Digital CookBooks -Best kitchen display gadgets be it a tablet or screen size recommendations, setup - Ingredients - Eat Your Books

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Digital CookBooks -Best kitchen display gadgets be it a tablet or screen size recommendations, setup   Go to last post Go to last unread
#1 Posted : Monday, April 24, 2023 10:51:19 AM(UTC)
Much as in our household, we opt for and prefer hardback or paperback copies of our cookbooks as a format choice, in a like-for-like price comparison situation, we also find ourselves purchasing more and more Digital CookBooks (primarily Kindle via Amazon) mainly for 2 reasons: the special offer reduced prices and the fact we are fast running out of bookshelf storage space.
We do have an oldish MS Surface Laptop that doubles as a Tablet with touchscreen commands, which we use but it's set up to save battery so not quite ideal. I know we can change this setting but the idea was to set up a screen permanently in our small-sized kitchen. Am looking into an Ipad as I suspect these are more intuitive when using the Kindle Reader App or web browser with a nicer screen resolution, etc.
Was really hoping to have it as a permanent feature always plugged in, hanging somewhere on our kitchen wall or cabinets as this would ensure we would make far more usage of the fast-increasing digital cookbooks we now have in our library but often find we refer to far less often than the physical cookbook copies we own.
Does anyone have any suggestions as to the best screen size, setup, etc, etc so that we do in fact make more use of our digital library of cookbook titles?
Any tips would be gleefully welcomed.
#2 Posted : Monday, April 24, 2023 12:55:12 PM(UTC)

Hi Celialemos,


I use an iPad and am quite happy with it. Several things you might want to think about.  Keeping your hands clean and dry-physical books can take a splash, but electronics can't.  Either have lots of hand towels around and get very good about drying your hands or get a waterproof pouch (check out Amazon).  Don't plan on leaving your tablet plugged in unless you don't mind killing the battery early.  And you may want your battery.  One of the great things about a tablet is the portable nature of your books.  You can sit on the sofa and read any book in your library.  You can also take it along if you will be waiting in line somewhere.  Even sitting in your kitchen with a cup of tea and flipping thru the pages, just as you would with a print book.  


Set your sleep settings with cooking in mind, so that you don't have to unlock your tablet multiple times.  Treat security seriously, either logging out of amazon after a purchase or having a locking code on your tablet and being sure it is locked when you are done.


Screen size is pretty personal.  My present tablet is 10.5".  We have a 13" at our veterinary hospital and find the screen size useful but the tablet itself too large to handle comfortably.  Beautiful, though, if you don't plan to have to handle it.  We keep it propped on a desk for easy access.  I personally don't like the smaller tablets for cookbooks or embroidery books.  Great for fiction, but not enough screen space to adequately look at recipes or books where illustrations matter. 


You can buy cases with keyboards attached.  Again, pretty personal.  I feel that an attached keyboard detracts from the portable nature of a tablet.  My husband adores the keyboard and requires on for every tablet.  If I need to do a lot of typing, I use a computer rather than a tablet. 


Lastly,  if you think epub cookbooks are likely to be your future, get as large a memory as you can afford.  Cookbooks tend to be larger than fiction books and fill a memory more quickly.  Since your plan is to use the tablet as a bookshelf and not as a gaming device, long practical lifetime is more important than the ability to upgrade to the latest and fastest.  My son has a 12yr old iPad that he uses to access the web.  We keep an 8 year old version down on our bar, complete with various drinks books and some grand drink apps.  Not something that needs a lot of processing power, so they just need to keep powering on.  Both were replaced for inadequate memory.  I am a slow learner (grin)


Zephy

#4 Posted : Monday, April 24, 2023 9:54:36 PM(UTC)
I use my iPad extensively for cooking. I try to keep my new purchases to digital for space (out of bookshelf space), and convenience (have the recipe at the grocery store, have it when visiting family, etc.).

Electronics aren’t as delicate as might have been suggested. I will touch my iPad during cooking with hands I’d never think to touch one of my physical cookbooks with, damp, floured, etc., but I’m not going to touch it with sticky, gummy, meat juiced fingers either.

The comment about sleep settings might benefit from some elaboration. When cooking from a recipe on the screen, you probably want to set the screen/device to never automatically go to sleep. You will want to be able to wake and unlock the device as easily as possible. My current one uses face ID. When I had one using fingerprint ID, I had the thumb of my off hand, and the knuckle of my middle finger programmed in to unlock the device — this will save you in most ‘clean hand / dirty hand’ circumstances and in some ‘both hands are dirty’ circumstances.

Memory can be somewhat flexible, as long as you don’t mind that you may have to redownload a cookbook (for free), because it has been purged from memory. But do NOT go for the lowest level of memory, across all brands, this seems to be ‘can just barely run the operating system’

As mentioned, stands are very personal. I use a keyboard case, but I have had an under cupboard stand as well.

All my favorite, frequently visited recipes live on my iPad. I maintain the family cookbook in iOS Pages, and I move all heavily used recipes to there for the ‘have it everywhere’ aspect it provides.
#3 Posted : Tuesday, April 25, 2023 3:37:49 AM(UTC)

Originally Posted by: Zephyrness Go to Quoted Post
… Several things you might want to think about.  Keeping your hands clean and dry-physical books can take a splash, but electronics can't.…


While it is true that liquids and electronics do not mix with modern tablets and phablets there is little need to touch the device at all. Siri, Alexa or whatever Microsoft has — mongoose is it? — as voice activited control means the device does not need to be touch at all although protection remains a good idea much like perspex book holders protect printed recipe books.


During the CoVid-19 lockdown in the UK I watched the daily concerts from the Wigmore Hall in London and noticed that many performers were not using printed scores but rather iPads with a Bluetooth-enabled foot pedal that caused their score display app to turn the pages. It might be possible to use one of those pedals thereby protecting the tablet from any dough, water, sauce, etc.

#5 Posted : Tuesday, April 25, 2023 8:24:02 AM(UTC)

Thank you, each and everyone - some great tips and suggestions. 

#6 Posted : Wednesday, April 26, 2023 3:45:16 PM(UTC)
I also highly recommend using an iPad. You can use an older model, even one that is so old that there are no iOS updates for it. After all, you don't need fancy features, just the ability to run the Kindle app plus iPad apps to view PDFs (if you have recipes on PDFs) and Safari (for recipes on the web). What matters is the size of the screen. If you end up deciding to purchase an iPad, take a look at the refurbished iPads, which Apple sells at a significantly discounted price. They come with a full warranty and refurbished and cleaned up to be as good as new.

When my old cheapo iPad finally bit the dust (battery wasn't charging/holding a charge), I tried to cheap out and use a Fire Tablet instead of an iPad. Big mistake. So clunky to use, full of ads (when viewing recipes on web pages), and extremely difficult to resize recipes stored on PDFs. If it dies (or I find a different purpose for it or I give it away) I will go back to using an iPad with the biggest screen that is an affordable price.

I have no experience with Android tablets, so can't comment about any from manufacturers such as Samsung, etc.
#7 Posted : Wednesday, April 26, 2023 3:55:33 PM(UTC)

As an iPad user (started off more than 10 years ago with an iPad 2 — I did not queue at an Apple Store for it but did get one a week after release — and now have an iPad Air 4th generation) I have not found any need or desire to install the Kindle app. The 60+ recipe books I have on the iPad are all in Apple Books. I can't think of a cookery/baking book that I have wanted but was not on Apple books. (Typically if there is mention on Amazon of a Kindle version I go check Apple Book for it and find it.)


The only problem I have had with using Apple Books I documented here https://www.eatyourbooks...forum?g=posts&t=7294 in other words it was getting EYB to accept the Apple versions ISBN!

#9 Posted : Friday, April 28, 2023 12:00:52 PM(UTC)

I bring my ipad everywhere.  Even when we go camping in our camper trailer for my cooking needs.  I used to haul all kinds of magazines and cookbooks but now it is ipad only. I normally keep a small hand towel next to my ipad on a moveable large butcher block table at home so it does not get sticky with my fingers. But, even if it did get sticky, easy to wipe off.  I do use clear cover and cover to protect it.  I have dropped mine numerous times on our wood floor and luckily never broke. 

#8 Posted : Wednesday, May 10, 2023 4:31:37 AM(UTC)

Originally Posted by: ThePatheticBaker Go to Quoted Post


As an iPad user (started off more than 10 years ago with an iPad 2 — I did not queue at an Apple Store for it but did get one a week after release — and now have an iPad Air 4th generation) I have not found any need or desire to install the Kindle app. The 60+ recipe books I have on the iPad are all in Apple Books. I can't think of a cookery/baking book that I have wanted but was not on Apple books. (Typically if there is mention on Amazon of a Kindle version I go check Apple Book for it and find it.)


The only problem I have had with using Apple Books I documented here https://www.eatyourbooks...forum?g=posts&t=7294 fnf in other words it was getting EYB to accept the Apple versions ISBN!



I'm very impressed to hear that you've managed to find all the cookery and baking books you need on Apple Books without having to rely on the Kindle app.

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