To meal plan for the week to make nutrition logging easier, you must stop logging meals as you eat them and instead use a '2-Block' system, which reduces your total weekly logging time to just 15 minutes. If you’ve ever tried to track your calories or macros, you know the soul-crushing routine. You cook a meal, pull out your phone, open the app, search for 'chicken breast,' scroll, select, weigh it, enter '172 grams,' then repeat for the rice, the broccoli, and the olive oil. You do this 3-5 times a day. It’s not just annoying; it’s a battle of willpower you are guaranteed to lose. No one sticks with that. It’s why 8 out of 10 people who start tracking quit within three weeks.
The problem isn’t your discipline. The problem is the method. Real-time logging creates constant decision fatigue and friction. The solution is to front-load the work. You do the thinking and logging once, then simply execute for the rest of the week. This is the 2-Block System. It’s built for simplicity and real-life adherence, not for fitness models with personal chefs. Here’s how it works:
This system immediately solves two of the biggest meal-planning failures: monotony and complexity. You're not eating the exact same thing for 7 straight days, but you also don't need to invent 21 unique meals for the week. It’s the perfect middle ground that makes consistent tracking not just possible, but easy.
Let’s be honest about the time you’re spending on logging. If you’re doing it meal-by-meal, the math is brutal. Let’s say it takes you a conservative 5 minutes to log a meal. If you eat 4 times a day (3 meals, 1 snack), that’s 20 minutes per day. Over a 7-day week, you’ve spent 140 minutes-over 2 hours-just typing food into your phone. Now, compare that to the 2-Block System.
Your total time commitment for the entire week is under 25 minutes. You just saved yourself nearly 2 hours. That's the 90% reduction we're talking about. This isn't a magic trick; it's about shifting from a high-effort daily task to a low-effort weekly system. The psychological win is even bigger. You eliminate daily decision fatigue. You no longer stand in front of the fridge wondering, “What can I eat that fits my macros?” You already know the answer. The decision is made. All you have to do is eat. This frees up mental energy you can use for your workout, your job, or your family, instead of wasting it on calculating the protein in a handful of almonds.
You have the system now. Build two blocks of meals, copy and paste them through the week, and save yourself hours. But here's the gap between knowing and doing: how do you build a meal block that actually hits *your* specific numbers, like 1,900 calories and 160 grams of protein? How do you find the right foods that you actually enjoy eating? Knowing the strategy is one thing, but having the right ingredients to execute it is another.
This is where you turn the concept into a concrete plan. Follow these four steps. The first time you do this, set aside 30 minutes on a Sunday. After that, it will become a 15-minute weekly ritual.
Before you can plan, you need targets. Forget complicated macro splits. You only need two numbers to start: your daily calorie goal and your daily protein goal.
For our example, let's use a 180 lb person aiming for 2,200 calories and 180g of protein.
You don't need endless variety; you need reliable options. 'Meal Legos' are your personal, pre-approved list of single-ingredient foods or simple meals that you can mix and match. Create a list of 5-7 options in each category with their nutrition info pre-logged.
This library of about 15-20 items becomes your toolkit. You're no longer staring at a database of a million foods, just your trusted few.
Now, use your 'Meal Legos' to build two distinct days of eating that hit your targets. This is like putting together a puzzle where you already have all the pieces.
Block A (Mon/Weds/Fri): ~2,210 Calories, 182g Protein
Block B (Tues/Thurs): ~2,190 Calories, 179g Protein
Enter these two full days into your nutrition app. You've now done 90% of the week's logging work.
This is the final, effortless step. On Monday morning, your food is already planned. On Tuesday morning, open your app, go to Monday's diary, and use the 'Copy to Today' function. On Wednesday, copy Monday's diary. It takes 10 seconds. If you deviate-say, you eat an apple-you only have to log that one item. The rest of the framework is already in place. This removes the 'all or nothing' mindset. A small change doesn't ruin the day's log; it's just a minor adjustment.
Setting up a new system requires front-loading effort, and it's crucial to know what to expect so you don't quit before it becomes automatic. The first week of the 2-Block System will feel different, and that's the point.
Week 1: The Foundation Phase. Your first planning session on Sunday might take you 30-45 minutes. You'll be looking up foods, building your 'Meal Lego' library, and arranging your blocks. It will feel like work. During the week, eating according to the plan will feel rigid. You're used to making food choices on the fly, and this structure will feel confining. That's the system overriding your old, ineffective habits. Your goal isn't perfection; it's 80-90% adherence. If you hit that, it’s a massive win.
Weeks 2-4: The Automation Phase. Your second Sunday planning session will be dramatically faster, likely under 15 minutes. You'll reuse meals from last week, maybe swapping one 'Lego' for another. The daily 'copy and paste' will become a 30-second habit. The feeling of rigidity will be replaced by a feeling of freedom. You'll experience the mental relief of not having to think about what to eat. You just look at the plan and execute. You'll start to see consistent results on the scale or in the mirror because you're finally hitting your numbers day after day.
Month 2 and Beyond: The Intuitive Phase. By now, the system is second nature. You can build a 'Block C' and 'Block D' for more variety in under 10 minutes. You'll have internalized the portion sizes of your go-to meals. You can look at a chicken breast and know it's about 200 grams without a scale. Logging is no longer a chore but a quick verification step. You can handle weekends and restaurant meals with confidence, knowing you have a solid structure to return to on Monday. This is when nutrition stops being a source of stress and becomes a tool you control.
The 2-Block system is a starting point. Once you're comfortable, create a Block C and D. You can then rotate them: A/B/C/D/A for the weekdays. You can also create 'swap-outs' within your Meal Lego library. For example, 200g of salmon can be swapped for 200g of steak for a similar protein and fat profile.
Don't let one unplanned meal derail your entire week. Use the 'best guess' method. If you go out for pizza, search for 'Domino's Pepperoni Pizza, 1 slice' in your app, log it, and move on. It won't be perfectly accurate, but it's better than logging nothing. The goal is to get back on plan with your next scheduled meal.
Yes. For the first month, a food scale is non-negotiable. Guessing portion sizes is why most people fail at tracking. A digital food scale costs about $15 and is the most important tool for nutritional accuracy. After a few months of consistent use, you will develop the skill to eyeball portions accurately.
Focus on foods that are easy to cook in bulk and hold up well in the fridge. Top choices include: chicken breast (baked or grilled), 93/7 ground beef or turkey, hard-boiled eggs, canned tuna or salmon, and Greek yogurt. For plant-based options, tofu, tempeh, and lentils are excellent.
After 4-6 weeks, you may need to adjust your numbers. If your weight loss has stalled, reduce your daily calories by 100-150. If you're trying to build muscle and your weight isn't slowly increasing, add 100-150 calories, primarily from carbs. Make one small change and hold it for 2 weeks to see how your body responds.
All content and media on Mofilo is created and published for informational purposes only. It is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or other qualified health provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition, including but not limited to eating disorders, nutritional deficiencies, injuries, or any other health concerns. If you think you may have a medical emergency or are experiencing symptoms of any health condition, call your doctor or emergency services immediately.