The Complete Vegetarian Meal Plan: 40+ Recipes + 7-Day Shopping List for 2026

The Complete Vegetarian Meal Plan: 40+ Recipes + 7-Day Shopping List for 2026

A protein-balanced week of plant-forward meals you can shop in one 30-minute store run.

· 12 min read · By Mike Perry · beginner

A vegetarian meal plan is just a 7-day eating schedule built around plant proteins — legumes, tofu, eggs, dairy, whole grains — that lands you between 1,800 and 2,200 calories and 60-90 grams of protein per day without any meat. This guide gives you the week, the shopping list, the protein math, and 10 reader-favorite recipes from the AislePrompt catalog to fill it. You can cook the whole thing with one skillet, one chef's knife, and a sheet pan.

Who this plan is for and what to expect

This plan is built for a regular weeknight cook. You don't need a chef's resume, a stand mixer, or two hours of evening prep. Each weekday dinner is 30 minutes or less from chopping board to plate; weekend dinners stretch to 45 minutes and feed four with one set of leftovers. Breakfasts are five minutes flat. Lunches are either yesterday's dinner repackaged or a fast grain bowl. The week averages 70-85 grams of protein per day and runs about $65-$85 in groceries for one adult at a US chain supermarket as of 2026, less if you shop bulk-bin grains and dried beans.

If you've cooked meat-forward meals your whole life, the biggest mental shift is treating beans, lentils, tofu, eggs, and cheese as the center of the plate — not a side. We'll walk through the protein math in section three so the swap feels concrete instead of vague. By Sunday night you'll have a stocked pantry, five new go-to dinners, and a confident answer for "what are we eating tonight?"

A note on cost: the Harvard Health team's vegetarian-nutrition primer points out that plant-forward eating is consistently cheaper than the equivalent meat-centered diet, and our shopping list bears that out — dry lentils run about $1.50 a pound and yield three dinners, where the same protein in chicken thighs is closer to $5.

Choosing your vegetarian lane: lacto-ovo vs flexitarian vs plant-based

Three lanes, three slightly different shopping lists:

LaneEatsDoesn't eatBest for
Lacto-ovo vegetarianPlants, dairy, eggsMeat, fish, gelatinEasiest transition; widest recipe selection
FlexitarianPlants, dairy, eggs, occasional fish/poultryDaily meatPeople cooking for mixed-diet households
Plant-based / veganPlants onlyMeat, fish, dairy, eggs, honeyCholesterol-conscious; environmental priority

This guide is written for lacto-ovo by default because it covers the largest catalog and the easiest path for new vegetarians. Every recipe linked below has a dairy-free + egg-free swap noted on its detail page, so flexitarians and vegans can run the same plan with minor adjustments. The vegan-conversion notes live in the FAQ at the bottom of this article.

The USDA's 2020-2025 Dietary Guidelines explicitly include a "Healthy Vegetarian Eating Pattern" alongside the Mediterranean pattern, with the same calorie and nutrient targets as their omnivore reference plan. You are not nutritionally cutting corners by skipping meat — you're just sourcing your protein differently.

Protein math: how to hit 60-90g per day without meat

The single most common worry for new vegetarians is protein. Here is the math, with no hand-waving.

Target: 0.8 grams of protein per kilogram of body weight is the RDA floor. Most active adults do better at 1.0-1.2 g/kg. For a 150-pound (68 kg) adult that's roughly 55-82 grams per day, and for a 200-pound (91 kg) adult it's 73-109 grams.

Sources, ranked by protein density:

FoodServingProtein (g)
Tofu, extra-firm4 oz (113 g)22
Tempeh4 oz (113 g)22
Lentils, cooked1 cup18
Greek yogurt, plain 2%1 cup18
Edamame, shelled1 cup17
Black beans, cooked1 cup15
Chickpeas, cooked1 cup15
Cottage cheese, low-fat1 cup24
Eggs, large212
Quinoa, cooked1 cup8
Whole-wheat pasta2 oz dry8

A real day on this plan, for a 150-lb adult:

The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics' vegetarian position paper confirms what the table above shows: there is no plant-based protein deficiency for any adult who eats a varied diet. Combining a legume with a whole grain across the day (not necessarily the same meal — the old "complementary proteins" rule has been retired) gives you the complete amino-acid profile.

The 7-day plan: breakfast, lunch, dinner, snack

Each day's dinner is one of our 10 reader-favorite recipes. Lunches are leftovers from the previous night's dinner unless noted; breakfasts repeat across the week to keep prep dead simple.

Monday

Tuesday

Wednesday

Thursday

Friday

Saturday

Sunday

That's seven dinners, twelve in-plan lunches, seven repeatable breakfasts, and steady 70-85 g protein days. The plan rotates two cuisines (Mediterranean and Indian) and three formats (skillet, sheet pan, one-pot) so it doesn't get monotonous.

Top 10 reader-favorite vegetarian recipes from the AislePrompt catalog

These are the ten recipes anchoring this plan plus a tenth weekly-rotation slot. All are pure vegetarian, all rated 3+ stars, all written to feed two to four people:

1. Popular Vegetarian Chickpea Curry with Coconut Milk

2. One-Pan Cheesy Vegetable Pasta

3. Lemon-Garlic Mediterranean Quinoa Bowl

4. Golden Crispy Tofu Stir-Fry

5. Oven-Roasted Vegetable and Chickpea Grain Bowl

6. Simple Spiced Black Bean Tacos with Cilantro Lime Slaw

7. True-Hearted Mushroom & Thyme Risotto

8. Vegetable Lentil Shepherd's Pie

9. Keto Breakfast Frittata with Spinach and Feta

10. Spiced Aloo Gobi (Indian Cauliflower Curry) — drop in for Week 2 in place of the chickpea curry to keep variety.

You can swap any pick for another vegetarian dish from the recipes catalog — the protein math holds as long as you keep a legume, tofu, or egg-and-dairy anchor in every dinner.

The shopping list: organized by aisle for a single 30-minute store run

Print this, send it to Instacart from the meal plan page, or pull it open on your phone. The order matches a standard US chain supermarket's flow: produce → bulk → dairy → frozen → pantry.

Produce (≈ $18)

ItemQuantity
Yellow onions4
Garlic2 heads
Ginger, fresh1 small knob
Lemons4
Limes3
Cherry tomatoes1 pint
English cucumber2
Bell peppers, mixed4
Zucchini3
Mushrooms, cremini16 oz
Cauliflower head1 large
Carrots1 lb
Broccoli crowns2
Snap peas1/2 lb
Baby spinach10 oz
Romaine or mixed greens1 head
Russet potatoes3 medium
Apples4
Berries (fresh or frozen)1 lb
Cilantro1 bunch
Fresh thyme1 small package

Bulk / grains (≈ $9)

ItemQuantity
Brown rice2 lb
Quinoa1 lb
Whole-wheat penne1 lb
Dry lentils, green or French1 lb
Rolled oats18 oz
Granola12 oz
Almonds, raw8 oz

Dairy & refrigerated (≈ $19)

ItemQuantity
Greek yogurt, plain 2%, large tub32 oz
Cottage cheese, low-fat16 oz
Eggs, large1 dozen
Feta cheese, block8 oz
Mozzarella, shredded8 oz
Parmesan, block or grated4 oz
Extra-firm tofu14 oz block
Unsweetened almond or oat milk1 quart

Frozen (≈ $5)

ItemQuantity
Edamame, shelled16 oz bag
Frozen mixed berries (if not buying fresh)16 oz bag

Pantry (≈ $14, mostly one-time for the season)

ItemQuantity
Canned chickpeas4 cans
Canned black beans3 cans
Canned crushed tomatoes2 (28 oz)
Full-fat coconut milk2 cans
Vegetable broth1 quart
Soy sauce or tamari1 bottle
Tahini1 jar
Olive oil1 bottle
Kalamata olives1 jar
Corn tortillas1 dozen
Curry powder, cumin, smoked paprika, oregano, chili powderjars
Honeysmall bottle

Total: $60-$70 for one adult-week. If you're already stocked on the pantry section, drop the spend to about $42. Get storage containers you actually like before this week starts — leftovers are half the plan.

Pantry staples that make vegetarian cooking effortless

These don't go on the weekly list because they live in your cupboard year-round. Replace them every six to ten weeks:

A well-stocked pantry turns "I have nothing in the house" into a 20-minute dinner. Keep at least one non-stick skillet you actually trust within arm's reach — when a pan is annoying to clean, you skip cooking and order takeout.

Common mistakes (the bean-soak skip, the under-seasoned tofu)

After reviewing thousands of weeknight cook reports across our recipes, the same five mistakes show up most often:

1. Under-seasoning tofu. A 14-oz block of extra-firm tofu needs about 3/4 teaspoon of salt, two tablespoons of soy sauce, and a hot pan to taste like anything. Salt it before it goes into the skillet, not after. A bland tofu is a salt problem, not a tofu problem.

2. Skipping the bean-soak. Dry beans really do need 6-8 hours of soaking (or a quick 1-hour hot-soak — boil 2 minutes, sit 1 hour, drain). Skipped soak = gritty interior even after 90 minutes of cooking. Canned beans are an honest shortcut; just rinse them well to drop the sodium.

3. Crowding the sheet pan. Roasted vegetables steam instead of caramelize when they're touching. Use two sheet pans for a full week's roasted-veg batch — the surface-area cost is worth the flavor.

4. Pre-cooking quinoa and rice at the wrong ratio. Quinoa is 1:2 (rinse first; the saponin coating is bitter). Brown rice is 1:2.25. White basmati is 1:1.5. Mixing them up turns dinner into porridge or pilaf-grit.

5. Forgetting the acid. Almost every vegetarian dinner — curry, grain bowl, taco, frittata — wakes up with a squeeze of lemon or lime at the end. The flavor that's "missing" when meat is gone is usually acid, not fat or salt.

Fix those five and your weeknight pass rate jumps from "fine" to "we should make this again."

How to rebuild the plan around allergies using AislePrompt's AI chat

Real households have real constraints: nut allergies, gluten sensitivity, a kid who refuses mushrooms. Rather than hard-coding the plan against every combination, this site lets you regenerate it.

Head to the AI chat and paste this prompt:

> Rebuild the Complete Vegetarian Meal Plan for a household that's [your constraints, e.g. "nut-free, no mushrooms, one toddler"]. Keep protein at 70+g per day. Use only recipes on aisleprompt.com. Give me the new shopping list grouped by aisle.

The chat returns a customized week within about 15 seconds. Behind the scenes it queries the same recipe catalog these picks came from and filters out allergens and disliked ingredients. You can push the shopping list straight to Instacart from the chat output. The pantry tracker at /pantry deducts whatever you already have at home.

For a longer-horizon view, the four-week weeknight rotation takes the same idea and stretches it across a month. The family dinner rotation is the kid-tested subset.

FAQ

(See the FAQ panel below — five common questions answered.)

Sources

Last reviewed: June 2026.

Frequently asked questions

How much protein will I get on a vegetarian meal plan?
This plan averages 70-85 grams of protein per day across three meals and a snack by leaning on legumes, tofu, tempeh, Greek yogurt, eggs, and high-protein grains like quinoa and farro. Most adults need 0.8-1.2 grams per kilogram of body weight, so this comfortably covers a 150-pound adult with room to spare. Endurance athletes should add a second protein-forward snack — a scoop of plain whey or a hard-boiled egg with whole-grain toast does the job.
Can this meal plan work for vegans too?
Yes, with two swaps. Replace the Greek yogurt breakfast with a chia-and-soy-milk pudding (about 18 grams of protein per serving) and swap the spinach-feta frittata for a chickpea-flour omelet. Every other recipe in the plan is either already vegan or has a dairy-free note in the recipe page. The AislePrompt AI chat at /chat will regenerate the whole week as fully vegan if you ask — it preserves the protein math and the aisle-by-aisle shopping list.
How long does shopping for this plan take?
About 25-35 minutes for one store run. The shopping list is organized by aisle (produce, bulk bins, dairy, frozen, pantry) so you walk the store in one loop instead of zig-zagging. Plan an extra 10 minutes if your store hides specialty items like firm tofu or canned chickpeas in international aisles, or send the list straight to Instacart from /meal-plan for delivery in about an hour.
Will my family actually eat this if they're not vegetarian?
Most of these recipes test well with mixed-diet families because they lead with familiar formats — tacos, pasta, stir-fry, grain bowls — and just swap the protein. The black bean tacos, mushroom risotto, and one-pan vegetable pasta consistently get the highest ratings from omnivores in our recipe reviews. Add an optional side of grilled chicken or fish if a household member needs animal protein; the rest of the meal still does the heavy lifting.
What kitchen equipment do I need to cook this plan?
A 12-inch nonstick or stainless skillet, an 8-inch chef's knife, a sheet pan, a 4-quart pot for grains and soups, a baking dish, and a cutting board cover every recipe in the plan. A blender is helpful for two breakfasts and one sauce but not essential. AislePrompt's kitchen shop has vetted picks for each piece linked from the recipe pages if you need to upgrade — start with the skillet and the knife, those two carry 70% of the cooking work.

Sources

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