Easy Meals & Snacks for Busy Spring Break Days
Spring break sounds great until it’s Monday morning and you’ve got kids at home, nothing planned for lunch, and the question “what are we eating?” already coming at you before 9 a.m.
This isn’t about recipes. It’s about having the right stuff on hand so feeding everybody spring break meals through the week doesn’t feel like a second job. One good trip to Cash Saver and you’re set. Here’s how to think about it.
Breakfast That Handles Itself
Spring break mornings don’t have a schedule, and that’s fine. Stock the freezer and the fridge with things people can get into on their own, and you’ve already won half the battle.
- Frozen waffles or pancakes: Williams sausage patties on the side if you want it to feel like a real breakfast without any real effort
- Grab-and-go yogurts and string cheese: good for kids, honestly good for grown-ups too
- A couple boxes of cereal: yes, it counts, and yes, everyone will eat it
- Bananas, apples, and grapes: no prep, no mess, grab and go
- Best Choice eggs if you’ve got ten minutes and want something a little more filling
The goal is a shelf or a drawer where anyone in the house can find breakfast without coming to find you first.
Build a Snack Station and Thank Yourself Later
Spring break weeks run on snacks. Kids graze all day, and if every “I’m hungry” turns into a full meal situation, nobody’s going to make it to Friday in one piece.
Clear out one shelf in the pantry or a bin in the fridge and fill it with things people can get into freely. Some go-tos that hold up well all week:
- Best Choice chips or crackers with salsa: and if you pick up a can of Ro-Tel and some cheese, you’ve got queso in about five minutes
- Peanut butter and crackers: simple, filling, and a crowd favorite
- A big bag of popcorn goes further than you’d think
- Pre-cut veggies with ranch dip if you want something that at least nods at balance
- Juice boxes or drink pouches: whatever keeps the kitchen from turning into a disaster zone
A stocked snack station buys you time and sanity. That’s worth a lot during spring break.
Lunch Without a Plan
Lunch is the meal that sneaks up on you. It’s 10 a.m. and then suddenly it’s 1 p.m. and everyone is starving. You don’t need a plan. You just need options for spring break meals.
- Deli meat with Bunny bread or Nature’s Own: sandwiches are quick, filling, and everybody knows how to make one. Grab King’s Hawaiian rolls if you want to make it feel like a little more of an occasion
- Campbell’s chicken noodle or a pack of Maruchan: for the days when even a sandwich feels like too much effort. No judgment
- Tortillas, shredded cheese, and whatever protein is nearby: quesadillas come together in five minutes and kids eat them every single time
- Deli salads if you’re feeding adults and want something a little more substantial without any cooking
None of this requires a plan. It just requires having the stuff around.
Dinners That Don’t Ask Too Much
By dinnertime, the day has usually already been a lot. This is not the moment for complicated. A few reliable proteins and some easy sides will carry you through the whole week of spring break meals.
Rotisserie chicken is the most underrated thing in any grocery store. Already cooked, already seasoned, goes with just about anything — rice, salad, pasta, tortillas. Grab one and figure out the rest when you get home.
From there, keep it simple:
- Certified Angus ground beef or ground turkey: tacos, pasta, a quick skillet, whatever sounds good that night
- Sanderson Farms chicken thighs: season them, cook them, done
- Frozen fish or shrimp for nights when you want something different without any extra work
For sides: Pictsweet frozen vegetables, Best Choice rice or pasta, a can of Always Save beans. Mix and match with whatever protein you grabbed. That’s a full week of dinners without a single recipe written down.
Don’t Forget One Sweet Thing
Spring break should feel like a break. That means there ought to be something sweet around: nothing elaborate, just something to end the day on a good note.
- Blue Bell ice cream: Cash Saver carries it by the half gallon, and that’s almost always the right call
- A brownie or cookie mix for an afternoon when you want an activity that also produces dessert
- Little Debbie snack cakes or a Duchess honey bun: for the days when nobody has the energy for anything more than unwrapping something
One sweet thing in the house does a lot for morale. Trust the process.
Keep It Stocked, Keep It Simple
You don’t need a meal plan. You need a well-stocked fridge and pantry, and Cash Saver makes that part easy. One trip, and you’ve got breakfast, snacks, lunch, and dinner covered for the whole week without breaking the bank or spending the week in the kitchen.
Stock up, set up that snack station, and actually enjoy the break.

Memphis Cash Saver Locations
Midtown Memphis: 1620 Madison Ave, Memphis + (901) 272-0171
Third Street: 1977 S Third St., Memphis + (901) 948-2084
Whitehaven: 4049 Elvis Presley Blvd, Memphis + (901) 345-3003




