Cooking during a heat wave is a miserable experience. Turning on the oven adds massive heat to the kitchen, making the central air conditioner struggle for hours. Most families end up ordering expensive takeout because the thought of standing over a hot stove feels unbearable. You do not need to choose between a hot house and a massive takeout bill.
Related: See how we manage this by reading this routine, this system, or this guide.
I wasted thousands of dollars over the years ordering pizza when the temperature hit triple digits. I felt too drained to cook and too guilty to eat out. The solution is creating a dedicated rotation of meals that rely on the stovetop, the slow cooker, or simple assembly techniques. You can provide fresh, healthy family dinners without heating up the kitchen by a single degree.
A good sheet pan, like this one, is helpful for cold-assembly meals where you might need to toast flatbread or warm up pre-cooked proteins quickly. Focus on meals where the primary components require minimal cooking. If you must use heat, keep it quick and localized to the stovetop.
The Stovetop Strategy for Hot Days
The slow cooker is your best friend during the summer. By placing it on a counter away from the main kitchen traffic, the heat dissipated is negligible. You can cook entire roasts, shredded chicken, or hearty soups without generating any kitchen heat. Set it in the morning, let it work through the day, and serve immediately.
Cold assembly dinners remove the heat source entirely. Tuna salad, white bean wraps, and large pasta salads rely on ingredients that require no cooking. Use canned beans, pre-cooked rotisserie chicken, and fresh summer produce to build substantial meals. These dinners come together in under ten minutes and keep the kitchen temperature stable.
Utilize the air fryer if you have one. Air fryers are significantly more efficient than full-size ovens and do not heat up the entire room. You can cook crispy chicken thighs, roasted vegetables, or toasted sandwiches in minutes. The heat stays contained within the small chamber, saving your central air system from overworking.
Fast Dinners That Save the Week
Stovetop tacos provide a fast meal without requiring an oven. Ground turkey or beef cooks in minutes, and you can serve it with cold fresh toppings like shredded lettuce, diced tomatoes, and avocado. This meal is incredibly cheap and highly adaptable to picky eaters. Everyone builds their own taco, which saves you from playing short-order cook.
Pasta salad loaded with protein is a fantastic summer staple. Boil the pasta for ten minutes, drain it, and toss it immediately with cold vinaigrette, chickpeas, diced feta, and fresh herbs. It stores well in the fridge for three days. You can serve it as a main dish or a heavy side throughout the week.
Wraps and sandwiches are often dismissed as ‘lunch’ food, but they work perfectly for dinner. Use sturdy tortillas or high-quality wraps to hold heavy fillings like chicken salad, turkey and pesto, or hummus and roasted peppers. Pair them with a cold side like cucumber salad to round out the meal without turning on any heat.
If you must cook meat, keep the pieces small. Thinly sliced chicken breast cooks in half the time of a thick, bone-in piece. Small cubes of meat require only five minutes in a hot skillet. Keeping the cooking time short prevents the kitchen from accumulating excess heat.
Meal prep cuts weeknight cooking time significantly, but only if you have the right sequence before you hit the grocery store. The Meal Prep Guide ($17) includes weekly meal frameworks, a rotating ingredient list that keeps food costs under $100/week for a family of four, and the exact batch-cook order Rachel uses to get five dinners done in under two hours. Instant download on Gumroad.
