![]() Filling Out Your CalendarĪnd now, all that’s left is the fun part, filling out your meals for the week! I like to do this from the month view. If at any point you are no longer living together or don’t want them to have the same level of access, you can revoke access or change your sharing settings in that same menu. To access these sharing settings in Google Calendar, go Settings > Settings for my calendars > *select your meal plan calendar* > Share with specific people. When you invite them to see your calendar, they’ll receive an email notifying them that they’ve been given access to the calendar and it should immediately show up in their “Other calendars” list. For each person, you can allow them read-only access or allow them to make changes to the calendar. Once your calendar is set up, if you regularly share meals with other people, you can share your calendar with them via the sharing settings. ![]() Once you’re in your Google Calendar, you’re going to want to set up a separate calendar just for meal planning.Ĭreating a meal-planning-specific calendar allows you to toggle your meals on and off so they don’t clutter your daily calendar and so that if you share that calendar with others, your housemates aren’t getting your doctors appointments too.Įxtra Tip: Google Calendars are arranged alphabetically so using a special character in front of the title or calling your calendar something like “A Menu” will keep that calendar at the top of your list, which is convenient since you will be adding to it so often. We live in a Google world, so I’m going to assume you have a Google account and know how to access your Google Calendar (if you don’t, here’s how to do both). (For the record, according to my calendar, I was eating Salsa Chicken and Peasant Soup three years ago.) □ Plus, it’s just fun to be able to look back and see what you were eating three years ago. ![]()
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