed food.
    Be careful, go to your account info and cancel auto renewal if you don't want that surprise charge on your credit card!

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  7. Thanks for your review! I also purchased the groupon from emeals and have been getting the emails for 3 weeks. I have yet to make anything because the meals are so disappointing. This week we have store bought ravioli and a can of spaghetti sauce. I could've done that myself. Before this I used nomoretogo. I loved them! The meals were all homemade but easy. They also have a shopping list. I'm going to switch back even though I have a 1 year subscription to emeals.

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  8. http://eatathomecooks.com/
    This one is free and tried it and liked it.

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    1. I checked out this website and it is no longer free. Looks interesting though.

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  9. http://thepeacefulmom.com/category/menus/

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  10. I happily stumbled upon emeals through a Groupon last year. I paid $30 for a one year membership (5 dinners a week which they switched to 7 a few weeks later). I don't think I have ever made a better purchase. Following our wedding, my husband and I were on an extremely tight budget. Like a Ramen noodle and pasta type budget. We didn't feel good and were desperate to fix the issue. When we did splurge and actually followed a recipe we had way to much of it and would be freezing and eating it for an entire week. Emeals has plans sized for 2 people, we signed up for the classic plan because it called for the most affordable ingredients. Emeals has been amazing, I print the recipes and put them in a sleeve in a binder. I make notes on our favorites and the ones to avoid. At one point we switched to the low carb plan, but we couldn't afford all the produce so back to classic plan it was. They have a ton of options, its worth checking out their website. I love emeals and will probably keep using them for years to come.
    ~Laura

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  11. I began with the natural and organic program for my family in September. We were desperate for help with meal planning. It has been fabulous for us. We are eating healthier, my kids and honestly husband and I are trying and liking so many foods that we would have never tried. We are enjoying it, I feel way less stressed and we are saving money. We rarely go out anymore and even the stuff we like we really don't repeat because I'm too lazy to make my own store list! I do tweak things that I know we won't like but overall it works great. We also use the breakfast and lunch plans. I can't imagine life without e-meals!

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  12. We've tried the low-carb and "general" family plans and were disappointed in both. My husband and I are native New Orleanians and not only do we like a lot of flavor in our food, I know my way around a kitchen! We found that the meals were rather unappealing and by the time I reworked the plans to "fix" them, it defeated the purpose of subscribing to a service that does it all for you.

    I think emeals would work best for those who don't care for cooking (technique, etc.) and aren't terribly concerned about variety. That's not an insult - my grandparents and inlaws are like this, as are many of my friends. It simply did not work for us.

    Also, for those who do not care for fish, one fish-based meals was included every week. The paleo plans I saw had fish listed twice.

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