Rigid weekly prep
You planned Sunday meals for a week that no longer exists by Wednesday afternoon.
Built for remote workdays that never go to plan
MacroDesk helps you turn what is already in your kitchen into a practical meal plan when meetings move, prep gets skipped, and takeout starts looking easier.
The friction
You planned Sunday meals for a week that no longer exists by Wednesday afternoon.
Finding a recipe that fits your remaining protein, carbs, and fat can take longer than cooking.
Inventory notes, recipes, trackers, and delivery apps turn one meal into a multi-tab project.
How it works
MacroDesk is designed to reduce app switching and keep the whole day aligned when one meal changes.
Scan your pantry or connect grocery receipts so the app starts with what you actually have.
Add macro goals and dietary restrictions once, then reuse them across single meals or full-day plans.
Create a meal for the next opening in your day, or build the rest of the day around what just changed.
When lunch changes, remaining meals adjust so your day still points toward your macro goals.
If something is missing, use grocery delivery to close the gap instead of abandoning the plan.
Why this approach feels different
What we can say honestly today
Pantry or receipt input, macro setup, fast meal generation, day-level adjustment, and delivery support are all part of the concept.
The idea comes from direct lived experience and an existing prototype, but there is no durable unfair advantage yet.
Visit-to-waitlist, signup cost, trial conversion, and week-1 retention numbers are early assumptions to validate, not proven metrics.
Best fit
MacroDesk is aimed at remote-working professionals, especially people already trying to meal prep, track macros, and work around dietary preferences, but struggling to keep that routine going when the day becomes unpredictable.
FAQ
Audience to be clarified.
Problem to be clarified.
Early access
Get updates as MacroDesk validates the core workflow for flexible, macro-aware meal planning.