

But if you want to get serious about curating recipes, you might want to consider a dedicated recipe manager. For an online approach, a self-hosted wiki or a modified installation of Drupal or Wordpress would let you access your recipes from any device. For the casual chef, a simple spreadsheet or basic multi-purpose database might do the trick. So I suggest self-hosting your recipes, or at the very least keeping a copy of them locally.

Of course, there are third-party sites where you can upload recipes, but some of us aren't willing to share grandma's spaghetti sauce with the world, and would be devastated if the company hosting our recipe catalog up and vanished overnight. And let's be honest, you were probably never going to cook 95% of the recipes in those books anyway, so why not shed them for a more modern solution.Ī personal recipe database can take many forms. Years of clipped recipes and notes written on napkins stuffed between the pages of countless dirtied cookbooks aren't necessarily the best way to organize a recipe collection. When it comes to recipes, it pays to be organized.

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