If cooking feels slow, the problem isn’t your effort—it’s your workflow. And the good news is, systems can be fixed quickly.
Every extra second spent chopping, organizing, or cleaning adds up. Over time, that accumulation turns cooking into a task you avoid.
And execution improves when the process is simplified.
Step 1: Identify Friction Points
Look at your current process and find where time is being wasted—usually in prep and cleanup.
Anything that takes more than a few seconds should be questioned.
This is where the biggest gains happen. Prep is often the bottleneck.
Step 4: Simplify Cleanup
Design your workflow so cleanup requires minimal effort.
A simple system done daily beats a complex system done occasionally.
You’ll notice that cooking feels lighter, faster, and more manageable.
Instead of thinking about cooking as a task, it becomes a quick process that fits naturally into your day.
Think of these as minor upgrades that compound over time.
Even reducing the number of tools used can speed up cleanup significantly.
The fastest way to cook more is not to increase motivation—it’s to decrease website effort.
The system does the work for you.
✔ Eliminate delays
✔ Use faster tools
✔ Design for ease
✔ Reduce resistance
✔ Execute daily
Efficiency is created by eliminating unnecessary steps, not adding new ones.
There is no resistance, no hesitation—just execution.