The Meal Ecosystem
What if dinner was already figured out?
Liana Banyan’s meal ecosystem transforms how families eat through three integrated initiatives:
- Let’s Make Dinner — The marketplace and coordination hub
- The Family Table — Group cooking and potluck networks
- Let’s Get Groceries — Cost+20% ingredient sourcing
The Core Innovation: Grocery Boxes
Refrigerator Shelf-Compatible Design
Every Grocery Box is engineered to:
- Fit standard refrigerator shelves — No reorganizing required
- Contain pre-cut, pre-measured ingredients — Ready for cooking
- Include meal chain suggestions — Leftovers from Meal A become ingredients for Meal B
- Support multiple use modes — Cook yourself, join a group session, or hire a chef
Box Sizes
| Size | Serves | Dimensions | Meals Included |
|---|---|---|---|
| Single | 1 | Standard shelf | 3-4 meals |
| Couple | 2 | Standard shelf | 3-4 meals |
| Family | 4 | Standard shelf | 3-4 meals |
| Extended | 8 | Two shelves | 3-4 meals |
The Meal Chain Concept
Instead of isolated recipes, Grocery Boxes are designed for meal chains:
Sunday: Roast chicken with vegetables
↓ (leftover chicken)
Monday: Chicken sandwiches with fresh greens
↓ (chicken bones + vegetable scraps)
Tuesday: Chicken soup with fresh bread
This approach:
- Reduces food waste to near-zero
- Maximizes ingredient utilization
- Creates variety without complexity
- Lowers per-meal costs
Three Ways to Eat
1. DIY Cold Box
You cook, your schedule.
- Ingredients arrive pre-cut and measured
- Recipe cards included
- Typical prep time: 20-30 minutes
- Best for: Home cooks who enjoy cooking but hate planning
2. Group Cook Session
Share the work, share the food.
- Join a scheduled session at a certified community kitchen
- Bring your box, cook alongside neighbors
- Take home multiple meals
- Best for: Social cooks, busy families, learning new cuisines
3. Chef Prepared
Hot meal delivered, ready to eat.
- Hire a member chef to prepare your box
- Delivered hot or ready-to-reheat
- Premium convenience option
- Best for: Time-crunched families, special occasions, those unable to cook
The Economics
Cost Comparison (Per Meal, Family of 4)
| Method | Cost | Time | Waste |
|---|---|---|---|
| Traditional grocery shopping + cooking | ~$8-12 | 60-90 min | 20-30% |
| Grocery Box (DIY) | ~$7-10 | 20-30 min | <5% |
| Group Cook Session | ~$5-8 | 45-60 min (shared) | <2% |
| Chef Prepared | ~$12-18 | 0 min | 0% |
Why It’s Cheaper
- Bulk purchasing — Let’s Get Groceries sources at scale
- Zero waste — Pre-measured ingredients, meal chains
- Shared labor — Group cooking distributes prep time
- Cost+20% pricing — No hidden markups, ever
The Potluck Network
“I always wondered what it would be like to have potluck for every dinner.”
The Potluck Network makes this real:
How It Works
- Neighbors form a pod (4-8 households)
- Each household cooks 1-2 nights per week
- Meals are shared across the pod
- Everyone eats variety without cooking daily
Benefits
- Variety: 7 different cuisines per week instead of the same 3 recipes
- Time: Cook once, eat many times
- Community: Know your neighbors through food
- Support: Built-in meal train for illness, new babies, emergencies
The Math
| Scenario | Cooking Days/Week | Different Meals/Week |
|---|---|---|
| Solo household | 7 | 3-4 (repeats) |
| 4-household pod | 1-2 | 7+ (variety) |
| 8-household pod | 1 | 14+ (abundance) |
Community Kitchen Model
Certified Facilities
Group cook sessions happen at certified community kitchens:
- Church kitchens — Often underutilized weekdays
- Community centers — Built for group activities
- School cafeterias — Available evenings/weekends
- Member home kitchens — Certified for small groups
Compliance Built-In
Every facility in the network:
- Meets health department requirements
- Has liability coverage through Liana Banyan
- Follows standardized safety protocols
- Maintains equipment to commercial standards
Equipment Sharing
Through Household Concierge, members can access:
- Commercial-grade mixers and processors
- Vacuum sealers for meal prep
- Large-batch cookware
- Specialized tools (pasta makers, dehydrators, etc.)
Member Chef Program
Become a Certified Meal Prepper
Any member can become a certified chef:
- Complete food safety certification (we cover the cost)
- Pass kitchen inspection (your home or community facility)
- Build your portfolio (start with friends and family)
- List on the marketplace (set your own prices, keep 83.3%)
The Business Model
A member chef working 2-3 days per week can:
- Prep 20-40 meals per session
- Serve 5-10 regular households
- Earn $500-2,000/week (depending on volume and pricing)
- Build a sustainable micro-business
Quality Assurance
- Ratings and reviews build reputation
- Repeat customers indicate quality
- Dispute resolution through platform
- Insurance coverage included
Initiative Connections
Let’s Make Dinner
The marketplace and coordination hub:
- Browse and order Grocery Boxes
- Find group cook sessions near you
- Hire member chefs
- Manage meal subscriptions
- Rate and review
The Family Table
The social and community layer:
- Group cooking coordination
- Potluck network management
- Family meal planning tools
- Cultural recipe sharing
- Emergency meal support
Let’s Get Groceries
The supply chain:
- Bulk ingredient sourcing at Cost+20%
- Delivery coordination
- Seasonal and local optimization
- Specialty ingredient access
Household Concierge
The logistics layer:
- Delivery scheduling
- Kitchen equipment rental
- Facility booking
- Chef scheduling
Getting Started
As a Consumer
- Browse Grocery Boxes on Let’s Make Dinner
- Choose your mode: DIY, Group Cook, or Chef Prepared
- Select delivery or pickup
- Enjoy your meals
As a Producer
- Get certified as a meal prepper
- Choose your facility (home or community kitchen)
- Set your schedule (2-3 days/week recommended)
- Build your customer base
As a Community
- Register your facility as a certified kitchen
- Host group cook sessions
- Form a potluck pod with neighbors
- Share the abundance
The Vision
Perpetual potluck — where everyone eats better than they could alone, at costs lower than cooking solo, with variety that no single household could achieve.
This isn’t a meal kit service. It’s a food network — neighbors feeding neighbors, communities cooking together, and everyone keeping 83.3% of the value they create.
Part of the Sweet Sixteen Initiatives Crown: Maneet Chauhan (Let’s Make Dinner)