6 Simple Kitchen Habits That Make Weeknight Cooking Easier
I used to think cooking felt hard because I didn’t have enough time.
But honestly? A lot of it came down to small habits. Not complicated systems. Not fancy gadgets. Just simple rhythms that make the week smoother.
These are the kitchen habits that actually make cooking easier for me.

1. I Read the Recipe Before I Start
This one changed everything.
Whether it’s a brand new recipe or something I’ve made ten times, I read it all the way through first.
Then I chop, measure, and/ or combine sauces. Prep everything before the pan even heats up.
I don’t like scrambling while something is already cooking. Prepping first keeps dinner calm instead of chaotic.
2. I Decide Dinner Before 4 PM
If I wait until everyone is hungry, I make worse decisions. Having it decided earlier removes that 5 PM pressure.
No staring into the fridge and no “what do you want?” This also leads to less panic buying take out.
3. I Thaw Meat on Purpose
Not accidentally at 3:45 PM.
If I know what we’re having, I pull it out in the morning. That one small decision saves so much stress later.

4. I Clean As I Go (Mostly)
I’m not deep cleaning mid recipe.
But I rinse cutting boards, load what I can, and wipe counters while something simmers.
It keeps after dinner from feeling overwhelming.
5. I Repeat Meals
I don’t reinvent dinner every week.
We have repeat meals. Comfort meals. Meals I could make half asleep.
Repetition makes cooking easier. It doesn’t make it boring.
6. I Accept “Good Enough”
Not every dinner needs:
- A side salad
- Homemade bread
- A picture perfect presentation
Sometimes it’s one pan and we’re done. That still counts.

Cooking doesn’t get easier because life slows down. It gets easier when the habits get simpler.
What’s one kitchen habit that makes dinner easier at your house?
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Our Christmas Eve Traditions (Messy, Loud, and Full of Love)
If you’ve ever watched a Hallmark Christmas movie with the perfectly matching decorations and the holiday dinner that looked like it belongs in a magazine spread and thought, Wow, must be nice, this post is for you. Every year, our Christmas Eve traditions at my grandma’s house looks nothing like a movie and honestly? That’s exactly why it works.

🎄 Expectation: A Set Arrival Time
You know the kind. Everyone shows up neatly at 4:00 PM. Jackets are hung. The oven is already warm. Candles are lit.
🎄 Reality: “Whenever You Get Here Is Fine”
Grandma might say 4:00pm, but that’s more of a suggestion than a plan.
My family is usually walking in the door around 1:00 because I like to help set up (and because standing still at home waiting to leave makes me anxious). Meanwhile, other family members roll in around 5:00 like that was always the plan.
No one is late or early. We just arrive when we do.
🍽️ Expectation: A Coordinated Christmas Eve Dinner
You know what it looks like. One protein, matching sides, everything planned and plated beautifully.
🍽️ Reality: Everyone Brings “Their” Thing
We don’t have a perfectly curated menu or theme. There is only tradition. Grandma makes ham and potato salad, My mom brings Christmas punch (and has been told she’s not allowed to come if she ever forgets it), My aunt brings clam chowder and cookies. You get the idea.
Now that we’re our own household, I’m still figuring out my “thing”. For the past two years, I’ve brought a broccoli apple salad, and thankfully, it’s gone over well
Does any of it match?
Absolutely not.
Does it all somehow work?
Also yes.

🎁 Expectation: Calm, Organized Present Time
Children patiently awaiting their turn. Everyone watches quietly. Wrapping paper is neatly thrown out.
🎁 Reality: Controlled Chaos
By the time presents start, the kids are vibrating with excitement, and we’re all just doing our best to keep them seated long enough for gifts to be handed out. Wrapping paper flies. Someone inevitably misplaces their gift. While someone else insists they already opened that one. It’s loud, joyful, and exactly as chaotic as you’d expect.
🎲 Expectation: A Sweet, Peaceful Evening
Soft music. Meaningful conversation. A perfect ending to Christmas Eve.
🎲 Reality: Rob Your Neighbor and Laughter
The adults play a rob your neighbor style gift game that never fails to bring laughter, trash talk, and a little bit of chaos. There are stolen gifts. Dramatic reactions. Someone always ends up way happier than they expected and someone else pretends they’re totally fine with what they got.
✨ Final Thoughts
Is our Christmas Eve Hallmark worthy?
Not even a little.
But it’s warm and a bit loud. It’s familiar and filled with love. It’s filled with food that doesn’t match, traditions that don’t make sense, and people who show up exactly as they are.
And honestly?
I wouldn’t trade it for anything.
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