Table for One

39 Quick, Simple Dinner Recipes for One

From Japanese soft-scrambled eggs to the best homemade blue cheese burger.

by:
March 29, 2020
Photo by Bobbi Lin

Table for One is a column by Senior Editor Eric Kim, who loves cooking for himself—and only himself—and seeks to celebrate the beauty of solitude in its many forms.


In 1963, the German television station NDR recorded an 18-minute single take of Dinner for One, a comedy sketch written by Lauri Wylie. According to older editions of the Guinness Book of World Records, it is the most re-aired television program ever, often shown on New Year's Eve in countries all over the world (including Germany, Denmark, Sweden, South Africa, and Australia).

It's a real slapstick gem. Miss Sophie hosts a dinner for her 90th birthday, inviting her four friends, Sir Toby, Admiral von Schneider, Mr. Pomeroy, and Mr. Winterbottom. Unfortunately, she's outlived all of them, so instead she dines alone. The film should be devastating, were it not for the butler, James, who keeps her company throughout the meal.

Dinner for One is a traditional affair à la russe: four courses (mulligatawny soup, North Sea haddock, chicken, and fruit). Each course is a lap around the same joke: James serves Miss Sophie her food and then has to impersonate the guests, making a birthday toast at all four seats (this means four shots each of sherry, white wine, Champagne, and Port).

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Every time he stumbles back to the sideboard, where the food sits, he trips over a tiger-skin rug with a head that juts out from the ground. (Humor here comes from the fact that as James gets drunker and drunker, he becomes more cognizant of the rug and even hopscotches over it toward the end of the meal.)

"The same procedure as last year, Miss Sophie?" he asks at each course.

"The same procedure as every year, James!" she answers.

This was my roundabout way of saying: Eating dinner alone doesn't have to be a sad affair. If anything, it's a chance to collect your thoughts, to be with yourself and with yourself alone, and to brush off the day's excesses.

Though it would be nice, I'll admit, to have a James keeping me company, I take great pleasure in preparing myself a small supper when I can. There are a few pantry staples I rely on for this: quick-cooking meats like seafood and steak, carbohydrates like pasta and white rice, and a selection of amari with which to end the meal (and to aid in digestion).

Another thing about recipes for one: They're incredibly easy to scale up (just multiply the ingredient quantities by however many you're feeding). Scaling down a recipe, on the other hand, is like nails on a chalkboard. There's nothing like dividing a recipe by six to eight to remind you of your loneliness. The New Yorker's parody of the FoodNetwork.com recipe review hits this nerve dead on:

I live alone in a studio apartment with only a mini fridge, so leftovers aren't an option. And every time I try to reduce the size of a recipe, it just doesn't come out right. Don't get me wrong, Ina Garten—I am completely fine with being a forty-nine-year-old assistant funeral director who has only ever purchased twin sheets. Totally. Fine. But why don't you try dividing 1⁄4 teaspoon of fleur de sel by eight? Do you think I just happen to own an electron microscope?

For you and for me, here are 35 single-serving dinner recipes—plus four desserts—so you don't have to go out and buy an electron microscope.


Easy Dinners

1. Cobb Salad

Lightly dressed in a malt vinaigrette, this salad is exactly what I want to eat when I want to eat absolutely everything. I can have the chicken, the eggs, and the bacon. Better yet, each will be perfectly cooked and deliberately composed in relation to the others (i.e., blue cheese, cherry tomatoes, avocado slices, and gorgeously bitter radicchio).

2. Roasted Seaweed Caesar Salad With Anchovy Croutons

The dinner salad of Dinner Salads™. This Caesar is meaty and substantial enough to be a meal on its own, especially the way I make it: one whole romaine heart, scattered on a large plate with a gutsy, anchovy-heavy dressing, upgraded with roasted seaweed snack and nutty sesame oil.

3. Gluten-Free Turkey Meatloaf With Cream & Oats

It's never lost on me: the old-fashioned comfort of meat and potatoes.

4. Cornish Game Hen Soup With Garlic, Ginger & Fried Shallots

I recommend a Cornish game hen here for a multitude of reasons: It's a single-serving bird; has ultra-tender flesh, even the white meat; and makes the richest, most fortified broth because it's a whole chicken (bones and all). But readers have made this with a regular roasting bird to feed their families, or even just breasts, thighs, or wings. Whatever chicken you use, the resultant broth—made aromatic and immune-boosting, thanks to garlic, ginger, and onion—is something we could all use right now.

5. Roasted & Pickled Radish Tacos

Anita Lo "relies on the toaster oven to roast the vegetables for her vegetarian tacos, and even to warm the tortillas on top," Genius Recipes columnist Kristen Miglore writes. "She quick-pickles a handful of radishes, quarters, and roasts the rest, then wilts the greens in, too ... Everything is considered and nothing goes to waste."

6. Nori & Sesame Avocado Toast

I remember the way, years ago (before I learned to cook in any real capacity), the way an avocado half would make me full; even fuller when I'd smash roasted seaweed snack, sesame oil, and salt into it with a fork. Flecked onto a slice of toast, it was the most delicious way to satisfy those after-school hunger pangs.

7. Welsh-Rarebit Yorkshire Pudding

I find great comfort in knowing that, as long as you have one egg, a little milk, and some flour, you're just a greased ramekin away from a Yorkshire pudding. My version takes the original recipe (egg, milk, flour) and "turduckens" it into another British delicacy: Welsh rarebit. We Americans have no idea what any of this means (why is it called pudding?), but let me tell you, it's nice with meats and gravies, or as a savory dinner for one—especially with a green salad, or just a glass of wine and a good book.

8. Japanese 7-Eleven Egg Sandwich

This lovely recipe comes by way of former Food52 editor extraordinaire Nikkitha Bakshani. "It closely mirrors what I would call the best egg salad sandwich I've ever eaten in my life, widely available at conbini (convenience) stores across Japan," she writes. "My personal favorite one was at 7-Eleven, but they all have the same idea: super-smooth eggs that don't shy away from mayo, in between soft white bread." Complete with potato chips or a side salad, this meal for one couldn't be simpler.

9. Thai-Curry Chicken Pot Pie

The joy of writing this piece is that I get to highlight those underrated recipes readers may have missed the first time around in the column. Here, an otherwise laborious dish, chicken pot pie, is transformed into a quick weeknight meal for one. Radishes, peas, and an umami-rich Thai coconut curry fill a buttery pie crust—and it all gets cooked in one pan. I adore eating this for dinner, but making it is also a pleasure. Even the pie crust is homemade, with the idea in mind that rolling out a single portion of dough is easier than rolling out a normal one (but what is "normal," anyway?).


Quick-Cooking Proteins

10. Sheet-Pan Shrimp Scampi

Inspired by an immeasurably delicious garlic shrimp dish I had at a Chinese restaurant in Hawaii, this dinner for one makes good use of a high-heat oven. Marinated shrimp caramelizes in its own juices, creating a sauce that's made even saucier thanks to a last-minute pat of butter and spritz of lemon juice. The usual scampi players are present (garlic, lemon, and red pepper flakes), but I went with mirin instead of white wine and soy sauce instead of salt, lending it some of that Waikiki palate.

11. Chicken-Fried Steak Katsu With Milk Gravy

I’ve always felt that frying at home was never worth the mess, but when you’re cooking small-scale like this, the oil feels more manageable. I like to make a classic milk gravy with some pan drippings, essentially a cowboy's version of a béchamel. The most important ingredient here for me is the nutmeg, that deep, earthy cure-all for homesickness.

12. Honey-Mustard Chicken Breast With Corn Panzanella

I regret that this dish may have been overshadowed by the long, sad story it accompanied. Melancholy aside, it really is a useful dinner recipe to keep in your back pocket. Baked chicken breasts with a raw corn salad—what more does one need?

13. Pan-Fried Lamb Chops With Minted Pea Salad

I developed this recipe for two reasons: 1) Apparently Marilyn Monroe made lamb chops for herself when she lived alone (and who doesn't want to be Marilyn Monroe?). 2) Lamb chops cook up super fast (we're talking one to two minutes per side), which is ideal for when you need to hit the kitchen running.

14. Duck Breast With Blueberry-Port Sauce

It might seem like an extravagance to cook duck for one, but I stand by it. This pan-seared duck breast recipe almost asks that you be negligent, as the fat needs time to render in the pan, untouched, left to do what it does best.

15. Buffalo-Glazed Salmon With Blue Cheese Kale Salad

Sustainable salmon fillet and gorgeous hunk of Gorgonzola aside, it's likely you’ll already have all these ingredients on hand—and dinner will be ready in 20 minutes tops.

16. Pan-Roasted Chicken Breast With Broccoli Panzanella

"This recipe is a great way to use up old bread," writes Lo. "Day old, week old, two weeks old—as long as it isn't moldy, it will work. The lemon and olive oil soaks into the dry bread to make it soft and delicious again. And paired with the chicken breast, you have a balanced meal that covers all four food groups."

Eating dinner alone doesn't have to be a sad affair. If anything, it's a chance to collect your thoughts, to be with yourself and with yourself alone, and to brush off the day's excesses.

17. Foil-Packet Scallops With Caper-Raisin Butter

The true star here is the caper-raisin butter that runs through the entire foil packet. I first read about this golden elixir in Tacos: Recipes and Provocations by Alex Stupack and Jordana Rothman, who got it from Jean-Georges Vongerichten. "This scallop preparation helped make JGV's flagship restaurant a sensation when it opened in 1997," they write in the recipe's headnote. I thought it was the strangest combination of ingredients and had to try it for myself. Now I keep a jar in my fridge most weeks of the year. It tastes great with pasta, roasted cauliflower, raw bitter vegetables, and of course, scallops.

18. Pizza Mussels

The brothy, buttery sherry sauce here (made pizza-like thanks to tomato paste and dried oregano) could be used for mussels or any other seafood you might have: steamed clams, poached fish, even frozen shrimp. All you need is a hunk of crusty bread to sop up those juices and you're set.

19. Grilled Ribs With Salt & Pepper

Exceedingly simple, yes, but don't knock it till you've tried it: This is my father's favorite way to cook baby back ribs. As one reviewer reports back, "I truly doubted and had serious reservations about this recipe, but I also had a rack of ribs that wasn't going to fit in the freezer. I should not have doubted at all; these ribs were stellar! Huge return on the tiny investment of time and effort and almost nonexistent ingredient list."

20. Blue Cheese Burger

"This was the best burger recipe I have tried thus far," writes in one reviewer. "It was easy to prep and make. Everyone on the table devoured it. I have since added other ingredients just to change it up, but the original recipe is the best ever. The taste of the cinnamon and rosemary really complement each other. I have even started adding these spices to my meatballs."

21. Five-Minute Steak With Fish Sauce & Lime Butter

Here's a weeknight workhouse of a supper, something I like to cook for myself when I have time for nothing else. Sweet, salty, and life-affirming, the fish sauce–lime butter is at once funky caramel and umami personified. (Don't forget to turn on your range hood vent, though.)


Pasta La Vista

22. Ketchup Spaghetti

Spaghetti Napolitan (named after Naples, Italy), or what I like to call "ketchup spaghetti," was invented by the head chef at the New Grand Hotel. Since tomato sauce was a rare ingredient in postwar Yokohama around the 1950s, ketchup was used as a substitute. Unfortunately, some people hear the word "ketchup" and cringe. I have a theory: The American palate has for so many decades been conditioned to associate Heinz ketchup as a condiment, disallowing any acknowledgement of it as an ingredient in its own right. Which is unfortunate because (hear me out) when you caramelize it in butter, onions, and red bell peppers, it gains an almost tomato paste–like flavor that pairs beautifully with pasta. It's important to note here, too, that many cultures in the world have some variation of this dish and adore it.

23. Miso-Eggplant Spaghetti

The star ingredient here is white miso—it adds that savory depth, made even better once fried in olive oil. If ever there were a dish you'd want to eat on repeat, then this umami-packed eggplant spaghetti must be it.

24. Jajangmyeon (Korean Black Bean Noodles)

If Americans have delivery pizza, then Koreans have jjajangmyeon (often romanized as jajangmyeon), a popular black bean noodle dish studded with fatty pork. In Seoul, you can order it over the phone and have a bowl delivered to your door in a matter of moments. (Or you can make it at home.)

25. Fettuccine Alfredo

Real Alfredo—the original from Rome, at least—doesn't have a lick of cream. Just fettuccine, butter, and cheese, tossed together with the pasta's starchy cooking liquid to create a sauce that looks and tastes very close to heavy cream. At his restaurants in Italy, Alfredo di Lelio would do this tableside as a sort of ceremony for the guests.

26. Spaghetti With Fried Eggs & Pangrattato

"In his book, Naples at Table: Cooking in Campania, Arthur Schwartz introduced me to the simple delights of pasta cooked with fried eggs," says recipe author Rhonda. "Living alone overseas while my husband was deployed with the USAF, I became a bit obsessed with this dish—to the point where my sister, Amanda, thought she might have to run an intervention. Ten years later, I have added to and changed this recipe to fit my own tastes. The yolks coat the pasta and the whites provide little puffs of yumminess throughout this peppery, garlicky dish. The pangrattato tops it all off by adding bits of crunch and bright bursts of lemon and rosemary."


Have a Rice Day

27. Pesto Risotto With Shrimp

This recipe was linked to in The New York Times last year and was, in its own way, the reason my column came to be. (Thank you, Tejal Rao.) The dish's success proved that people are indeed looking for single-serving dinners, especially ones which don't result in leftovers. Eighteen relaxing minutes are all you need here—and don't forget to eat this pesto risotto straight out of the pan with a wooden spoon. (It just tastes better.)

28. Soft-Scrambled Tamago

I'm forever grateful for this recipe's food stylist, Yossy Arefi, who made my eggs look creamier and dreamier than I ever could've imagined. Its origin story is humble: I came home from work one night to an empty kitchen, save for a few eggs, rice (which I always have stocked), and a packet of roasted seaweed snack. I decided to turn these eggs into a scramble; in went some sesame oil, soy sauce, and a little sugar—and I found that the whole lot tasted not unlike those tamago nigiri you get at sushi restaurants. My soft-scrambled tamagoyaki was born.

29. Unadon (Japanese Eel Rice Bowl)

Another Japanese favorite: all the sweet and salty barbecued eel you can eat over fluffy white rice. If you know, you know.

30. Skillet Bibimbap

Dolsot bibimbap is a classic Korean dish of mixed rice with vegetables, served in a sizzling hot stone bowl. The earthenware caramelizes the rice and forms a tahdig-like crust on the bottom, which tastes fantastic against the meat, gochujang (red pepper paste), and fresh white rice. Here, I've replaced the stone pot with the more readily available cast-iron skillet. Everything gets cooked in this one pan, which means dishes are reduced and caramelization is heightened.

31. Parmesan Risotto With Broccoli Rabe

A more grownup take on the broccoli-cheese-rice casseroles I grew up adoring, but with salty-nutty Parmesan and bitter-as-can-be broccoli rabe. Because there are days, after one too many late-night fried chicken sandwiches and French fries, when what my body really craves is bitterness.

32. Risotto Alla Carbonara

This is everything you love about carbonara—that creamy, eggy, bacon-y wonder—but risotto. It makes sense, too, to swap out starchy Arborio rice for the pasta, since it's the starch that gives the classic Roman dish its signature creaminess. If you can't find guanciale, then just use bacon; it'll taste just as wonderful.

33. Seasoned Salmon With Warm Sushi Rice

This surprisingly simple dinner for one is a twofold recipe: First, you get a perfect single portion of sushi rice, which is easier to make than you think (just short-grain white rice, vinegar, and a little sugar and salt). Second, the soy sauce vinaigrette in the seasoned salmon here can be used on just about anything: poached chicken; pan-seared beef, pork, or tofu; noodles if you want to skip the rice entirely; and green vegetables like broccoli, sugar peas, and asparagus.

34. Paper-Thin Asparagus With Butter & Soy Sauce

Speaking of asparagus, this James Beard–inspired recipe has a magic two-ingredient sauce: butter and soy sauce. That's it. The combination is a dream, as the butter's sweetness balances the soy sauce's addictive saltiness, which bubbles up into a glaze around the vegetables. This dish also comes together in just two minutes, which means, with a bowl of fresh white rice, dinner for one is done.


When only pancakes will do

35. Cottage Cheese Pancakes With Strawberry Maple Syrup

These pancakes are light, fluffy discs of protein: Cottage cheese adds lovely texture (a lightness like you're never had) as well as incredible flavor (a little reminiscent of strawberry cheesecake, but savory). Great for breakfast to jump-start the day, but doubly good for dinner with a side of bacon.


Dolce per Uno

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Eric Kim was the Table for One columnist at Food52. He is currently working on his first cookbook, KOREAN AMERICAN, to be published by Clarkson Potter in 2022. His favorite writers are William Faulkner, John Steinbeck, and Ernest Hemingway, but his hero is Nigella Lawson. You can find his bylines at The New York Times, where he works now as a writer. Follow him on Twitter and Instagram at @ericjoonho.

22 Comments

Duffy February 5, 2021
So, thanks for all the ideas.
Unfortunately, they would be meals that I would create to share with someone special. I am looking for great easy tasty meals for one!
 
Katherine V. May 10, 2020
I am SALIVATING I cannot wait to make some of these this week!
 
Linda V. March 28, 2020
Thank you sooo much, can't wait to start cooking! Your recipes are always spot on. Stay healthy.
PS. Loved the movie lol
 
Sea February 3, 2020
Thank you so much. I totally agree with you. They are tasty and easy to make
 
joanne M. September 10, 2019
I love the Dinners for one, I have tried 4 and each delicious, please print more! and Thank you
 
Eric K. September 10, 2019
4! That's a lot! Thank you!
 
joanne M. September 10, 2019
I'm having the pan shrimp tonight, got it marinating now!
 
Eric K. September 10, 2019
Let me know how it goes?
 
joanne M. September 10, 2019
absolutly fantastic, I am 87 and its hard to cook for just myself, but
these recipes are so simple and are a real blessing.. I am also on a keto diet and have lost 40 lbs and 25" off my belly and even though I had a "little" 1/4 cup of rice it was perfect along with a zucchi which I steamed with lots of butter. Thanks for helping me out.
 
Eric K. September 10, 2019
Zucchini is, truly, a wonder vegetable.
 
Wesley D. September 8, 2019
That tamagoyaki would be great with some pan fried tomatoes a la Taiwanese/Chinese scrambled eggs and tomatoes.
 
Eric K. September 8, 2019
Speaking of which... https://food52.com/blog/24476-chinese-tomato-eggs
 
Wesley D. September 8, 2019
Yes! Although, my family’s version is much simpler. Eggs, salt, a dash of white pepper, and a hit of mushroom bouillon for umami and (mostly) natural msg.
 
Wesley D. September 8, 2019
Have you added powdered dashi to your tamagoyaki before? That would really up the flavor profile and connect it to the original more. Bonito flakes would do the same and add a fun visual aspect to it.
 
Eric K. September 8, 2019
I haven't, but that's a great idea!
 
Wesley D. September 8, 2019
I messaged you on fb. I have an idea I’d love to work on with you! Please check your message requests when you have a chance.
 
Leigh September 8, 2019
Gosh, I don’t think eating alone is sad - I am thrilled when I have a meal by myself. But thanks for the ideas 😊
 
Eric K. September 8, 2019
Me too. :)
 
M September 6, 2019
Dinner for One! ❤️ More food culture posts pls!
 
Eric K. September 6, 2019
Coming right up.
 
Maggie S. September 6, 2019
*Looks up "anchorite"*
 
Eric K. September 6, 2019
*Finds self*