Guide · New baby
Organizing meals for a family after a new baby
Pick one person to coordinate, ask the family a few simple questions, then share one link so friends can each claim a night. That is the whole job, and it keeps a steady stream of suppers coming while the new parents find their feet.
The short version
A new baby is joy and exhaustion in the same week. The kindest thing neighbors can do is take dinner off the list. You do not need a spreadsheet or a long group chat. You need one coordinator, a few facts about the family, and a single link everyone can use.
How to set it up, step by step
How long and how much
Two to four weeks is a good run. The first two weeks are the hardest, so aim for a meal every other day at the start, then taper as the family settles. Three or four meals a week is plenty. Leftovers cover the gaps, and a small fridge fills up fast.
A few things that help
- Send food that reheats well. A casserole, a soup, a pan of enchiladas. Save the delicate plating for later.
- Use containers nobody needs back. One less thing for a tired family to track and return.
- Label what is inside and how to heat it. A sticky note does the trick.
- Ask about allergies and the older kids too. A new sibling still wants supper.
- Spread the nights out. Steady meals beat a flood on day one and nothing after.
For more on the food itself, see our guide on what to bring a new mom and what to skip. For drop-off timing and allergy questions, see meal train etiquette.
Why folks use Meal Fame for this
Meal Fame is built so the family does the least work of anyone. Friends help with one tap, with no account and no password. The folks bringing food never see the family's address, so privacy holds without anyone having to think about it. And when the dust settles, the people who showed up get a little thanks from the family who was fed.