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18 Easy Breakfast Recipes That Are Ready in 15 Minutes

By : | 0 Comments | On : 03/07/2026 | Category : breakfast

πŸŒ… Breakfast Β· April 2026

18 Easy Breakfast Recipes That Are Ready in 15 Minutes

Breakfast does not need to take 45 minutes or require a culinary degree. These 18 recipes prove it.

18Recipes
≀15Minutes
~$1Per Serving
100%Worth Waking For
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Written by Moiz Dotani β€” Founder, Food Recipes Deal

Home cook and budget food blogger. Every recipe in this guide has been personally cooked, tasted, and cost-calculated in a real kitchen. No theoretical advice β€” only what actually works.

🍳 10+ Years Home Cooking βœ… All Recipes Tested πŸ“… April 2026 πŸ’° Budget-First Approach

Most people treat breakfast as the meal they eat standing over the sink while checking their phone before running out the door. The food is an afterthought β€” a handful of cereal, a piece of toast grabbed on the way, or nothing at all until the hunger becomes distracting at 10am.

This guide is not going to tell you that breakfast is the most important meal of the day. What it will tell you is that a breakfast with genuine protein and fibre β€” one that takes 10 to 15 minutes to make β€” changes the quality of your entire morning. You think more clearly, you are not raiding the biscuit tin by 10:30, and you make better food choices for the rest of the day.

These 18 recipes are all achievable on a weekday morning. None requires more than 15 minutes. Several can be prepared the night before. All of them taste like food worth eating.

All 18 Recipes

1. Scrambled Eggs on Sourdough

The fundamental breakfast. Three eggs scrambled slowly in butter over low heat, removed from the pan while still slightly wet, served on toasted sourdough with flaked salt. This is the breakfast that most people get wrong by using high heat β€” the result is rubbery, dry eggs. Low heat and patience produces something genuinely luxurious.

⏱ 7 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $1.20
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 tbsp unsalted butter
  • 2 tbsp milk or cream
  • Salt, white pepper
  • 2 slices sourdough bread
Instructions
  1. Whisk eggs with milk, salt, and white pepper.
  2. Melt butter in a non-stick pan over medium-low heat.
  3. Add eggs. Stir continuously with a spatula β€” slow, deliberate folds rather than scrambling.
  4. When eggs are just barely set β€” still slightly glossy and wet β€” remove from heat. Residual heat finishes them.
  5. Toast bread. Pile eggs on top. Add flaked salt and optional chives.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Remove the eggs from the heat 10 seconds before they look done. They continue cooking from residual heat and arrive at the plate perfectly set. Waiting until they look done in the pan produces eggs that are overcooked by the time they are eaten.

2. Overnight Oats (5 Variations)

The breakfast that requires zero morning effort. Assemble five jars on Sunday evening β€” rolled oats, Greek yoghurt, milk, chia seeds, and chosen toppings β€” refrigerate overnight, and grab one each morning. The oats absorb the liquid and soften into a creamy, pudding-like consistency. Protein, fibre, and complex carbohydrates in one container.

⏱ 5 min prep + overnight πŸ‘€ Serves 5 πŸ’° $0.55 each
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • Per jar: Β½ cup rolled oats
  • ΒΌ cup Greek yoghurt
  • Β½ cup milk (any kind)
  • 1 tsp chia seeds
  • 1 tsp honey
  • Variation 1 β€” Berry: mixed berries + vanilla
  • Variation 2 β€” Peanut Butter Banana: 1 tbsp PB + sliced banana
  • Variation 3 β€” Apple Cinnamon: diced apple + Β½ tsp cinnamon + raisins
  • Variation 4 β€” Chocolate: 1 tsp cocoa powder + banana + dark chocolate chips
  • Variation 5 β€” Mango Coconut: diced mango + 1 tbsp coconut flakes + lime zest
Instructions
  1. Combine oats, yoghurt, milk, chia seeds, and honey in each jar.
  2. Add variation toppings.
  3. Stir. Seal. Refrigerate overnight β€” minimum 6 hours.
  4. In the morning, stir and eat cold. Or microwave 60 seconds if preferred warm.
  5. Keeps 5 days refrigerated.
βœ“ Pro Tip: The ratio that produces the best texture: 1 part oats to 1 part liquid total (yoghurt counts as liquid). Too much liquid produces runny oats; too little produces dense, chewy oats. This ratio is the foundation β€” adjust toppings freely.

3. Avocado Toast with Poached Egg

The dish that became a cultural shorthand for a certain kind of lifestyle β€” but underneath the jokes, it is genuinely excellent food. Creamy avocado with lemon and salt on toasted whole grain bread, topped with a soft-poached egg. The runny yolk breaks over the avocado and creates a second sauce. High in healthy fats, protein, and fibre.

⏱ 10 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $1.80
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 1 ripe avocado
  • 2 slices whole grain bread
  • 2 eggs
  • Lemon juice, salt, pepper, chilli flakes
  • 1 tbsp white vinegar (for poaching)
Instructions
  1. Bring a small pan of water to a gentle simmer. Add vinegar.
  2. Crack each egg into a small cup. Create a gentle swirl in the water. Slide egg in. Poach 3 minutes for runny yolk.
  3. Toast bread. Mash avocado with lemon juice, salt, and pepper.
  4. Spread avocado on toast. Top with poached egg.
  5. Season with chilli flakes and extra salt.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Fresh eggs poach significantly better than older ones β€” the white holds together tightly around the yolk. If your eggs are more than 10 days old, add an extra tablespoon of vinegar to the poaching water to help the whites coagulate faster.

4. Greek Yoghurt Parfait

Layers of full-fat Greek yoghurt, granola, and fresh fruit in a glass β€” assembled in five minutes with zero cooking. Greek yoghurt has nearly double the protein of regular yoghurt. Full-fat provides satiety-inducing healthy fats. This is one of the most nutritionally complete five-minute breakfasts possible.

⏱ 5 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $1.40
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • ΒΎ cup full-fat Greek yoghurt
  • ΒΌ cup granola
  • Β½ cup mixed fresh or frozen fruit
  • 1 tsp honey
  • Optional: chopped nuts, seeds
Instructions
  1. Spoon half the yoghurt into a glass or bowl.
  2. Add half the granola.
  3. Add half the fruit.
  4. Repeat layers.
  5. Drizzle honey over the top. Add nuts or seeds if using.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Use full-fat Greek yoghurt β€” the fat is what makes this breakfast keep you full until lunch. Low-fat yoghurt has a thinner texture and less satiety per serving. The additional calories from fat are entirely justified by the 3–4 hours of fullness they provide.

5. Banana Peanut Butter Smoothie

One frozen banana, two tablespoons of natural peanut butter, one cup of milk, a handful of oats, and a pinch of cinnamon β€” blended until completely smooth. This breakfast in a glass delivers protein, healthy fats, complex carbohydrates, and natural sugars for immediate and sustained energy. One of the most complete fast breakfasts imaginable.

⏱ 4 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $0.90
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 1 frozen banana
  • 2 tbsp natural peanut butter
  • 1 cup milk or oat milk
  • ΒΌ cup rolled oats
  • Pinch of cinnamon
  • Optional: 1 tbsp honey, ice
Instructions
  1. Freeze bananas when they are very ripe β€” peel and freeze in bags.
  2. Add all ingredients to a blender.
  3. Blend on high for 45 seconds until completely smooth.
  4. Drink immediately or refrigerate up to 12 hours.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Frozen banana is the key ingredient β€” it provides natural sweetness, a thick and creamy texture, and coldness without ice. Fresh banana produces a less smooth, less cold, less sweet result. Keep a bag of peeled ripe bananas in the freezer at all times.

6. One-Pan Shakshuka (Breakfast Version)

A smaller-portion version of the dinner classic β€” two to three eggs poached in a simple spiced tomato sauce, served from a single small pan with bread. This is the weekend breakfast that feels like you have gone to a proper cafΓ© without leaving the house.

⏱ 20 min πŸ‘€ Serves 2 πŸ’° $1.30
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 can (400g) diced tomatoes (use half)
  • 1 small onion, diced
  • 3 garlic cloves
  • Β½ tsp cumin, Β½ tsp paprika, pinch of chilli
  • Olive oil, salt, feta, crusty bread
Instructions
  1. SautΓ© onion in oil 4 minutes. Add garlic and spices, 30 seconds.
  2. Add half a can of tomatoes. Simmer 8 minutes until thick. Season.
  3. Make 3 wells. Crack an egg into each.
  4. Cover, cook 5 minutes until whites set.
  5. Top with feta. Serve from pan with bread.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Store the remaining half can of tomatoes covered in the fridge β€” it is the base of tonight’s pasta sauce, tomorrow morning’s eggs, or next week’s soup. Canned tomatoes keep 4 days refrigerated once opened.

7. Whole Wheat Pancakes

Pancakes made with whole wheat flour instead of plain flour β€” a straightforward swap that adds fibre and nutrition without changing the flavour or texture appreciably. These are genuinely fluffy, genuinely satisfying, and genuinely achievable in fifteen minutes on a weekend morning.

⏱ 15 min πŸ‘€ Serves 2 πŸ’° $0.80
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 1 cup whole wheat flour
  • 1 tbsp baking powder
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • Pinch of salt
  • 1 cup milk
  • 1 egg
  • 2 tbsp melted butter or oil
Instructions
  1. Whisk dry ingredients together in a bowl.
  2. Whisk wet ingredients in a separate bowl.
  3. Combine wet into dry β€” stir until just combined. Lumps are fine and expected.
  4. Heat a non-stick pan over medium. Lightly grease.
  5. Pour ΒΌ cup batter per pancake. Cook until bubbles form on surface β€” flip. Cook 1 minute more.
  6. Serve with maple syrup and fruit.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Do not overmix β€” overmixed pancake batter develops gluten and produces dense, rubbery pancakes instead of light and fluffy ones. Stir until the dry ingredients are just incorporated. Visible lumps are correct and will cook out.

8. Baked Egg Cups (Meal Prep)

Six egg cups baked in a muffin tin β€” each one a mini frittata with vegetables, cheese, and herbs. Make a batch on Sunday and reheat one or two each morning in 30 seconds. The fastest possible hot breakfast on a weekday. Each cup provides approximately 8 grams of protein.

⏱ 22 min πŸ‘€ Serves 6 cups πŸ’° $0.30 each
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 6 large eggs
  • ΒΌ cup milk
  • Β½ cup diced vegetables (any combination)
  • ΒΌ cup shredded cheese
  • Salt, pepper, herbs
  • Cooking spray
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 180Β°C. Grease a 6-cup muffin tin generously.
  2. Divide diced vegetables among cups.
  3. Whisk eggs with milk, salt, pepper, herbs.
  4. Pour egg mixture over vegetables, filling each cup ΒΎ full.
  5. Top with cheese.
  6. Bake 18–20 minutes until set and lightly golden.
  7. Cool in tin 5 minutes before removing. Refrigerate up to 4 days.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Grease the muffin tin very generously β€” egg cups that stick are one of the more frustrating kitchen experiences. Alternatively, line each cup with a small square of parchment paper. They slide out perfectly every time and cleanup takes 30 seconds.

9. Porridge with Toppings Three Ways

Steel-cut or rolled oats cooked in milk with a pinch of salt β€” the foundation breakfast of the British Isles, Scandinavia, and much of the world for good reason. Nutritionally excellent, extremely cheap, deeply warming, and endlessly variable through toppings. Three topping combinations that transform the same bowl into three different breakfasts.

⏱ 8 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $0.45
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • Β½ cup rolled oats (or ΒΌ cup steel-cut oats)
  • 1 cup milk or water
  • Pinch of salt
  • Topping 1 β€” Classic: banana slices + honey + walnuts
  • Topping 2 β€” Savoury: fried egg + soy sauce + sesame oil + spring onion
  • Topping 3 β€” Berry Compote: frozen berries microwaved with honey until jammy + Greek yoghurt
Instructions
  1. Combine oats, milk, and salt in a small saucepan.
  2. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer 5 minutes, stirring occasionally.
  3. Pour into bowl. Add chosen toppings immediately.
  4. For savoury version: top with a fried egg and season with soy sauce.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Savoury porridge is the most underrated breakfast option. Cooked oats in broth instead of milk, topped with a fried egg and soy sauce, tastes nothing like sweet porridge β€” it is a completely different meal that is genuinely filling and deeply satisfying.

10. Chia Pudding (3-Minute Prep)

Chia seeds soaked overnight in coconut milk with vanilla and a touch of honey β€” they absorb the liquid and transform into a thick, creamy pudding with a subtle texture. Loaded with omega-3 fatty acids, fibre, and plant-based protein. The easiest overnight breakfast in existence.

⏱ 3 min prep + overnight πŸ‘€ Serves 2 πŸ’° $0.80
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • ΒΌ cup chia seeds
  • 1 cup coconut milk or almond milk
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2 tsp honey or maple syrup
  • Toppings: mango, kiwi, berries, granola
Instructions
  1. Combine chia seeds, milk, vanilla, and sweetener in a jar.
  2. Stir thoroughly. Wait 10 minutes and stir again to break up any clumps.
  3. Cover and refrigerate overnight.
  4. In the morning, top with fruit and granola.
  5. Keeps 5 days refrigerated.
βœ“ Pro Tip: The second stir β€” 10 minutes after the first β€” is essential. Chia seeds clump together in clusters as they begin absorbing liquid. Breaking these clusters apart produces a smooth, even pudding. Skip the second stir and the pudding has an uneven, slightly lumpy texture.

11. Egg and Vegetable Omelette

Three eggs with whatever vegetables are available β€” capsicum, mushrooms, spinach, onion β€” folded into an omelette in a single pan. The technique matters: medium heat, no colour on the egg surface, and a fold rather than a scramble. A properly made omelette is one of the most elegant things you can make in under 10 minutes.

⏱ 8 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $0.90
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 3 large eggs
  • ΒΌ cup diced vegetables of choice
  • 2 tbsp shredded cheese
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • Salt, pepper, fresh herbs
Instructions
  1. Whisk eggs with salt and pepper β€” 30 vigorous seconds for a lighter result.
  2. SautΓ© vegetables briefly in butter. Remove and set aside.
  3. In the same pan over medium heat, add a little more butter.
  4. Pour in eggs. Immediately shake pan gently and stir slowly with spatula.
  5. When surface is barely set, add vegetables and cheese to one half.
  6. Fold other half over. Slide onto plate.
βœ“ Pro Tip: An omelette should have no browning on the outside β€” that is a sign of too-high heat. The surface should be set but pale, and the inside should still be slightly creamy. Medium heat and constant gentle movement achieves this. High heat produces a firm, rubbery, browned result.

12. Peanut Butter on Whole Grain Toast

Two slices of whole grain bread toasted to golden, spread generously with natural peanut butter and topped with sliced banana and a drizzle of honey. This is not a compromise breakfast β€” it is complete nutrition in three minutes. Complex carbohydrates, protein, healthy fats, natural sugar, and potassium from the banana.

⏱ 3 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $0.70
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 2 slices whole grain bread
  • 2 tbsp natural peanut butter
  • Β½ banana, sliced
  • Drizzle of honey
  • Optional: chia seeds, cinnamon
Instructions
  1. Toast bread until golden.
  2. Spread peanut butter generously on each slice.
  3. Top with banana slices.
  4. Drizzle honey. Add chia seeds and cinnamon if using.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Natural peanut butter β€” the kind where the only ingredient is peanuts β€” has more protein and fewer additives than processed peanut butter. It separates in the jar (oil rises to the top) and needs stirring β€” store it upside down between uses to minimise this.

13. French Toast

Thick slices of bread soaked in a spiced egg and milk custard and pan-fried until golden and caramelised. French toast is arguably the best use of slightly stale bread in existence β€” the staleness actually improves the absorption of the custard. Serve with maple syrup and fresh berries.

⏱ 12 min πŸ‘€ Serves 2 πŸ’° $0.80
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 4 thick slices bread (slightly stale is ideal)
  • 2 eggs
  • ΒΌ cup milk
  • Β½ tsp cinnamon
  • Β½ tsp vanilla
  • 1 tsp sugar
  • Butter for frying
  • Maple syrup and berries to serve
Instructions
  1. Whisk eggs, milk, cinnamon, vanilla, and sugar.
  2. Dip bread slices in mixture β€” let each side soak for 20 seconds.
  3. Melt butter in pan over medium heat.
  4. Cook bread 2–3 minutes per side until deeply golden.
  5. Serve immediately with maple syrup and fruit.
βœ“ Pro Tip: The bread should soak in the custard long enough to absorb it β€” 20 seconds per side for fresh bread, 30 seconds for stale. Under-soaked French toast has a raw egg flavour at the centre; properly soaked produces a custardy, rich interior.

14. Banana Oat Pancakes (2 Ingredients)

One ripe banana mashed with two eggs β€” the entire batter, with nothing else required. Pan-fried into small pancakes that are surprisingly satisfying and genuinely good. No flour, no sugar, no dairy. Ready in ten minutes. The ultimate minimal-effort minimal-ingredient breakfast.

⏱ 10 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $0.60
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 1 very ripe banana
  • 2 eggs
  • Optional: pinch of cinnamon, ΒΌ tsp vanilla, dark chocolate chips
Instructions
  1. Mash banana completely until smooth.
  2. Add eggs and optional ingredients. Mix well.
  3. Heat non-stick pan over medium-low. Add a little oil or cooking spray.
  4. Pour small circles of batter β€” about 2 tablespoons each.
  5. Cook 2 minutes until edges set and bubbles form. Flip carefully.
  6. Cook 1–2 minutes more. Serve with honey.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Make the pancakes small β€” about the size of a large cookie. The two-ingredient batter is more delicate than regular pancake batter and larger pancakes break during flipping. Small pancakes flip cleanly and cook through more evenly.

15. Muesli with Milk and Fruit

Store-bought or homemade muesli β€” rolled oats, nuts, dried fruit, and seeds β€” served in cold milk with fresh fruit. The most effortless nutritious breakfast available after overnight oats. No cooking. No preparation beyond pouring. High in fibre, iron, and complex carbohydrates.

⏱ 3 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $0.70
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • Β½ cup muesli (store-bought or homemade)
  • ΒΎ cup cold milk
  • Fresh fruit to top (banana, berries, or apple)
  • Optional drizzle of honey
Instructions
  1. Pour muesli into bowl.
  2. Add cold milk.
  3. Top with fresh fruit and optional honey.
  4. Allow to sit 2–3 minutes for oats to soften slightly before eating.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Homemade muesli β€” oats, almonds, walnuts, dried cranberries, pumpkin seeds, and desiccated coconut mixed together β€” costs a fraction of branded muesli and keeps for 3 weeks in an airtight container. Mix a large batch once and it becomes effortless for weeks.

16. Savory Oat Congee

Rolled oats cooked in chicken broth instead of milk until creamy, then topped with a soft-boiled egg, spring onion, sesame oil, and soy sauce. This is the breakfast that broadens the definition of what oats can be. Deeply warming, deeply savoury, and completely unlike any sweet breakfast. One of the most underrated budget breakfasts.

⏱ 10 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $0.45
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • Β½ cup rolled oats
  • 1.5 cups chicken broth
  • 1 soft-boiled egg
  • Spring onion, sliced
  • 1 tsp soy sauce, Β½ tsp sesame oil
  • Chilli flakes
Instructions
  1. Bring broth to a boil. Add oats.
  2. Simmer 5–6 minutes, stirring, until thick and creamy.
  3. Pour into bowl.
  4. Top with halved soft-boiled egg, spring onion, soy sauce, sesame oil, and chilli.
βœ“ Pro Tip: This congee keeps in a thermos for 4–5 hours β€” make it at home and eat it at work as a warming mid-morning meal if breakfast is not possible before leaving the house.

17. Smoked Salmon Bagel

A toasted bagel with cream cheese, smoked salmon, capers, thinly sliced red onion, and fresh dill. This is the breakfast that costs $14 at a cafΓ© and $2.80 at home. It takes five minutes, requires zero cooking, and is one of the most luxurious breakfast experiences imaginable β€” the contrast of warm toasted bagel, cold cream cheese, and silky salmon is genuinely exceptional.

⏱ 5 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $2.80
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • 1 bagel, split and toasted
  • 2 tbsp cream cheese
  • 50g smoked salmon
  • 1 tbsp capers
  • 2–3 thin slices red onion
  • Fresh dill, lemon wedge
Instructions
  1. Toast bagel halves.
  2. Spread cream cheese generously on both halves.
  3. Layer smoked salmon.
  4. Top with capers, red onion, and dill.
  5. Squeeze lemon over the top. Eat immediately.
βœ“ Pro Tip: The red onion should be sliced as thinly as possible β€” use a mandoline or the sharpest knife you have. Thick red onion overpowers the delicate salmon. Paper-thin slices contribute a gentle sharpness that complements it perfectly.

18. Cottage Cheese with Fruit and Seeds

A bowl of full-fat cottage cheese β€” one of the highest-protein, lowest-cost dairy foods available β€” topped with mixed berries or sliced fruit, a drizzle of honey, and a tablespoon of mixed seeds. Around 25 grams of protein per serving at minimal cost. One of the most underrated high-protein breakfasts.

⏱ 4 min πŸ‘€ Serves 1 πŸ’° $1.10
Ingredients / Cost Breakdown
  • ΒΎ cup full-fat cottage cheese
  • Β½ cup berries or sliced fruit
  • 1 tbsp mixed seeds (pumpkin, sunflower, chia)
  • 1 tsp honey
  • Optional: pinch of cinnamon
Instructions
  1. Spoon cottage cheese into a bowl.
  2. Top with fruit, seeds, and honey.
  3. Add cinnamon if using.
  4. Eat immediately.
βœ“ Pro Tip: Blend cottage cheese with a stick blender for 30 seconds if the texture bothers you β€” it becomes completely smooth and creamy, similar to ricotta, and is far more appealing to people who find the natural lumpy texture off-putting.
πŸ’‘

Frequently Asked Questions

Are budget meals actually nutritious?

Yes β€” and many of the most nutritionally dense foods are among the cheapest available. Lentils, beans, eggs, oats, seasonal vegetables, and whole grains provide outstanding nutrition at very low cost. The correlation between food price and nutritional quality is weak. The correlation between planning and nutritional quality is strong.

How do I make cheap food taste good?

Three principles: season at every stage of cooking (not just at the end), build flavour through browning and caramelisation (high heat, patience, do not stir too soon), and use acid at the end of every savoury dish β€” a squeeze of lemon or a splash of vinegar brightens flavour more effectively than any additional spice.

What are the cheapest protein sources for dinner?

In order of cost per gram of protein: dried lentils and beans, eggs, canned tuna, chicken drumsticks and thighs, and ground beef. Dried lentils at $2 per bag provide approximately 25 grams of protein per serving at around 15 cents each β€” the most economical complete protein source available.

Can I save money by cooking in bulk?

Consistently yes. Bulk cooking reduces cost per serving by 30–50% on average through more efficient use of ingredients, less food waste, and the elimination of convenience purchases made when nothing is prepared. Cooking a double portion of every dinner produces ready-made lunches for the following day at zero additional cost.

How do I reduce food waste to save money?

Plan meals before shopping. Use a written grocery list and stick to it. Check what needs to be used before planning the next shop. Store food correctly. Learn to use vegetable scraps and meat bones for broth. Freeze anything that will not be used within two days. These habits combined typically reduce household food waste β€” and the associated cost β€” by 40–60%.

More Budget Cooking Inspiration

Food Recipes Deal publishes new kitchen-tested, budget-focused recipes and guides every week. Real food, real savings, real kitchens.

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Written and tested by Moiz Dotani Β· Food Recipes Deal Β· foodrecipesdeal.com Β· April 2026

Cost estimates approximate based on average supermarket prices. Content is 100% original.

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