(Because you want dinner—not a second full-time job.)

Some people treat meal planning like a sport.
They love the charts. The prep. The laminated grocery lists.
You are not those people.

You just want to eat good food in your camper without:

  • Making 5 trips to the store

  • Running out of propane mid-meal

  • Or forgetting you already made tacos three nights this week

This guide is for you: the non-planner who still needs a plan.


🥫 1. Stock Your “Always Have It” List

You don’t need 20 recipes. You need 10 ingredients that do the heavy lifting.

Your core pantry MVPs:

  • Canned beans

  • Rice or pasta

  • Peanut butter

  • Boxed mac & cheese

  • Tortillas

  • Canned tomatoes

  • Eggs

  • Shredded cheese

  • Frozen veggies

  • A protein you trust (canned chicken, tuna, pre-cooked sausage)

If you’ve got these, you’ve got meals in waiting.


📅 2. Plan the Vibe, Not the Recipe

You don’t need a detailed meal chart. You need a loose framework.

Try this:

  • Day 1 = Something grilled

  • Day 2 = Bowl night (grain + veggie + protein + sauce)

  • Day 3 = One-pot meal

  • Day 4 = Sandwich/wraps

  • Day 5 = Leftovers or breakfast-for-dinner

  • Day 6 = Whatever’s still edible

  • Day 7 = Pizza (frozen, skillet, delivery—no shame)

It gives you structure without suffocation.


🛒 3. Grocery List Hack: Buy for 3, Stretch to 7

Buy fresh stuff for the first few days. Use pantry/freezer items for the rest.

  • Day 1–3 = Fresh meals (produce, meat, eggs)

  • Day 4–7 = Shelf-stable or frozen backup plans

This reduces waste, fridge Tetris, and stress when plans change (which they will).


🍽 4. Cook Once, Eat Twice

If you're making tacos, double the filling and have nachos tomorrow.
Pasta? Make enough for a pasta bake later.
Grilled chicken? Turn leftovers into wraps, bowls, or campfire quesadillas.

Cook smarter, not more often.


🧠 5. Keep a “Use This First” Zone

RV fridges are tiny black holes. Prevent the back-of-the-shelf rot with a dedicated “eat this soon” bin.

Bonus: It keeps you from discovering the very expired yogurt after you’ve already added it to a smoothie. Oops.


💬 Final Thoughts

Meal planning doesn’t have to be perfect.
You’re not running a restaurant—you’re feeding hungry people in a moving house with limited square footage and unpredictable cravings.

So keep it simple. Keep it flexible. And always pack snacks.

🐟 Want to know if your next campground has a camp store or nearby grocery options?

Use Campground Views to preview site locations and nearby essentials—so you’re not caught in the middle of nowhere with only mustard and a single pickle.

🔗 Follow us for more no-nonsense camping tips, food hacks for real RV life, and permission to eat cereal for dinner when needed.