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The Watercooler
Meal Delivery and healthy living options?
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<blockquote data-quote="Hound dog" data-source="post: 617441" data-attributes="member: 84"><p>My mother swears I'm weird because it is just Travis and I but I still cook the large meals I have always cooked. (I just store leftovers or we eat them for a few days) But I have to watch ingredients going into my food, especially salt, which has an immediate effect on how I feel these days. Only sure way to do it is to cook my own meals. Plus I'm not that big on other people's cooking for the most part.</p><p></p><p>My mother would certainly jump at the chance, and she is about as cheap as you can get. If the meals were good and affordable though, I could see her opting in for a couple of times a week at least. She cooks odd things because it's just her or she doesn't cook at all for very long stretches. Eating a cheeseburger and fries off Mc Donald's dollar menu is hardly the healthy diet she now swears it is. It's just easy and cheap, she doesn't have to cook it. </p><p></p><p>Affordable for seniors means pretty darn cheap. But if you can get a lot of your menu ingredients wholesale you could probably manage pretty cheap, I'd think. Not sure the way food prices are jumping these days.</p><p></p><p>I will say though mother in law opted out of Meals on Wheels before the first week was up simply because she did not like nor could tolerate the menu. I would do a research survey of potential target customers for meal menu ideas. Know what I mean??</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Hound dog, post: 617441, member: 84"] My mother swears I'm weird because it is just Travis and I but I still cook the large meals I have always cooked. (I just store leftovers or we eat them for a few days) But I have to watch ingredients going into my food, especially salt, which has an immediate effect on how I feel these days. Only sure way to do it is to cook my own meals. Plus I'm not that big on other people's cooking for the most part. My mother would certainly jump at the chance, and she is about as cheap as you can get. If the meals were good and affordable though, I could see her opting in for a couple of times a week at least. She cooks odd things because it's just her or she doesn't cook at all for very long stretches. Eating a cheeseburger and fries off Mc Donald's dollar menu is hardly the healthy diet she now swears it is. It's just easy and cheap, she doesn't have to cook it. Affordable for seniors means pretty darn cheap. But if you can get a lot of your menu ingredients wholesale you could probably manage pretty cheap, I'd think. Not sure the way food prices are jumping these days. I will say though mother in law opted out of Meals on Wheels before the first week was up simply because she did not like nor could tolerate the menu. I would do a research survey of potential target customers for meal menu ideas. Know what I mean?? [/QUOTE]
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Meal Delivery and healthy living options?
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