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Week of Meals for One: Meal Prep for You and Your Dog Using the Same Ingredients

Solo meal prep has a reputation for being sad — sad portions, sad Tupperware, sad Sunday afternoons spent making five identical chicken bowls.

But here’s the thing: when there’s a dog in the house, meal prep suddenly has an audience. An enthusiastic one. One that will absolutely supervise every single step from approximately three inches away.

This is a full week of meals for one — real, varied, satisfying human food — paired with a complete dog food meal prep that runs alongside it.

The magic is in the overlap. Cooking a batch of chicken breast? The dog gets some too. Roasting sweet potatoes? Save a portion. Rice on the stove? Already done.

By the end of one prep session, both the human and the dog are sorted for the week. That’s efficiency. 🙂

Here’s exactly how to do it.

The Weekly Meal Plan: Human + Dog, Prepped Together

The week is built around five core batch-cook ingredients that appear in both human and dog meals. This cuts prep time dramatically and means one shopping trip covers everything.

The five shared ingredients:

  • Chicken breast — cooked plain, then seasoned or sauced for human dishes
  • Brown rice — a staple base for both
  • Sweet potato — roasted in bulk, used across multiple meals
  • Eggs — quick human protein; occasional dog addition
  • Green beans — steamed batch used in human sides and dog bowls

Everything else is human-only additions (seasoning, sauces, cheese, bread, etc.) that get added after the dog’s portion is set aside. That’s the golden rule of cooking for both: portion the dog’s share first, then season the rest.

Monday — Chicken Rice Bowl (Human) + Chicken & Rice Dog Bowl

Monday — Chicken Rice Bowl
Monday
Chicken Rice Bowl Day High-protein for you • Base meal for your dog all week
🧑 Your Plate
🍗 Shared ingredient: Chicken + Brown Rice
Chicken Rice Bowl

Seasoned chicken breast over brown rice with roasted sweet potato and sautéed greens — hearty and balanced, takes about 5 minutes to assemble from prepped components.

  • Chicken breast (seasoned, baked or simmered)
  • Brown rice
  • Roasted sweet potato
  • Sautéed greens (spinach, kale, or bok choy)
  • Tahini or soy-ginger sauce (drizzle to finish)
🐾 Dog’s Bowl
✅ Dog-safe ingredients only
Chicken & Rice Dog Bowl

Plain boiled or baked chicken with brown rice and a spoonful of pumpkin — the base dog meal used throughout the week with slight variations.

  • Plain chicken breast (no seasoning — set aside before adding any)
  • Brown rice
  • 1 tbsp plain canned pumpkin (not pie filling)
⚠️ Set your dog’s portion aside before any seasoning, sauce, or oil touches the chicken.
🔪
Shared Prep Tip

Cook 6–8 chicken breasts at once — enough for the full human week and a full dog week. Bake at 375°F (190°C) for 25–30 minutes, or simmer in plain water for 20 minutes. Shred or slice after cooling. Store separately — plain batch for the dog, seasoned batch for you.

Tuesday — Sweet Potato & Black Bean Tacos (Human) + Sweet Potato Dog Bowl

Tuesday — Sweet Potato Day
Tuesday
Sweet Potato Day Meatless for you • Plant-powered for both
🧑 Your Plate
🍠 Shared ingredient: Sweet Potato
Sweet Potato & Black Bean Tacos

Roasted sweet potato cubes and black beans in warm corn tortillas — comfort food that doesn’t feel like a compromise.

  • Roasted sweet potato cubes
  • Black beans (canned, rinsed)
  • Corn tortillas
  • Avocado
  • Salsa + shredded cheese
  • Squeeze of lime
  • Seasoning: olive oil, cumin, smoked paprika
🐾 Dog’s Bowl
✅ Dog-safe ingredients only
Sweet Potato Dog Bowl

Plain roasted sweet potato with brown rice and a probiotic boost — simple, wholesome, and made from the same batch.

  • Plain roasted sweet potato (no seasoning, no oil — or lightest drizzle of olive oil only)
  • Brown rice
  • 1 tbsp plain Greek yogurt (probiotic boost)
🔪
Shared Prep Tip

Roast two full trays of sweet potato cubes at the start of the week. Use parchment-lined trays — half goes straight into a container for the dog (plain, before seasoning), the other half gets tossed with olive oil, cumin, and smoked paprika for your tacos.

Wednesday — Egg Fried Rice (Human) + Rice & Veggie Dog Bowl

Wednesday — Egg Fried Rice Day
Wednesday
Egg Fried Rice Day Quick & budget-friendly for you • Egg boost for your dog
🧑 Your Plate
🥚 Shared ingredient: Egg + Brown Rice
Egg Fried Rice

Classic egg fried rice — quick, cheap, and genuinely delicious. The “I don’t want to think about dinner” meal that always delivers.

  • Brown rice (pre-cooked from meal prep)
  • Eggs (scrambled directly in the wok)
  • Frozen peas and corn
  • Sesame oil + soy sauce
  • Whatever vegetables are in the fridge
🐾 Dog’s Bowl
✅ Dog-safe ingredients only
Rice & Veggie Dog Bowl

Plain scrambled egg with brown rice and steamed green beans — a favorite for dogs who are a little off their appetite mid-week.

  • Plain scrambled egg (no butter, no salt)
  • Brown rice
  • Steamed green beans (plain, no seasoning)
💡 Plain scrambled egg is an excellent protein and healthy fat boost — especially for dogs a little off their appetite.
🔪
Shared Prep Tip

Steam a full batch of green beans during the fried rice cook on Wednesday. They keep refrigerated for 4–5 days and work as a quick dog meal addition through the rest of the week — no extra cook time needed.

Thursday — Chicken Soup (Human) + Bone Broth Dog Bowl

Thursday — Chicken Soup Day
Thursday
Chicken Soup Day Cozy comfort for you • Bone broth bowl for your dog
🧑 Your Plate
🥕 Shared ingredient: Chicken + Carrot + Broth
Classic Chicken Soup

Simple, cozy chicken soup using already-cooked chicken — the soup that cures everything, including a mid-week slump.

  • Pre-cooked shredded chicken (from Monday’s batch)
  • Brown rice or noodles
  • Carrots + celery (chopped)
  • Low-sodium chicken broth
  • Garlic + onion
  • Seasoning: salt, pepper, thyme
💡 This is a great way to use up the last of the Monday chicken batch — soup hides any slightly dry pieces perfectly.
🐾 Dog’s Bowl
✅ Dog-safe ingredients only
Bone Broth Dog Bowl

A dog-safe version of the same soup — shredded chicken, brown rice, and chopped carrot in plain broth. Honestly still looks pretty appealing by human standards.

  • Low-sodium chicken or beef broth (no onion, no garlic)
  • Shredded plain chicken (from Monday’s batch)
  • Brown rice
  • Chopped carrot (plain, no seasoning)
⚠️ Separate the dog’s carrot portion before garlic and onion go into the human soup — both are toxic to dogs.
🔪
Shared Prep Tip

Batch-chop all carrots at once and divide into two portions before cooking. Dog’s share goes into the plain broth pot first — then add garlic and onion to the human soup pot. One chop, two pots, zero cross-contamination.

Friday — Buddha Bowl (Human) + Protein-Packed Dog Bowl

Friday — Buddha Bowl Day
Friday
Buddha Bowl Day Colorful feel-good bowl for you • Protein treat bowl for your dog
🧑 Your Plate
🍗 Shared ingredient: Chicken + Brown Rice + Peanut Butter
Buddha Bowl with Peanut Sauce

A big, colorful bowl that actually looks as good as it tastes — roasted sweet potato, a soft-boiled egg, crunchy veggies, and a drizzle of peanut sauce or lemon tahini. Friday deserves this.

  • Brown rice (base)
  • Roasted sweet potato (cubed)
  • Soft-boiled egg
  • Sliced cucumber
  • Shredded purple cabbage
  • Peanut sauce or lemon tahini dressing
💡 Roast the sweet potato in a large batch — half goes into your Buddha bowl, the other half gets set aside plain for the week ahead.
🐾 Dog’s Bowl
✅ Dog-safe ingredients only
Friday Protein Treat Bowl

Shredded chicken and brown rice with a spoonful of peanut butter stirred through and a few green bean pieces on top. Dogs are completely unreasonable about peanut butter — this is their Friday.

  • Shredded plain chicken
  • Brown rice
  • Xylitol-free peanut butter (1 small spoonful, stirred through)
  • Green beans (a few pieces, plain)
⚠️ Always check the peanut butter label — xylitol is toxic to dogs and hides in many “natural” or sugar-free brands. Plain peanut butter only.
🔪
Shared Prep Tip

Cook one pot of brown rice and one batch of shredded chicken for both bowls at the same time. Divide portions before any seasoning or dressing goes on — dog’s bowl stays plain, yours gets the sauce. Stir the peanut butter into the dog’s bowl last, right before serving.

Weekend (Saturday & Sunday) — Flexible Human Meals + Dog Meal Top-Up

Weekend — Flexible Meals & Dog Top-Up
Weekend
Flexible Meals & Dog Top-Up Use it up Saturday • Guilt-free Sunday • Dog gets a little extra
🧑 Your Plate

No recipe needed — just open the fridge and get creative with whatever prepped components are left.

🌯 Chicken salad wrap — shredded chicken, leftover veg, any sauce
🍳 Veggie omelette — eggs + whatever veg needs using up
🍚 Leftover fried rice — day-old rice works best
🥗 Simple grain bowl — base + protein + whatever’s left
🎉 You’ve earned this. The whole week is already prepped and accounted for. Order in, eat out, or do absolutely nothing in the kitchen — Sunday is officially guilt-free.
💡 Saturday’s job is to clear the fridge, not follow a recipe. Anything still in containers by Sunday night should be portioned and frozen before Monday’s fresh prep begins.
🐾 Dog’s Bowl
✅ Dog-safe ingredients only
🔄 2 days of prepped food still remaining
Weekend Top-Up Additions

The base meals are already prepped — just stir in one of these weekend additions to keep things interesting. Dogs notice variety more than we think.

  • Remaining prepped chicken + rice base (from the week)
  • Fresh bone broth drizzle (plain, no onion or garlic)
🥦 Steamed broccoli florets
plain, no seasoning
🎃 Plain pumpkin
1 spoonful, unsweetened
🍌 Mashed banana
small amount only
Pick one add-in
don’t mix all at once
⚠️ Introduce only one new add-in at a time — mixing multiple new foods at once makes it harder to spot any digestive reaction.
🗓️
End-of-Week Reset Tip

Sunday evening is prep-ahead time. Before the new week starts, check what’s left in the fridge, freeze any unused portions, and make a quick grocery list. Monday’s batch cook goes smoother when Sunday-you already did the thinking.

The Combined Weekly Shopping List

One trip. Everything for both.

Proteins:

  • 6–8 chicken breasts
  • 1 dozen eggs
  • 1 can black beans

Grains & Starches:

  • 2 cups dry brown rice
  • Corn tortillas
  • Low-sodium chicken or beef broth (2–3 cartons)

Vegetables:

  • 3–4 large sweet potatoes
  • 1 bag green beans
  • Carrots (1 bag)
  • Celery
  • Cucumber
  • Purple cabbage
  • Frozen peas and corn

Dog-Specific Additions:

  • 1 can plain pumpkin
  • Xylitol-free peanut butter
  • Plain Greek yogurt (also used in human meals)

Human-Only Additions:

  • Avocado, salsa, lime
  • Soy sauce, sesame oil, tahini
  • Garlic, onion, thyme (keep away from dog portions)
  • Cheese

How to Run the Prep Session (Both at Once)

The whole thing runs in about 90 minutes on Sunday. Here’s the sequence that makes it efficient:

  1. Start rice first — it takes longest; set and forget
  2. Get chicken in the oven — 25–30 minutes, hands-free
  3. Roast sweet potatoes — same oven, different tray; separate plain and seasoned portions before roasting
  4. Steam green beans while oven runs
  5. Scramble eggs for Wednesday’s dog portion (or prep fresh on the day)
  6. Portion dog meals into containers while chicken rests — 5 meal containers, labeled Mon–Fri
  7. Season and divide human components into separate storage

By the time the oven is done, everything is ready. The dog gets fed immediately from the first container, which is frankly a more enthusiastic response than most cooking gets. 🙂

Dog Meal Nutrition: What This Week Covers

This isn’t meant to replace a complete commercial dog food diet — it works best as a supplement or a short-term rotation for dogs that tolerate homemade food well. Always check with a vet before switching a dog to fully homemade meals long-term.

That said, this week of dog meals covers solid nutritional ground:

  • Protein — chicken breast, eggs, plain peanut butter
  • Complex carbohydrates — brown rice, sweet potato
  • Fiber & micronutrients — green beans, carrots, pumpkin
  • Healthy fats — olive oil (minimal), peanut butter, egg yolk
  • Probiotic support — plain Greek yogurt (if the dog tolerates dairy)

Portion guide by dog size:

  • Small dogs (under 20 lbs): ½ cup per meal, twice daily
  • Medium dogs (20–50 lbs): 1–1½ cups per meal, twice daily
  • Large dogs (50+ lbs): 2–2½ cups per meal, twice daily

Storage Guide

Human meals:

  • Cooked chicken, rice, and sweet potato: refrigerate up to 5 days
  • Assembled bowls and tacos: best built fresh from components; don’t pre-assemble
  • Soup: refrigerates well for 4–5 days; freezes for up to 3 months

Dog meals:

  • Portioned dog meal containers: refrigerate up to 4 days
  • Remaining portions: freeze in individual containers and thaw overnight as needed
  • Bone broth: refrigerate 4–5 days or freeze in ice cube trays for easy portioning

Quick Reference Guide

DayHuman MealDog MealShared Ingredient
MondayChicken Rice BowlChicken, Rice & PumpkinChicken, rice
TuesdaySweet Potato TacosSweet Potato & Yogurt BowlSweet potato
WednesdayEgg Fried RiceScrambled Egg & Rice BowlEggs, rice, green beans
ThursdayChicken SoupDog-Safe Broth BowlChicken, carrot, rice
FridayBuddha BowlPeanut Butter Chicken BowlChicken, rice, peanut butter
WeekendFlexible leftoversTop-up with fresh additionsWhatever’s left

Final Thoughts

A week of meals for one doesn’t have to mean boring, repetitive, or lonely. When there’s a dog involved, Sunday prep becomes a team effort — one party doing the actual cooking, one party doing quality control sniff-checks on everything. It’s a whole thing.

The real win here is the overlap. Cook once, eat well all week, and keep the dog fed and happy without buying expensive pre-made dog food or spending extra time on separate prep. Everyone eats well. Everyone wins.

Try it this Sunday. Pick up the shopping list, block out 90 minutes, and see how satisfying it is to stack up a fridge full of meals for two — one human, one very good dog. And if there’s a specific recipe from this week that the pup goes absolutely feral for, that’s basically a sign it needs to become a permanent part of the rotation. 🙂

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