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Recipes

Spinach Lasagna: An Easy Meal for a Return to Busy Nights

August 22, 2021 By Anna Lutz 2 Comments

The quarantines of the pandemic have led to many people appreciating more simplified schedules. For me, it’s seemed to have the opposite affect. I’ve come to appreciate more the activities that my children are involved in and have missed them over the last year. I’m excited about this fall’s prospect of busier weeks and the kids benefiting from sports and other after school activities. 

Making a Loose Plan Can Decrease Stress

As my children return to school and activities, and I add my youngest to the bunch as she enters Kindergarten, we are suddenly doing a lot of schedule juggling. I’ve found over the years, if I have a busy week of afternoon and evening activities, it helps my overall stress level to have a loose plan for dinners. I typically will look at the week’s calendar and plan 3-4 dinners for the week that I can pull from, depending on how each day is going.  Meal planning doesn’t need to be rigid and looks different for different people and families. Check out one of our first podcast episodes, where Elizabeth and I discuss our approach to meal planning.

This past week was my kids’ first week of fall sports. Suddenly, we had evenings with sports games and practices. I honestly had not done as much meal planning over the past year, because of the monotony of the pandemic, I believe. Looking at the week ahead, I knew I needed some kind of a plan, or I’d be scrambling each night. As I made a dinner plan for the week, a tried-and-true recipe came to mind, spinach lasagna. I hadn’t made this recipe since probably the beginning of 2020. It’s a favorite dish of the house, but I think about it as a “go-to” meal when I need something we can pull out of the fridge and heat up during a busy week. That hasn’t been a scenario over the last year. I suppose that is why I haven’t made it in so long. 

A Great Recipe to Prepare Ahead of Time

I typically will put the lasagna together on the weekend or after dinner one night to be eaten later in the week.  It can be cooked right before eating or cooked ahead of time. I think it tastes even better heated up a day later! There is usually enough for 2 dinners for my family of 5. I typically will pair it with a bagged salad kit, fruit, or microwave in the bag green beans. Also, the kids love the lasagna cut into small pieces and put in a thermos for lunch. Sometimes, I will make one recipe split between 2 square pans and freeze one of the pans for a future busy week. This is a great recipe to get the kids to help with! And a great way to expose more selective eaters to spinach. 

I grew up eating this recipe and always loved it! My mother says the original recipe is from the Irregardless Cookbook, a restaurant in Raleigh, NC. As she made it over the years, she made it more and more simple and the recipe has transformed to what it is today.

Simple Assembly

To assemble, add lasagna noodles to boiling water. We use whole wheat lasagna noodles, as they hold up well reheated and add fiber to the meal. Regular lasagna noodles are great, too!

As the noodles cook, combine defrosted (in the microwave) frozen spinach, ricotta cheese, parmesan cheese and eggs. Preheat your oven to 350 F. 

Pour a small amount of jarred spaghetti sauce to the bottom of a 9″ x 13” pan. 

Place 3 lasagna noodles on top. (This photo is from layer number 2, that is why the cheese is showing!)

Scoop ⅓ of the spinach mixture on top of the noodles. 

Pour about ⅓ of the spaghetti sauce on top of the spinach mixture. Sprinkle with parmesan cheese and mozzarella cheese. 

Repeat the layers 2 more times. Cover with aluminum foil. Cook at 350 degrees for 45 min, remove foil, and cook for another 15 minutes. 

Let sit for 10 min before serving.  Or, let cool and keep in the fridge to be reheated the next day. 

What’s on your “go-to” meal list?

For more of our “go-to” meals click the links below:

  • “Go-to Meals” – Your Plan B
  • Garlic Shrimp with Feta – A New “Go-To” Meal
  • “Go-To” Meals – Part 2
  • “Go-To” Summertime Meals

 

 

 

 

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Spinach Lasagna

Print Recipe

Simple vegetarian lasagna. Great reheated!

  • Author: Anna Lutz
  • Prep Time: 20 mins.
  • Cook Time: 60 mins.
  • Total Time: 80 mins.

Ingredients

1 package of frozen spinach

2 eggs

3/4 c ricotta cheese

1 5-6 oz. package of shredded parmesan cheese

1 8 oz. package of shredded mozzarella cheese

9 lasagna noodles

1.5 24-ounce jars (36 ounces total) of spaghetti sauce (I use Classico brand)

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven 350 degrees.
  2. Cook 9 lasagna noodles according to package.
  3. Combine thawed spinach, ricotta, eggs, 1/2 parmesan in a bowl.
  4. Coat bottom of pan with sauce.
  5. Place 3 lasagna noodles in bottom of pan.
  6. Spread 1/3 of spinach/ricotta mixture on noodles.
  7. Pour 1/3 of sauce on top of spinach mixture.
  8. Sprinkle mixture with parmesan and mozzarella cheese (about 1/3 of what is remaining)
  9. Repeat layers 2 more times.
  10. Cover with foil.
  11. Bake for 45 minutes. Remove foil. Bake 15 minutes more.

 

Did you make this recipe?

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Filed Under: Dinner, Family Feeding, Lunch, Recipes, Vegetarian, Weeknight Meals

Dreading School Lunch Packing? Tips for Getting the Job Done!

August 9, 2021 By Anna Lutz 2 Comments

August is here. Which means it’s back to school time in my house. This is a big year of transition for us! I have a child starting high school, one starting middle school, and one starting elementary school! Who planned this?!  As we make the milestone transitions, we’re also making the usual transitions from a summertime schedule to the a school schedule. 

Back to school means back to packing lunches.

And, with my youngest out of preschool, it means I have one more person to pack lunches for this school year. For me, packing lunches is a chore that I do not enjoy.  However, when I stick to these guidelines for myself, it can go a little easier: 

Tips for Keeping Lunch Packing Simple:

  1. Have the right equipment on hand.  Check out our post with some of our favorite lunch packing supplies. 
  2. Pack school lunches at night.  If I’m scrambling in the morning, the lunch packing seems harder, physically and mentally. When I’m cooking dinner or cleaning up the kitchen in the evening, I may start packing the lunches. I”ll lay out the lunch boxes and start to add the components. Combining these tasks can make lunch packing seem less daunting.
  3. Have a loose plan. It helps me when I know a dinner or two may also be packed in lunches and I keep a meal structure in my head when I’m getting lunches packed.  If you are dreading lunch packing as much as I am, we encourage you to check out our E-book: Your Ultimate Guide to Stress Free Lunch Packing. This easy to use ebook walks you through the steps to streamline your meal planning and lunch making.
  4. Pack the same things for everyone. A little tweak here and there is okay, but don’t pack 3 separate lunches. It’s okay if one child doesn’t love everything packed or even doesn’t eat it all. Remember, your feeding jobs and know exposure is an essential part of a child expanding their variety.
  5. Ask for help! Getting kids to help in an age appropriate way is how children can learn how to put together meals. This can be done without a side of diet culture. Check out our post Lunch Packing with Teens & Tweens. for the how-to’s of getting kids involved in lunch packing. 

Bonus Tip!

Pack your lunch when you’re packing your kids’ lunches. Are you headed into an office or working virtually from home? We’re hearing about and experiencing the demands on parents right now, juggling virtual work, school, and quarantines. As the caregiver, keeping yourself fueled is just as important and feeding your children. If you have a packed lunch ready to go to work or to pull out of your own refrigerator between your meetings, you are a step closer to fueling your day.

Are you looking for some ideas of what to pack?

Our Lunch Ebook includes a list of lunch packing ideas of mains and sides!

Also, Check out our posts with ideas of recipes that are great in lunch boxes!

  • What’s For Lunch? 
  • Make These Easy Black Beans
  • 3 Favorite Back to School Lunches 
  • 15 Minute Lentil Ragout

 

Filed Under: Family Feeding, Lunch

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