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HelloFresh Meal Kit Review (2026): Vast Options, Good Execution

Wired Matthew Korfhage 0 переглядів 8 хв читання
Buy Now at HelloFreshCommentLoaderSave StorySave this storyCommentLoaderSave StorySave this storyRating:

8/10

Open rating explainerInformationWIREDMore than 400 meal options a week, somehow. Updated, modern-feeling, global menu. Well-organized, yet minimal packaging. International flavors better represented than in similar meal kits.TIREDCook times are untrue, as always. International flavors take a few liberties. Menu can't be viewed before subscribing.

Last Summer, I took a Zoom call with meal delivery company HelloFresh's now-global chief operating officer, Dan Seidel, to talk about the brand's tangled logistics and grand ambitions.

HelloFresh already dominates the meal delivery world. Well over half the meal kits left on patios, doorsteps, and apartment lobbies by phalanxes of third-party last-mile carriers come from one of the German-founded meal company's expanding stable of brands: Green Chef, EveryPlate, Factor, and of course HelloFresh.

“Logistics” is not a sexy or exciting word. A lot of what Seidel talked about with me were jargon-heavy concepts like expanding weekly SKUs, agile supply chain practices, reducing process lead times, and minimizing substitutions. These days, there's also a bit of AI hocus-pocus.

Prepackaged food ingredients and recipe cardPhotograph: Matthew Korfhage

Why do I bring this up? Because compared to what was on offer last year, the results of these big plans have been nothing short of astounding. Last July, most of HelloFresh's ambitions still felt theoretical. This year, they're quite real. My weekly menu from the HelloFresh meal kit this April contained nearly 500 recipes to choose from. Seasonal produce. Global spices. Chicken, beef, and pork from multi-generation meat producers in Texas or New Jersey.

I can add chicken thigh to my Gambian peanut stew, or swap it out for pork in my enchiladas. There are eight different kinds of enchiladas. Twelve distinct takes on ramen. Possibly too many salads. And I can get a box filled with any of those meals within four days of ordering it.

In a matter of months, HelloFresh has become the most expansive and flexible meal kit delivery service I've ever seen. And I've tested pretty much all of best meal kits there are. Logistics, it turns out, are actually pretty sexy. The new website interface has a couple problems here and there. The recipes still lie cheerfully about how long it takes to make each dish. But the breadth of recipes on offer each week would stun the Cheesecake Factory into silence.

Here's how the HelloFresh meal kit operates these days, and how it tastes.

How HelloFresh Works in 2026

HelloFresh mostly still follows the model it helped pioneer more than a decade ago. You sign up for a subscription and choose recipes from a menu on the company's website. On a day of your choosing, a big green “HELLO” box arrives on your stoop with recipe cards, and ingredients individually sorted and placed into a bag for each recipe.

HelloFresh meals cost $12 a portion if you're not on a trial discount, about average for a premium meal kit. (For trial HelloFresh memberships, you'll often pay less than half price for your first week.) This is far less than you'd spend for comparable meals when ordering delivery. But it's also a lot more than you'd likely pay when cooking using staples from your pantry and fridge. (Though interestingly, meal kits are still cheaper than if you tried to make a recipe by buying all ingredients from scratch.)

Prepackaged food ingredients in a freezerPhotograph: Matthew Korfhage

Where HelloFresh tends to work best for me is at the three or four meals a week mark. This leaves it as a fun treat on dreary days when doing my own meal planning seems impossible. Spending $80 a week on three meals for two will stop me from blowing $60 on a single (mediocre) desperation DoorDash. And as opposed to DoorDash, when I'm done cooking a Thai-spiced green curry on my stovetop, I actually feel a sense of accomplishment.

The problem, in the past, was that meal kits too often repeated menus, or felt a little samey. In 2020, when I used the service to stop myself from being bored to tears during the pandemic, HelloFresh was also a little boring. But these days, HelloFresh is not boring unless you want it to be. Among the nearly 500 meal options are basic burgers, wraps, and salads, along with many culinary wonders of the known world.

Cooked meal in a white bowlPhotograph: Matthew Korfhage

Last week I made Gambian peanut stew, Thai green curry shrimp, North African-influenced ras el hanout beef, nostalgically Tex-Mex chicken enchiladas, American-Chinese ginger-garlic-scallion steak stir fry, and earthy Lebanese-spiced barramundi whitefish. No meal took more than 45 minutes to prep and cook. And except for the enchiladas, I probably would not have made any of them myself if I hadn't had these nifty little bags of ingredients in my fridge.

This is the promise of meal kits like HelloFresh. It's a manageable vision of domesticity—one that involves you making a well-conceived meal without actually doing the work of, well, conceiving it.

Options, Options, Options

HelloFresh is a worldly meal kit, available in 18 countries across mostly the global North and West (plus Australia). While reviewing the meal kit last year, I wrote that what HelloFresh had mastered best was the ability to produce a bright, lightly internationalized menu in tune with modern tastes: pan-Latin rice bowls with a very American fetish for steak, beef stir-fried with ponzu and plum, Turkish chickpea bowls, maybe some mango salsa atop a vaguely Southwest-y pork roast. “It's an Alison Roman world,” I wrote. “We're all just living in it.”

With HelloFresh's newest update, you can still find this version of HelloFresh if you want it. But honestly, there are so many options it's possible that no two people step into the same HelloFresh universe. Vegan substitutions, including Impossible beef and tofu everywhere, run wild. There are roughly 20 couscous dishes on the May 11 menu, ranging from “herby salmon” to “trattoria pork chops.” If I want, I can order a vegan black bean couscous and put 5 ounces of turkey or beef in each serving, for a $2 premium.

Prepackaged food ingredients and recipe cardPhotograph: Matthew Korfhage

Or I can shun cosmopolitanism and go straight-up Midwestern 1980s. I can order up (I kid you not) a “grilled cheese sandwich bar” for me and my hypothetical kids, plus the fixins for some chicken salad sandwiches (that's chicken salad with cranberries in it, just like what Becky brings to the cookout.) Tuna pasta salad is also here for you, and so is a good ol' lemony chicken Caesar.

Anyway, I liked my little tour of East and Southeast Asia and the Mediterranean and was surprised by the freshness of a loosely Thai green curry. The enchiladas tasted like ones from restaurants I used to frequent with my family when I was 12 years old, full of cumin and paprika and sweet-spicy tomato. The ras el hanout beef—its earthy-spiced meat and blistered cherry tomatoes and turmeric rice pocked with dried cranberries and fresh greens—was downright delicious. It's a recipe I will modify and keep. And perhaps order again.

Recipes and the Lying Liars Who Write Them

The instructions on recipe cards were clearly written. For the most part, they follow rules of good cookery (though god help you if you don't have a wealth of mixing bowls on hand, because they will definitely ask you for them.)

But, one quibble: All of these recipe cards lied like crazy about how long each recipe will take. Often, they lied in ways that were blazingly obvious after a cursory reading of the instructions. If the recipe has prep, the oven needs heating, and the cooking time itself is 20 minutes, it's pretty unlikely that this is a 20-minute recipe. It is a 30-minute recipe. Probably 40 minutes. Why lie?

Just tell it like it is. I'm grown. I can take it.

4 large recipe cardsPhotograph: Matthew Korfhage

I know the reason behind these lies, of course, which are near-universal among recipe writers. It's that 40 minutes sounds like a long time to cook up some spicy fish and rice. Consider each recipe time on HelloFresh a sort of aspirational time: It's how long the recipe is supposed to feel like it takes. As with half the internet's code these days, recipe times are written on vibes.

The HelloFresh website has a few transparency issues, as well. HelloFresh's stunning array of menu options is more searchable than it ever was, by ingredients and by genre and by whether a generic kid might like it. But the full menu is quite hard to find before you sign up. (This menu is sort of a tiny sampler, and even this page isn't easy to stumble upon.) Before you see the menu you'll be ordering from, you must hand over your credit card, a practice I've never loved.

But all in all, the new version of HelloFresh is a salutary mix of vast options and solid execution. Unlike previous years, no recipes among the six I tested had any basic cooking errors. The most vexing annoyance was that I was asked to put a teaspoon of cinnamon in some rice. But the cinnamon packet I was given was measured in grams. Come on, guys.

In the end, though, I probably liked the meals I ate because among almost 500 possible meals, I was able to choose ones that I was pretty sure I would enjoy. Chances are, you'll do the same.

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