This is what creating a Munchery meal kit is supposed to look like — if only we all had granite countertops and six burner stoves. Instead, my challenge was to see what it would be like for the below-average home cook to try out Munchery's new meal kits.
My kitchen is below-average to match my cooking skills. I have a gas stove, and no countertops other than the IKEA butcher blocks that I've installed in my kitchen. Without much cooking experience or a work space worthy of a professional chef, here's what it's like to try Munchery's meal kits.
The best thing about Munchery's meal kit is the delivery. At 5:30, a Munchery delivery person shows up at my office to give me an advance preview of the kit. It does need to be refrigerated, so I stick it in my work fridge until I head home. Since I live in an apartment where things would get stolen from the front steps in a heart beat, I haven't had a chance to try Blue Apron or Plated. Having an in-person delivery at my convenience is the best option for me.
Inside the Munchery bag, I have an order of Shaking Beef, a specialty from San Francisco chef Charles Phan's The Slanted Door restaurant. For dessert, Pascal Rigo has created a chocolate fondant inspired by La Boulangerie. Both dishes arrive in separate boxes, so I keep the fondant in the fridge while I start on the beef.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdTucked into my Munchery Bag is a schedule for the next three weeks with a magnet to hang it up. Also in the bag are some toothpicks, so I can 'Smile Pretty!' Both are nice touches. Unlike other meal prep kits, Munchery lets you know what's on the upcoming schedule so, if there aren't meals you like, you can make sure to squeeze in a trip to the grocery store.
I'm making Shaking Beef, a specialty dish from The Slanted Door, which includes beef, rice, vegetables, a special sauce, and an additional dipping sauce.
Inside the box, almost all of the ingredients are included. I have the main ingredients of beef, rice, and veggies. Also in smaller bundles are the oil, sauce, dipping sauce, and spices. The one thing I quickly realize I'm missing? The green watercress shown in the promo pictures.
I love that the veggies come pre-sliced, and these aren't just the discards. This is by far the biggest time saver in the box and still high-quality ingredients. Make sure you do have the scissors on hand to open all of the packets though. These aren't Ziploc baggies.
The meal kit comes with an instruction manual. Each dish is only 3 steps, although each step has a couple tasks within it. Each recipe will take between 10-15 minutes. For the Shaking Beef, it's a 15-minute cook time.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdThe first step is to open the rice and microwave it for two minutes. Some of the ingredients, like the rice, are pre-cooked. This step is simply reheating the rice in the microwave.
The beef comes raw (and has a hidden butter square included in its cooling pack). Since the Munchery meals are designed for two, the small amount is the perfect portion, without waste, for me and my boyfriend.
The beef is the main cooking portion of this meal. The beef cubes are fresh and not pre-marinated or spiced. With 15 minutes as a suggested cook time, we spend the first five minutes opening packets, microwaving rice, and spicing the beef.
The beef hits the pan to brown for seven minutes. Munchery included all the edible ingredients, including the oil for the pan. I did need to supply my own skillet and cookware for the rest of the steps. The meals are designed to be as easy as cooking over a campfire. If you have a skillet and some spare plates, this recipe would work so far.
11 minutes in, my fire alarm goes off. Oops. I know my stove runs hot, but we tried following the Munchery instructions precisely. Seven minutes on the stove turns out to be too long for the beef, and I'm stuck waving a towel in front of my fire alarm so it stops going off. To be fair, this also happens when I cook something like a frozen pizza, so it's likely not the Munchery meal kit, but my own stove. Regardless, I realize I should trust my own cooking skills and treat the recipe as a suggestion along the way.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdWith the fire alarm subdued, it's time to add the sauce, vegetable, and butter. The sliced vegetables prove to be a time-saver again. I love being able to dump them in the pan with the freshly cooked beef.
It again cooks quickly, but that's my stove's fault. My apartment smells delicious, and 20 minutes later, I have finished cooking my Shaking Beef.
The Shaking Beef doesn't plate as well as the photo, but that's expected for a home cook. For one, I'm missing the watercress that it's supposed to be served on so I'm missing the touch of green. Otherwise, I'd like to think I'm not too far off the recipe.
At the end of my cooking adventure, I had used a bowl for microwaving the rice, a plate to spice the beef, and a pan mix everything together. There's a small amount of trash from all the wrappers.
When it comes to taste, it doesn't even matter that my food (or my kitchen) doesn't look like it's supposed to. On my first bite, I can tell this is better than most things I've cooked at home. The rice, despite being microwaved, is soft and tasty. The vegetables are cooked to the perfect tenderness. The beef is a little bit tougher than I'd like, but that's a cooking error on our part. The key here is the flavors in the sauce. In all the meals I've cooked at home, this is levels above. For only taking 20 minutes (which included photo-taking and a fire alarm), I'm sold.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdOriginally, I was worried when I saw the portion size, but once the rice and veggies were added in, it turned out to be a full meal. If I didn't have someone to split it with, I'd be worried I would turn the meal into an over-sized dinner instead of keeping it for leftovers, but I had to save room for dessert..
Dinner was delectable, but I'm definitely a dessert person. My boyfriend though, has other ideas: "After all this, we have to cook dessert too?
Munchery has sent me a chocolate fondant recipe from La Boulange to try. In the packet is a strawberry compote, fresh strawberries, some sliced almonds, and two fondants for the base.
The strawberries are fresh, although the instructions don't advise me whether I should wash them or not. To be on the safe side, I give them a quick wash before dicing them. Helpfully, the step-by-step guide does tell me the difference between simply slicing off the top versus hulling a strawberry. Since this is a 10-minute recipe, I decide to go for the quick chop.
In a pan, I mix the compote mixture with the fresh berries and bring to a boil. This is the only cooking step in the recipe, aside from a quick 10 second zap of the fondant in the microwave.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdOnce both are done, I easily pour the strawberry compote onto the fondant and top with sliced almonds. Considering the butter, cocoa, almonds, strawberries, sugar, and flour I would have had to buy normally for this recipe, the cost and waste-savings are clear. It's $9 for a dessert for two, which is less than the bulk cost of the dry ingredients.
After zapping the fondant an extra three seconds in the microwave, I'm left with a warm gooey center paired with fresh strawberries. Each bite is mouthwatering, and the chocolate is warm. Any ingredient I've put in the microwave hasn't come out stale at all. Even though this has a 10 minute cook time, it takes us 7 minutes to go from unwrapping the box to a professional dessert.
If it were within my budget, I would definitely order a meal kit from Munchery again. For one, it works with my lifestyle. I can't wait have a subscription box delivered every week, but I'd also like to feel accomplished by creating my own food, not just placing take-out orders. It's a similar price point, but you do have to budget the cooking and cleaning time involved. The Munchery meal kit also brings out my love of cooking and just how much fun it can be. Yes, I may have had to wave my towel to get the fire alarm to stop going off, but that's a memory I can laugh at later. All is forgotten with the first bite.