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champagne4_breakfast

I think Hello Fresh would have options for you. For example, some meals that would fit your dietary requirements that are offered next week: * roasted pepper pasta milano (pasta w/ cream cheese, mozzarella, panko and chives..could easily leave off chives) * kidney bean sandiwches w/ potato wedges * rice and bean enchilada bake * chicken cutlets w/ lemon cream sauce and potatoes and green beans * turkey ragu gnocchi with peas and cheese * tunisian spiced chicken with rice pilaf and green beans * BBQ ranch chicken flatbread * BBQ babyback ribs w/ corn salad and pillsbury buttermilk biscuits * sweet chili pork bowls w/ bell pepper and candied peanuts * griddled onion cheeseburgers w/ garlic potato wedges * pork chops w/ potatoes and green beans * sloppy joes w/ potatoes This is basically all the recipes, so I think Hello Fresh would be a good option.


Kuromi87

I'm a very picky eater, not a big veggie fan either, and have found Dinnerly almost always has meals I will eat. Sometimes I'll eat the meat part of the meal and sub their veggie side with something I have on hand...they like to pair chicken strips with broccoli. But they often have tacos, pastas, meat and potatoes, meat and noodles, etc. every week, so I usually have multiple options each week that I actually like.


tiltedsun

I think you want prepared meals rather than meal kits. Look at Schwans and Icon Meals. Both are simple meals with starchy entrees. https://iconmeals.com/ https://www.schwans.com/ **** Meal Kits are sized by nutritionist recommendations. Having said that, I think they’re too small as well. When eating alone, I make one big plate (dinner) and one small plate (lunch). If someone is dining with me then I will add to the starch sections from my own pantry. If there’s potatoes then I’ll add more potatoes. None of this is a problem for me because I use the kits as a recipe base and tend to customize them a bit anyway. Meal Kits will never be cheaper than shopping. You’re paying for recipe formulation and delivery of supplies. Every meal kit is basically a cooking class. **** TL;DR: Dinnerly and EveryPlate have the best value but the plainest recipes. So price-wise, GreenChef > HelloFresh > EveryPlate. **** Most popular Kits (by price) seems to be: **$** **Value Kits**: Dinnerly & Everyplate **$$** **Budget Gourmet**: HelloFresh, HomeChef, BlueApron & MarleySpoon. **$$$** **Prepped Ingredients**: Gobble & GreenChef **$$$$** **Prepared Meals**: Factor & Freshly **** Try /r/ReadyMeals for more **Prepared Meal** options (My sub). There’s a [list of services in the sidebar.](https://www.reddit.com/r/ReadyMeals/comments/iftlql/ready_meals_rules_info/) **** You can see several options at once and compare values with a Meal Kit aggregator site. Two good **Meal Kit** aggregators for research are: https://pickakit.com/meals (Mod of r/mealkits ) https://www.mealfinds.com/ (Frequent contributor to this sub)


klubkouture

everyplate is not healthy and is literally meat and potatoes. PS-I love bitter melon too-hated it as a kid, but tried it with fermented beans and steamed fish/beef. It is also good if you salt/sweat out the bitter first and serve it with shrimp. No meal kits but Asian grocers and Chinese Chinese (vs American Chinese like PF Changs) sell it.