Most people spend years trying to cook faster, when the solution can be implemented in a single afternoon.
Every extra second spent chopping, organizing, or cleaning adds up. Over time, that accumulation turns cooking into a task you avoid.
Instead of focusing on recipes or techniques, you need to focus on execution.
Step 1: click here Identify Friction Points
Look at your current process and find where time is being wasted—usually in prep and cleanup.
Speed comes from removing repetition, not improving it.
This is where the biggest gains happen. Prep is often the bottleneck.
Step 4: Simplify Cleanup
Design your workflow so cleanup requires minimal effort.
The goal is not perfection—it’s repeatability.
When this system is applied, the difference is immediate. Tasks that once took 15 minutes can drop to under 5.
Instead of thinking about cooking as a task, it becomes a quick process that fits naturally into your day.
Each one reduces friction slightly, but together they create a smooth workflow.
Examples include organizing ingredients ahead of time, using multi-purpose tools, and minimizing movement within the kitchen.
When cooking becomes easy, it becomes consistent.
The system does the work for you.
✔ Remove friction points
✔ Optimize workflow
✔ Minimize effort per action
✔ Focus on speed and simplicity
✔ Build repeatable systems
Efficiency is created by eliminating unnecessary steps, not adding new ones.
And that is what ultimately turns cooking into a sustainable habit.