Making Mother’s Day Meals Simpler: The Rise of Convenient, Home-Style Cooking
Team L&M
Mother’s Day has increasingly moved beyond being just a calendar occasion marked by last-minute flowers or gifts.
From Celebration to Participation
In many urban households, it is quietly evolving into a more thoughtful moment one where the focus shifts from celebration to participation. Instead of taking moms out, many people are choosing to step into the kitchen, attempting to recreate the care and comfort that has long been served to them on a plate.
At the same time, the way we cook has also changed over time. With busier routines and shrinking time for elaborate preparation, convenience-led solutions have become an important part of modern kitchens. Frozen foods, once seen as a backup option, are now finding their way into everyday meals, offering both variety and ease without compromising on taste. For a generation balancing work, social lives and home responsibilities, they make the idea of “cooking for someone” far more accessible.
This shift is not happening in isolation. Through 2025, consumers have actively explored alternatives to traditional home-cooked meals experimenting with new ingredients, formats and solutions that balance health, taste and convenience. Farm-fresh options such as cut fruits, salads and smoothies are expected to remain in high demand, while packaged and fresh snack formats continue to appeal for their familiarity and ease. Together, these choices reflect a broader move towards simplifying everyday cooking without losing the essence of flavour and comfort.
Convenience Meets Comfort in Modern Kitchens
This is especially visible on occasions like Mother’s Day, where the intent remains deeply personal, even if the approach is more practical. The gesture is no longer about spending hours in the kitchen, but about making the effort count bringing together simple ingredients, familiar flavours and a bit of planning to create something that feels considered, warm and worth sharing.
As Alka Jena mentioned food writer at Culinary Express said “In 2026, urban Indians will continue to seek balance between health, comfort, and convenience. Ready-to-cook kits, RTE packs, and farm-fresh solutions will see steady growth as they offer convenience with a sense of home-style comfort. Farm-fresh juices, salads, and deli-style snacks will appeal to those with growing wellness awareness while rising disposable incomes and smaller kitchens will see some consumers lean on these products to simplify daily cooking without losing the sense of freshness and familiarity that home meals bring.”
In line with this shift, cooking for Mother’s Day is becoming less about complexity and more about ease.
Here are two recipes that keep delivering on flavour and taste:
Burnt Garlic & Black Pepper Chilli Paneer
(This recipe is curated by Chef Teja Paruchuri)
Ingredients:
For the Crispy Paneer:
200g Paneer Cubed
3 tbsp cornflour
2 tbsp rice flour
½ tsp black pepper powder
Salt to taste
¼ cup water
For the Garlic Pepper Sauce
2 tbsp oil
6-7 cloves garlic finely chopped
1 tbsp ginger finely chopped
One tsp soy sauce
1 tsp vinegar
½ tsp sugar
Half tsp black pepper powder
½ tsp white pepper powder (optional for extra heat)
half cup water + 1 tsp cornflour (slurry)
2 tbsp spring onions chopped
Instructions:
Coat & fry Paneer
Mix comfort, rice flour, black pepper powder, salt and water to form a little batter
Coat paneer and shallow fry or deep fry until crispy. Set aside.
Make the burnt garlic sauce
Heat oil, fry half the garlic until golden & crispy, remove and set aside
In the same oil, add the rest of the garlic, ginger and saute
Add soy sauce, vinegar, sugar, black and white pepper.
Finish the dish
Add the cornflour slurry, stir until thickened
Toss in crispy paneer and coat well.
Top with burnt garlic and spring onions.
Serving Suggestion: serve with hakka noodles or stir fried rice!
Gud ka Rasgulla
(This recipe is curated by Chef Varun Inamdar Godrej Millets Cookbook, Godrej Vikhroli Cucina)
Ingredients:
1½ litre Godrej Jersey milk
2 tbsp lemon juice
1 tbsp jowar flour
For the syrup
3 cups water
3 cups grated jaggery
Instructions:
For Filling:
In a deep saucepan, pour Godrej Jersey milk and bring it to a boil
Pour the lemon juice into the milk and stir
Allow the milk to cool and strain through cheesecloth
Rinse the cheese under running water
Tie the ends of the cheesecloth and squeeze all the excess water
Take the cheese out of the cloth in a plate and knead. Add the jowar flour and knead till it becomes a soft cheesy dough
Once the dough is ready, make tiny, smooth dumplings from the dough
In another pan, make the jaggery syrup by mixing water with jaggery and bring it to a boil
Once the jaggery has melted, drop the cheese balls into it. Cover the pan with a tight lid and let it cook for about 15 minutes
Meanwhile, check the consistency of the syrup. If it gets too thick, add some water and continue cooking the rasgullas. Once they are almost double in size, they’re ready.
Switch off the heat, and leave the rasgulla in the syrup
Once it has cooled, serve with the syrup

