How do you organize your recipes?
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I just got a new app that lets you stick a link in and then pick a picture and it saves them all together in the app. It's called My Cookbook2
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oh, you can also type your own recipes in and save them so it's not jsut online recipes you find0
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I have a little note card book thing.0
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My mum-in-law made me a scrap book with all her favourite and signature recipes either written or pasted in, and I just add to that.0
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I still have my original somewhat dilapidated recipe box from the 70s, but I'm looking for a better way to organize my new recipes, all of which I find online.0
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Pinterest. I separate "Proven" recipes from "Want to try". The proven recipes are made over and over again.
I have "Proven Mains", "Proven Sides and Desserts, and "Proven Breakfasts".
When I am experimenting I keep track on an index card and make notes as I refine the recipe to my tastes. I am perfecting a bread, protein bar, and a protein cheesecake.1 -
I do everything different everytime.2
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An old school recipe box for my old recipes (too lazy to scan or re-type), and Pinterest for things I find online.
But truthfully, I don't use recipes very often. Most of the time, I just make stuff. Structural ingredients are the only things that matter, so when I do use recipes (sort of), it's mostly for baked goods, which have more structural ingredients. But by this age (61), I know a lot of substitutions, so I fiddle with baked goods recipes, too. Non-structural ingredients are just there to play with, IMO. I like to look at recipes to get ideas for new flavor combinations, though.0 -
Oh, and if you want to get super nerdy, log your recipe in something like grouprecipes.com. Take a picture of your creation. Post on Instagram. Use lots of hashtags. Upload on to MFP. Make notes of the nutritional profile on your posted recipe.
Two of my favourite hashtags are #pancakesunday and #yegeats0 -
Copymethat.com is amazing and free! You can install a button for google chrome and whenever you find a recipe you like, you just click the button on your browser and it saves it to your account. You can add your own recipes too.0
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An old school recipe box for my old recipes (too lazy to scan or re-type), and Pinterest for things I find online.
But truthfully, I don't use recipes very often. Most of the time, I just make stuff. Structural ingredients are the only things that matter, so when I do use recipes (sort of), it's mostly for baked goods, which have more structural ingredients. But by this age (61), I know a lot of substitutions, so I fiddle with baked goods recipes, too. Non-structural ingredients are just there to play with, IMO. I like to look at recipes to get ideas for new flavor combinations, though.
I change almost every recipe but I like them for ideas and new combos and general proportions for things I haven't made before.1 -
I use an app called Paprika. I love it - it syncs meal planning and your grocery list, and will save recipes directly from web pages as well as allowing you to put them in yourself and categorize them however you want, with nutritional info. I usually don't cook from a recipe exactly but it's still nice to have the ideas there. I also have entries for local restaurants and takeout.1
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I have a pretty pink binder where I store all of my recipes that I have tested and that I enjoy.
The recipes are separated into breakfast, lunch, dinner, appetizers, desserts and treats. Each recipe is typed out and have a section for notes and the calories/macro breakdown.
I place them in those clear sheet protectors.
Inside of my binder I also have a folder where I store recipes I'm still trying to perfect or want to try eventually. These are usually just printed from the internet or are handwritten.
Since I cook just about every meal at home I have a lot of recipes. It does take time to maintain, but it's so worth it. It makes things easier and makes my weekly meal planning a breeze.2 -
I have a binder with those plastic page protectors. I have them organized by type...beef, chicken, snacks, sides, desserts, pasta, mexican, etc. If we don't like one of the recipes, it gets pulled out and tossed.
I also utilize Pinterest a lot. If I make a recipe and we like it, I save it.1 -
I have a large binder with dividers for recipes I print out. I just punch holes in the pages and insert them in the appropriate category. I take the recipe out and stick it to my refrigerator with a magnet when I want to use it.
Before that I had recipes in an accordion folder. After 17 years of collecting recipes I broke 2 of those.
Online I have Pinterest boards of recipes I want to try.1 -
I use an app called Pepperplate. I plan out two weeks worth of meals and it creates my shopping list for me. I even have it customized so that the aisles are in the same order as the ones in my store.5
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I use an app called Cozi. It's an organizational app and you're supposed to be able to sync with family, but I just use it to keep my recipes. It also creates shopping lists and all of that for you!1
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Copymethat is a great app.0
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BeardedTxCowboy wrote: »I do everything different everytime.
same here0 -
I bookmark the link. I have a folder full of folders organized for each type of recipe in my bookmarks. It's free! The only issue obviously is when I don't have access to my computer, but then Google is your friend.0
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For those who use an app, do you cook from your phone or do you print out the recipe then throw it away?0
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allrecipes.com need I say more?1
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For those who use an app, do you cook from your phone or do you print out the recipe then throw it away?
For the ones I've Pinterest linked, it varies. I don't like handling my devices with messy hands (or washing every two steps). So, if it's complicated, I'd probably print it. If I really immediately love it a lot and think I'll make it again soon, I might stick the printout in my old-school recipe box; other wise I recycle it,
(If there's lots of white space, it may be "reuse then recycle" - I keep chunks of recyclable white paper, often from junk mail envelopes, in my kitchen to write down foods & weights as I cook, for later logging. Occasionally, if I'm going to try a recipe that's simple as to steps, but that has a list of structural ingredients that must be measured out, I'll scrawl the list on a scrap rather than printing, too - I'm terrible at remembering numbers.)0 -
I get the majority of my actual recipes on Pinterest so they're all just stored their in various related folders. I have a lot of stuff just in my head though.1
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For those who use an app, do you cook from your phone or do you print out the recipe then throw it away?
The app I use has a "Cook Now" feature that displays the recipe in a plain format. It seems to disable the timeout screen on my phone. It also has timers for cooking. Yes, you have to either wash your hands or handle it with messy hands. My favorite thing to use is actually my kid's Kindle.0
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