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Review: Green Chef Meal Kit

Green Chef is a great meal kit for home cooks—just make sure to read the instructions.
Left to right packaging for a meal kit including ingredients and instructions plate of cooked chicken and vegetables and...
Photograph: Louryn Strampe; Getty Images

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Rating:

8/10

WIRED
Expansive, approachable menu options. All organic. Really tasty, usually.
TIRED
Requires thorough reading (and rereading). Peeled garlic cloves wrapped in plastic. Many dishes to do at the end.

Green Chef (owned by HelloFresh) is a great meal kit subscription for beginners. I said as much in our Meal Kit Buying Guide. The recipe cards are full of helpful pictures, and the intuitively grouped instructions don't skip important steps. I’ve spent weeks testing meal kit subscriptions during my tenure at WIRED, but we’re testing them again in order to give them individual reviews. Green Chef has been an honorable mention in our guide since I first tested it, and I still think it’s a good option for anyone looking to build up their culinary prowess.

Green Chef has a few plans available. You can get three meals with two servings per meal (which works out to $13.49/serving), or you can go all the way up to four meals with six servings per meal (which works out to $11.99/serving). Different lifestyle and dietary filter options include plant-based, low-calorie, high-protein, keto, and gluten-free (among others). Note that Green Chef's pricing is higher than similarly styled meal kits—that's because nearly every ingredient is organic.

Usually there are introductory offers to make your first week(s) cheaper. Each week you'll select your dishes from the weekly menu and make any customizations, such as swapping proteins or adding extra portions. You can pause or cancel your subscription anytime so long as you do it at least five days before your order ships. Most of the packaging is made from recycled materials and is recyclable itself.

An Emotional Rollercoaster

During my week of testing Green Chef, I experienced the highest of highs and the lowest of lows. My Steak & Shrimp With Creamy Truffle Sauce was a brown, oversalted disaster—partially due to my heavy hand with the Maldon flakes, and (I think) partially due to the instructions telling me to salt my dish six separate times. For context, there wasn't any particular kind of salt to use—most meal kit services have you provide your own, so I just used the flaky sea salt that I always season with. I was so absorbed in following each step thoroughly that I didn’t stop to think, “Hmmm. I’ve already salted and peppered this four times.” Instead, with reckless abandon, I enthusiastically seasoned, and at the end I cried, threw it away, and sadly DoorDashed myself chicken nuggets at 10:30 pm. And for what it’s worth, even outside of the salty sauce, I didn’t love the accompanying green bean and tomato side. I didn’t love the ratio of shrimp to steak. I just didn’t love this dish!

Photograph: Louryn Strampe

On the flip side, my Chicken With Maple-Dijon Sauce was delicious. Possibly one of my favorite dishes I’ve ever made. The chard, sweet potato, and apple hash could have been a meal in and of itself, and the maple-glazed chicken was divine. I realized it reminded me of my favorite dish from Sweetgreen (the Harvest Bowl), and after trying the finished dish thoroughly enough to be able to review it, I went rogue from the recipe and added a chunk of goat cheese to further emulate the Harvest Bowl. It was perfect. So good that I didn’t want to share it. I loved this dish so much that I saved the recipe card.

And I had a similar experience with the third dish—Buttery Lemon-Garlic Shrimp. The star of the meal was the sun-dried tomatoes that had soaked in a lemon juice and vegetable broth mixture. They were bright and tangy, a true delight that brightened up the otherwise heavy, shrimpy pasta. I’ve cooked with lemon juice, sun-dried tomatoes, and vegetable broth individually hundreds of times. Why did I never think to combine them before?

Overall, I found that the recipes’ time estimates were a bit short. I think all recipe kits have this flaw. If you're Ina Garten or one of the wonderful Bon Appetit food editors, maybe you'd nail the timing. But for the average person, it's safe to give yourself a 20-minute buffer on top of the estimated prep time shown on the recipe card.

Photograph: Louryn Strampe

Quit Playing Games With My Chard

The ingredients that arrived in my box were all fresh and fine. I had one moment of harrowing despair when I realized that my garlic cloves were pre-peeled and encased in vacuum-sealed plastic. Garlic is encased in its own protective, papery, wonderful skin. I love peeling garlic. I find it meditative and ritualistic. And I was robbed of this experience. I talk about this more in our Meal Kit Buying Guide, but one of my gripes with meal kits in general is that you lose out on experiences like peeling your own garlic or picking out the nicest-looking lemon at the store. And for some people, that'll be fine—or even a benefit. To be fair, I'm sure that this was partially to preserve freshness, and it's likely more cost-effective to send a few vacuum-sealed cloves rather than a whole head of garlic to each Green Chef subscriber. But as for me and my house, we will peel our own garlic (and cut back on unnecessary plastic in the process).

The instructions for my recipes were quite easy to follow, and the timing worked out fairly well. The recipe cards did a solid job when it came to preparing me for the things I'd need on hand … usually. Sometimes I'd have to run to the sink to grab a quarter-cup of water that I didn't have set aside already, and I don’t like chopping up a bunch of chard, placing it all in a bowl, and then realizing that I should have separated the stems from the leaves—and that I should have read the instructions again. It’s my mistake; my burden to bear. My chicken growing cold and my olive oil splattering while I frantically sort out leafy greens by hand.

Photograph: Louryn Strampe

You could experience this with any meal kit service—the ups and the downs. But there’s something really cool about feeling like a chef on TV. I like to get my ingredients out ahead of time and put them in little bowls around my counter, dumping them in sizzling pans while a towel is draped over my shoulder, like a scene straight out of The Bear. I think it takes a few weeks of trying different recipes to decide whether a specific service, or meal kits in general, are right for you and your family. Meal kits are great if you hate deciding what to make for dinner or if you want to learn your way around a kitchen—just make sure to read the instructions no fewer than five times before starting. On the other hand, if you’re cooking for a ton of people or you like following your own rules, meal kits might not be your cup of tea. Or, er, lemon juice and vegetable broth.

Overall, Green Chef is worth it—as much as any meal kit is worth it. And though I was left with a big pile of dishes to do after each recipe was complete, I'm still dreaming of that sweet potato hash.