Spring is one of those in-between seasons that can feel a little tricky in the kitchen. Here are my best tips for simplifying your spring meal planning and making dinner come together with less stress and more intention.

We’re coming out of hearty winter meals, craving something fresh and light… but the garden isn’t quite producing yet. If you’ve ever stood in your kitchen this time of year wondering what to cook, you’re not alone.
The good news? With a simple shift in how you approach your meals, spring can actually become one of the easiest seasons to cook from scratch.
Here’s how to simplify your spring meal planning and make dinner come together with less stress and more intention.
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Quick Look at This Post
- ✅ Topic: Spring Meal Planning & Seasonal Cooking
- 🕒 Time to Implement: ~30 minutes (pantry check + simple plan)
- 👪 Best For: Busy families, from-scratch cooks, homesteaders
- 🥄 Focus: Pantry meals + early spring ingredients
- ❄️ Meal Prep Friendly: Yes – great for batch cooking (soups, egg bites, leftovers).
- 📖 Seasonal Foods: Eggs, herbs, asparagus, greens, pantry staples.
- ⭐ Why You’ll Love It: Simplifies dinner, reduces food waste, saves money, and makes seasonal cooking feel doable.
- 👩🍳 Tip: Choose 3 meals each week using what you already have before buying more groceries.
Why Spring Meal Planning Feels So Hard
Early spring is what I like to call a “shoulder season.”
- Your pantry is still full of preserved foods and storage crops
- Your garden isn’t quite ready to harvest
- And yet… you’re craving fresh, lighter meals
That tension often leads to decision fatigue or the temptation to just grab everything from the grocery store, whether it’s in season or not.
But instead of fighting that tension, we can work with it.
Start With What You Already Have

Before planning a single meal, take inventory of your pantry, freezer, and root storage.
Look for items like winter squash or root vegetables that need to be used up, frozen vegetables and meats, canned goods and preserved foods.
Spring is the perfect time to intentionally use these up. Not only does this reduce waste, but it also makes room for the upcoming harvest season.
👉 If you need help preserving or planning ahead for future seasons, be sure to grab my book, Everything Worth Preserving. Now is a great time to grab it so you can plan your garden season based on what you want to preserve!
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Pair Pantry Staples With Fresh Spring Flavors

Even if your garden isn’t fully producing yet, there are small ways to bring freshness into your meals.
Think of spring cooking as a blend of winter and fresh:
- Roasted potatoes topped with fresh chives
- Winter squash paired with garlic and herbs
- Eggs combined with early greens or preserved veggies
A handful of fresh herbs can completely transform a meal. This is where seasonal cooking becomes simple. You’re not starting from scratch, you’re just enhancing what you already have.
Use Eggs as Your Springtime Workhorse

If you have chickens (or access to fresh eggs), spring usually means one thing: Egg abundance.
This is the time to lean into simple, protein-rich meals:
- Scrambles with leftover vegetables
- Breakfast burritos or sandwiches
- Egg bites (perfect for meal prep)
- Frittatas or quiche (check out this springtime morel and asparagus quiche recipe)
Build Simple, Repeatable Spring Meals

You don’t need a brand-new meal plan every week. Instead, focus on a few simple meal types you can rotate:
Your Spring Meal Framework:
- A hearty soup using pantry vegetables (I love this Creamy Delicata Squash Soup)
- Roasted vegetables + a protein
- Egg-based meals for breakfast or dinner
- Homemade pizza with seasonal toppings (my chicken alfredo pizza recipe is on repeat – just add in whatever produce is in season!)
- Big salads as greens become available
This basic approach keeps things flexible without becoming overwhelming.
Use Soup to Clean Out the Pantry

Soup is one of the easiest ways to use up odds and ends. Pictured above is my humble old-fashioned ham and bean soup recipe. The beauty of a soup recipe is that it’s totally adaptable to whatever you have on hand.
It works especially well for:
- Slightly soft potatoes or carrots
- Extra squash
- Leftover meats
- Frozen vegetables
Embrace Simple Seasonal Favorites
Each season comes with its own rhythm and its own favorite meals. Instead of reinventing the wheel, create a small rotation of meals your family loves and revisit them each spring.
Then adjust based on what’s available.
This is how you find recipes your family loves and wants to eat again and again, and build a sustainable, from-scratch kitchen rhythm.
Reduce Decision Fatigue (This Is the Big One)
Plated By Season Magazine

Want more from-scratch meal inspiration?
Sign up for my quarterly seasonal print magazine, Plated By Season. This magazine is designed to help you get real food on the table without stress or complicated planning.
Each issue walks you through from-scratch, seasonal meals that come together in about 30 minutes or less, using ingredients you can grow, preserve, or keep stocked in your pantry. No rigid meal plans. No spreadsheets. Just practical, flexible recipes that actually work in real life.
If you want to cook with the seasons, simplify dinnertime, and build confidence in your from-scratch kitchen, Plated By Season was made for you. Grab instant access to the digital magazine now (plus a bonus video vault with over 130 bite-sized lessons), and await the quarterly delivery of your print magazine.
A Simple Spring Meal Planning Challenge
If you’re not sure where to start, try this:
👉 This week, choose 3 meals that use what you already have.
Maybe you only need to buy one or two ingredients or maybe you don’t need to shop at all! Either way, you’ll save money, reduce waste and simplify your cooking.
Spring doesn’t have to feel like an awkward gap between seasons. When you lean into what you already have and gently layer in fresh, seasonal ingredients, it becomes one of the most freeing times in the kitchen.
Simple meals. Less waste. More intention. And that’s really what from-scratch living is all about.







