Today I went to burger king for the first time in years. It was even worse than I remembered it. (had the vegetarian option, don’t know if it’s as bad with the meat burgers) Additionally it’s fucking expensive and not as quick as it used to be. So my question is why do some people go there regulary?
And meal prepping is 2 hours of your week every week, plus however long you have to work to pay for the ingredients, which is probably another 2 hours
You do not need to hover around a kitchen cooking for 2hrs to prep for the week. Hell throw a bunch of stuff in a crockpot and let it cook all day. That’s like a 20-30min commitment of actual work.
You are missing the point, it’s not “4.5 hours a week of work” vs “absolutely nothing”, it’s 4.5 hours of work vs however long to have to work to pay for the ingredients, plus the time to make the food. If I spend an hour meal prepping and it takes me an hour and a half to pay for the ingredients, eating out at lunch only costs me 2 additional hours of my time, not 4.5
I also don’t know what meal you are preparing where chopping veggies, searing meat, packaging and cleaning up afterwards only takes 20 minutes. Even making chili, which is the prototypical “throw everything in a pot” recipe takes me north of an hour when all is said and done
1.5hrs of work for 5 days of ingredients isn’t economical?
I understand that the math on this is not as simple as a lot of people make it out to be, but you’re not going to convince me that eating out for lunch every single day is even remotely comparable in cost to half-decent meal prepping.
I’m trying to point out that the premise is flawed because you are assuming there is no opportunity cost associated with time spent meal prepping at home. If I make $50/hr at work and wish I had more free time at home, then it’s a wash, and I’m just as well off getting subway every day
When did I ever say there was no opportunity cost? Show me.
$50/hr at work and eating fast food everyday? Is that what you think is happening? You think the average person doing this is pulling down almost 100k a year?
I was trying to say the cost savings of packing lunches is not absolute, and is dependent on the opportunity cost a person places on time spent at home cooking.
But I see now that you are just incapable of the critical thought necessary to deduce meaning beyond the concrete text placed in front of your eyes
Who said it was absolute? Who said anything like that? When did anyone disagree with that claim or say otherwise?
It’s not my fault you consider tilting at windmills a substitute for responding to people’s points. I try to keep on topic and give people the most generous interpretation of their arguments. You are just being myopic for sport.