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Not even diehard foodies enjoy the time it takes to prepare food. There’s a reason that “prep cook” is an entire job that chefs pay someone else to do—it’s no fun, and people are willing to throw money at the problem! If you look at a cookbook, you’ll notice that the prep time has its own dedicated section, and it usually takes far longer than the cook time. And unlike baking a dish in the oven or sauteing something on the stove, you can’t just walk away from preparing food. It doesn’t happen unless you do it. You can, however, try some of these meal prep tips that will give you hours back every week.

Corbis

Corbis

Removing potato skin

Stop peeling your potatoes when they’re raw; the skin is the most stubborn when the potato is raw. Instead, as soon as your potatoes are boiled, throw them in extra cold water. When you remove them, just roll the potatoes in your hands, and the skin will come right off.

Image Source: Shutterstock

Image Source: Shutterstock

Peeling garlic

If your recipe calls for several garlic cloves, you’re facing a lot of peeling time. Try this: take the whole, intact head of garlic, place it with the fatter, rounder part down and the tips of the cloves up. Now smack your hand down on the top of it. This will shake the cloves loose. If you toss them all in a closed container, like Tupperware, and shake it with all of your might, most of the peel will come off.

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Chop and wash all your lettuce at once

Cutting, rinsing, and drying lettuce takes forever. So, first of all, if you don’t already have a salad strainer, it’s time to get one. Now, save tons of time by chopping and rinsing all of your lettuce for the week at once. That way, you only need to clean your strainer once, too.

Image Source: Shutterstock

Image Source: Shutterstock

Chop it all when the chopping board is out

Seriously; think of how much time you take cleaning the cutting board, any drying devices like salad spinners, and your knives each time you cut vegetables. If you already have these devices out, take a look in your fridge, and ask yourself if there is anything else you should be chopping for this week.

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Keep these veggies diced always

Almost any type of soup you could possibly want to make will call for all or some of these: diced onions, carrots, garlic, and celery. Almost any pasta sauce you could want to make will call for diced onions and garlic. Keep these diced up, in Tupperware and in the freezer.