What digital resources do YOU use? - Recipes & Cooking Advice - Eat Your Books

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#1 Posted : Sunday, June 8, 2014 1:02:55 PM(UTC)
Hey, cooks!

Wondering what other digital resources - besides EYB - other member use out there, either to find new recipes or keep track of new and existing ones. I'll go first.

I try to keep most of my recipes in Evernote. Always helpful to know, when I'm standing at the grocery store and wondering if I have ALL the ingredients, that I can check any recipe within Evernote just to make sure. I haven't used Evernote Food very much, ironically. Think I'm just too trained to use the main program itself.

I love the Panna cooking app - very slick - but must admit I've yet to make something from it. They've aligned themselves with cooks I like, though - Deborah Madison, Rick Bayless, Melissa Clark - so I know I will soon.

The Next Issue app is great for magazines in general. I really don't like Bon Appetit's "cooking mode," however, as I prefer to see both ingredients and instructions on a single page - not tabbing through.

Lastly, I'm loving Oyster and Scribd, which are both like Netflix for books. They have a decent, although not extraordinary, selection of cookbooks within both apps.

This leaves out a ton of websites (have used Epicurious for years, and the new New York Times Cooking Beta is impressive) and apps - but it gets us started. What are your favorite digital resources?
#2 Posted : Monday, June 9, 2014 5:11:39 PM(UTC)

I use Paprika to upload recipes from the Internet (or type in if necessary) the recipes I have tried and want to make again.


When I come across a recipe I want to try, I bookmark in Delicious using tags so I can easily find by ingredient, etc.


I have never tried Oyster or Scribd, but if they have cookbooks that would be good for me to try as I am such a cookbook junkied. My shelves are full, and I am now trying to buy on Kindle to save space.


And of course I use EYB.

#3 Posted : Monday, June 9, 2014 6:27:53 PM(UTC)

Thank you for all these suggestions.  I'm such a dinosaur that it's hard for me to keep up with things and it's great to learn about these sites and apps. I'm going to check all of these mentioned here. 


 

#4 Posted : Thursday, June 12, 2014 11:40:13 PM(UTC)

I've tried using "My Recipes" via Cooking Light, since I subscribe to it, and I signed up for PepperPlate and never used it.  I put several of my personal recipes on Tasty Kitchens so I can access, print and share with friends.  However, the thing I use the most successfully is Pinterest.  


Pinterest is great for showing the picture and general catagorizing...however, not great if searching for anything in particular, which is why I joined EYB. 

#5 Posted : Sunday, June 15, 2014 12:17:47 PM(UTC)

For those people using other sites and apps for storing and bookmarking online recipes, why would you not use the EYB Bookmarklet?  In addition Personal Recipes allows you to add recipes such as clippings and family recipes.  The EYB service is intended to allow you to keep all your recipes in one place - cookbooks, magazines, online and personal.  If you have them spread around different services then it is much harder to find exactly the recipe you want.

#6 Posted : Sunday, June 15, 2014 2:02:05 PM(UTC)

I seldom use the "Add to EYB" bookmarklet, even though it's right there on my task bar.  When I'm zipping through web sites, I often find something worth following up on, but not right at the moment.  The EYB won't let me mark these pages, insisting that I have not added ingredients in the EYB indexing format, etc.  Am I doing something wrong?  Because I'd really like to use EYB instead of all these tiny pieces of paper floating around my computer desk.  FWIW, I am a charter member of EYB and use it constantly for everything except quick notes.  Those usually go into Pinterest.

#7 Posted : Sunday, June 15, 2014 3:03:00 PM(UTC)

Recipes added with the Bookmarklet are added to the public EYB Library as well as to your own Bookshelf which is why we ask that you index the recipe when using the Bookmarklet. Indexing the recipes fully is then a benefit to yourself as well as to other members searching for online recipes. I do proofread all recipes added with the Bookmarklet to make sure they are consistent with the Indexing guidelines. If you don't want to take the time to index the recipe and would prefer to just save the link to your Bookshelf for later reference without indexing it, you can add it as a Personal Recipe instead and just copy the title and URL into the form. Personal recipes are only seen by you, so it is up to you how much or how little information you would like to include.

#8 Posted : Tuesday, June 17, 2014 9:12:06 AM(UTC)

I've been using SpringPad for years, but it's about to close down this month.  I've imported all my notebooks to Evernote and also have been adding them to my online MasterCook account in a To-Try Cookbook.  The main purpose of web-clipping is to store my To-Try recipe and food ideas and I can do it by category. 


I don't make all the recipes I save, but they're often as much an inspiration as a resource. After I try something, it's moved from the stash, either to a favourites/make again folder or just deleted. 


I'm not yet certain about Evernote - not as seemlessly simple to use as SpringPad.


I'll take another look at the Bookmarklet, but I wasn't successful in making work first time round.

#9 Posted : Tuesday, June 17, 2014 5:06:50 PM(UTC)

Jane - I would love to store personal recipes in EYB if we can copy and paste with categories like pepperplate.  I use pepperplate to copy and paste recipes both English and Japanese and it works really well.  I don't necessary want to type in the recipes.  So right now I am using EYB and pepperplate for my cooking needs.  I also have like 8500 recipes in Mastercook and around 2000 recipes in Cookmanager (Japanese language). 

#10 Posted : Tuesday, June 24, 2014 4:35:04 PM(UTC)

Evernote is great for grabbing and organizing. I would be curious to hear from anyone that has tried Evernote Food. 

#11 Posted : Wednesday, June 25, 2014 12:15:04 AM(UTC)

I use living cookbook.


I own a cooking school and find it's great for keeping classes togther, working out shopping lists and aproximate costings.


Regards


Bec


becs-table.com.au

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