A new way to help achieve your New Year’s cooking goals
December 30, 2025 by DarcieWe have reached that time when many of us reflect on the past year and set our aspirations for the next. Last year, my main intention was to read or re-read every one of my cookbooks. On this, I failed miserably. I will not share the paltry number of books I made it through, but in my defense, 2025 was a challenging year work-wise (work not affiliated with EYB or CookShelf, which remain bright points). I changed jobs, moving to a new city with new coworkers and new systems to learn. That’s a lot of new, and it consumed a ton of energy.
However, another of my intentions for 2025 was to add more cookbook recipes to the “I want to make this” Bookmark in EYB and huzzah! I did it! Now I have a lovely list of recipes to try in 2026, and to make it through this list is my New Year’s goal. I am excited to say that CookShelf will help make this achievable thanks to the new goal feature available in the app.

If you haven’t yet downloaded CookShelf, this provides the perfect opportunity. You can subscribe to EYB in the app (if you are new) or access it as part of your Eat Your Books Premium membership. You can download the app from the Apple App Store or Google Play Store.
Perhaps I had a premonition last year when I wrote “set a goal of cooking 50 new recipes” because that is the “Sous” level for one preset Goal in the app, and that is what I’m choosing. That breaks down to roughly one recipe per week, which seems achievable. Now I just need to decide on which one to do first. It will be so satisfying to see the number of recipes tick up on the counter.
Another cool thing about CookShelf is the “All-Time Stats”. I always feel like I am under-utilizing my books, but it turns out I have cooked from 111 of them, about 25% of my collection. That is more than I thought, and gives me encouragement to drive that number up next year. Can I hit 50% in 2026? I’m eager to try, especially because I added several great new books to my Bookshelf this year. The Goals feature should give me the nudge I need to stay on track.
I’m also interested to see if my 2026 goal will change the top books in my stats, because I have a few that have multiple bookmarked recipes just begging to be made. Maybe this is the year a salad book will land on top (although I am not holding my breath on that one). What are your cooking, baking, and/or cookbook New Year’s goals? Did you achieve what you set out for your 2025 intentions?
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