Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Mug Meals: More Than 100 No-Fuss Ways to Make a Delicious Microwave Meal in Minutes

Rate this book
Dinner on the go, cooking for one, or just want to mix up a quick snack? Mug Meals will show you how! Chef Leslie Bilderback, the brilliant author of Mug Cakes, is back with easy and fresh ideas for every meal of the day. If you've got five minutes to spare, you can mix up a delicious single-serving meal with just a mug and a microwave. Here are over 100 mouthwatering and lightning-fast recipes for breakfast, lunch, dinner, and dessert. Whip up a mugful of Huevos Rancheros to start off your day, then lunch on a steaming cup of French Onion Soup or Pork Chops and Apple Sauce. Serve dinner to your whole family in mugs stuffed with Poached Salmon with Dill, Pasta Puttanesca, or Candied Sweet Potatoes—and finish things off right with a decadent Pumpkin Cheesecake. The options are endless, and you can't beat the clean-up!Mugs aren't just for cakes and coffee anymore; now you can make every meal in a mug—in minutes!

310 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 1, 2015

227 people are currently reading
530 people want to read

About the author

Leslie Bilderback

12 books6 followers
LESLIE BILDERBACK is a certified master baker, chef, and a graduate of the California Culinary Academy. She began her career as a pastry chef, and played a major role in several of California's most well-regarded and innovative restaurants, including Sedona, Postrio, Zola's, Angeli, and Georgia. Leslie appeared on Food Network’s Sweet Genius and has been featured in The New York Times, San Francisco Chronicle, and Culinary Trends Magazine. She is also the author of Mug Cakes, No-Churn Ice Cream, The Spiralized Kitchen, The Complete Idiot’s Guide and Everything food-based series, and collaborated with Pastry Chef Sherry Yard of Spago on the James Beard Award-winning The Secrets of Baking.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
26 (32%)
4 stars
25 (30%)
3 stars
24 (29%)
2 stars
4 (4%)
1 star
2 (2%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Tamara.
1,459 reviews637 followers
Read
November 29, 2020
Meh, not worth getting out all these ingredients from the pantry if not making a whole batch.

Possible exceptions: spoon bread, cheesy grits
Profile Image for BRNTerri.
480 reviews10 followers
January 13, 2016

THINGS I'VE MADE

MINESTRONE




This soup has macaroni, carrot, onion, beans, oregano, basil, and tomatoes in it. I doubled the recipe to make two servings and made it in a 2qt. pot instead of two jumbo mugs. I used celery flakes in place of fresh celery, tomato paste in place of tomatoes, since I don't like them, and I used onion in place of scallions. I used half the amount of dried oregano and way less basil. I sprinkled dried chives on top for color.

This is a decent recipe and worth making again. Though I used less basil, salt, and oregano it was still a little too much for my liking so I'll use a little less next time. I undercooked the elbow macaroni and boiled the mixture together at the end for five minutes, so the macaroni was cooked for fifteen minutes total.




APPLE CINNAMON OATMEAL



This is a really good, basic recipe. Just butter, oats, milk, apple, sugar, and cinnamon. I made this in a bowl, not mug, then transferred it to a 5 oz. ramekin and sprinkled chopped lightly toasted pecans on top. I used white sugar in place of brown, quick oats in place of old fashioned, a few dashes of cinnamon instead of 1/4 teaspoon, which is beyond too much, and added a large pinch of salt before microwaving because salt is extremely necessary when cooking oats. I cooked this for the full amount of time, 2 1/2 minutes, but it was overcooked. It makes a small serving but it's enough because it's more like a dessert.

Edit: I've made this a few times since, cooked it 2 minutes and it was perfect.


MACARONI AND CHEESE



This made a huge serving of mac and cheese, using 1c. cooked pasta*. I used mild cheddar cheese in place of white cheddar and a pinch of ground mustard in place of Dijon. I cooked my pasta in a pot, not in a huge mug in the microwave. After taking my cooked elbow mac out of the pot with a slotted spoon, I cooked 3/4c. frozen broccoli in the same water, then added that to the macaroni that was in a bowl. I discarded the water and made the sauce in the pot, then added the macaroni and broccoli to it and cooked it together for a few minutes.

It tastes very good but the sauce was loose because it had no flour in it like a proper cheese sauce does. Adding broccoli to this was an option so I used it. I'll definitely continue to make this but I'll add about a 1/2 teaspoon to the butter before adding milk. The recipe has us add 1/4t. salt but that would be way too much. I only needed a pinch because the pasta was cooked in salted water and the cheese was salty.

*My Barilla elbow macaroni tripled in volume, so 1/2c. uncooked turned into 1 1/2c. cooked.


ALBÓNDIGAS



This Mexican soup uses raw Italian sausage instead of meatballs, carrot, celery, potatoes, cumin, oregano, and onion. I omitted diced zucchini, a diced chile, and diced tomatoes. I used some tomato paste in place of tomatoes. I made this in a 2qt. pot instead of two jumbo mugs in the microwave. The flavoring is off in this but it's edible. The Italian flavoring clashes with the cumin or something. I wouldn't make this again.


CHEESY TWO-EGG OMLET



Boy, was this easy to make. I used two jumbo eggs, milk, butter, dried chives in place of scallions, left out the thyme, used half the amount of shredded cheese, salt, pepper, and cooked it for 2 minutes. As you can see the chives rose to the top. It was a little undercooked on the bottom so I put it in the microwave upside down on a plate for 20 seconds. It still wasn't cooked so I gave it another 20 seconds and it was cooked through on the bottom but the sides were very tough but the inside was moist. I'll experiment with this so that it's not overcooked again. I'll also use a smaller bowl. You'll need one with a 1 1/2 c. capacity. The photo on the bottom is the cooked egg upside down on a plate.

Edit: I've made this quite a few times and I usually cook the egg for 90 seconds, run a fork around the egg to loosen it from the bowl, flip it over and microwave it another 30 seconds or so.






CORNCAKE





Not good, folks. I microwaved this in a 3 cup bowl, not two jumbo mugs. It's extremely dense and tastes like nothing more than cornmeal with a little onion flavor from dried chives, which I used instead of scallions. The bottom had a raw area and there were pockets of raw egg inside. The corn just falls out of it too when you cut into it. I was able to eat most of it but I wouldn't make again. You have to use several bowls to make this too.

OKLAHOMA CHEESE GRITS



These were surprisingly good. They don't taste like corn or egg at all, just cheese and chives. I made mine in the bowl I eat cereal in, 1 1/2 c. capacity. You use a small amount of quick cooking grits (corn meal made from hominy for Quaker® brand) and water, microwave a short time, let the mixture sit, microwave again, add in egg, cheese, flavorings, and microwave until risen and firm.

My complaints- After the grits had sat for ten minutes we were to microwave it another two minutes before adding in the other stuff. We weren't told to stir that mixture after it had sat ten minutes. My final product had quite a few large lumps in it that I think may have been avoided had I stirred the grits/water mixture before adding in the other things. After adding in the eggs and cheese the center of mine was raw on top so I stirred the mixture together and microwaved another thirty seconds, then it was fine. I had to add about three tablespoons more water to the mixture after they cooked because the mixture was too thick. I'll have to experiment with the timing next time so I can get it just right. These tasted good and I'll continue to make these.


BEAN SOUP



This recipe is called Split Peas and Ham. You're supposed to mash up a drained and rinsed can of split peas, add some water to thin it slightly, ham, salt, pepper, onion, and garlic. I used part of a can of navy beans and some drained canned white meat chicken instead. I also added broccoli and used a 14.5 oz. can of low sodium chicken broth plus 1/2 c. of water to make two large servings.

No surprise that this need much more flavor. Onion and garlic are base flavors. You need more seasonings than those to create a flavorful broth. I added some celery but this desperately needed more flavor. I added a little bit of canned chipotle in adobe sauce and that helped some but this still needs some work. Next time I'll use more broccoli, use half a can of mashed beans and just put the rest in the soup and try to find some way to add more flavor to this. It wasn't bad at all the way I made it.

ORECCHIETTE ALFREDO



This was extremely good. I used spiral pasta instead of orecchiette (ear-shaped pasta). The sauce is made with cream (I used half and half) and parmesan cheese, that's it. I added raw broccoli and carrot, which I cooked in the water with the pasta, and 1/2 cup canned chicken. I didn't add any salt at all (the recipe called for 1/4 teaspoon!) because of the salty parm. This was very simple to make and tastes great and I'll continue to make this.



MY THOUGHTS: These are pretty simple recipes that require you to either cook rice or pasta in the microwave, and chop some vegetables. Easy. The recipes are severely lacking in flavor but it's easy to experiment with your own seasonings. Most recipes use just scallions and garlic for seasoning. I tried to use the ingredients called for but I don't like tomatoes so I had to use tomato paste in place of it. I didn't want to buy celery just to use probably less than two stalks total so I used my handy celery flakes. Most of these recipes use scallions but I prefer to use onion since I almost always have onion on hand, or dried chives.

I'm disappointed that no recipes use lentils, which are a legume and are cooked basically like you cook raw rice. I'm disappointed too that only one recipe uses barley.

Most of these recipes would have you use two jumbo mugs to make one large mug-full of soup. I don't like that method, I like to have plenty of room to mix things around, so I chose to use a 2 quart pot for most things I made because I doubled some recipes. The method used to cook pasta is silly. You boil it a few minutes in a 'jumbo' mug, let it sit a half hour, then boil it again for a few minutes. It's quicker to boil pasta on the stove in a pot.

This cookbook is alright for giving you ideas but to make the recipes exactly as they're written, they're not good. Most things I made turned out but I had to doctor them up and make some changes.

I received this from the publisher in exchange for an honest review.


Profile Image for Jeffrey Ning.
251 reviews4 followers
May 18, 2019
Attracted to its title, Mug Meals associating it with convenience. Who would have thought coffee mug can be used for cooking real food in it? Easy to read and follow if you have a microwave. I feel the recipes should be accompanied by photos instead of certain recipes.
Profile Image for Krista.
2 reviews
June 7, 2025
Just making same recipe smaller size

These recipes are making a normal recipe just a smaller batch. Thought the recipes would have fewer ingredients. This might work for others but when you are on the go, these are time consuming.
Profile Image for Marian Stein.
8 reviews2 followers
February 11, 2019
Love this great book!!

Great for a single person and easy instructions! Fantastic for me I am a new widow and love a book that encourages me to cook for one.
Profile Image for The Reluctant Retiree.
965 reviews7 followers
October 10, 2025
Oh!

I picked up a lot of ideas and tips from this book. Now I’m looking forward to trying them out. I’m alone now, so any recipe ideas are greatly appreciated!
Profile Image for Jennifer.
250 reviews24 followers
July 9, 2016
I love the mug cake concept and haven't looked at this author's mug cake book as yet. I picked this up from the library and after reading through it, I will be purchasing my own copy. I think it will be very handy when I just want to make a quick meal for myself without dirtying a ton of dishes or just eat a sandwich, leftovers or something premade. None of the recipes stand out as revolutionary but provide a quick and easy way to make common recipes in a mug in your microwave.

This would be a great gift for a college student or a single person who frequently eats out because they don't want to cook a big meal.

I'm looking forward to trying out the French toast in a mug!
Profile Image for Kim.
349 reviews
July 18, 2016
Easy recipes, no skimping on ingredients but simple to throw together. Great portions.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.