Kate Handel You might also try BigOven. You can use the mobile apps to take photos of typed or handwritten paper recipes, and BigOven types them for you into fully portable, scalable, searchable recipes. You can add web recipes by pasting a url, plus you can get started with over 250,000 public recipes from other cooks to search too.
Next, press the Home button and start My Recipe Book on the iPad. You are actually going to use the Custom Import feature to transfer the recipe into the App so start by selecting “Find Recipes Online” button. Once the Find Recipes screen is displayed, click the Custom Import button on the top of the screen. Explore 19 apps like My Recipe Book, all suggested and ranked by the. Free Open Source Mac Windows Linux. Free Mac Windows Web Android iPhone.
BigOven offers a grocery list, a menu planner, re-usable menus and more, which all sync across all devices and the web. Unlike Paprika, BigOven does offer a fully functional website that automatically syncs with its mobile apps.
Item: Price: $4.99 - $19.99 Overall Impression: A simple-to-use, attractive and intuitive app for storing recipes you find both online and off. Last year I talked about, which over the years had gotten scattered across a number of different systems (Google Reader, Evernote, Delicious), none of which really worked for me anymore. I decided to give Paprika a try and was happy to discover it has all the features I've been looking for in a recipe app, along with a few I didn't even know I wanted, but am glad to have.
The Review Characteristics and specs: Paprika is a recipe management app that allows you to capture online recipes and sync them automatically between various devices. To add a recipe you found online, you navigate to the website within the app's browser and locate the recipe you want to add, or use their to save recipes while browsing online. On websites for most major food magazines, as well as recipe-focused sites like Epicurious, recipes are captured with the click of a button, but even entering recipes from blogs or non-compatible websites takes less than a minute of highlighting and clicking. It's also possible to enter your own personal recipes, so that everything is stored in one place. The app also makes it easy to generate grocery lists or meal plans based on the recipes you have saved.
Favorite details: One-click recipe capturing! I really appreciate the intuitiveness of the app; captured recipes are almost always formatted perfectly and items on the grocery store list are already organized into the correct aisles ('Produce,' 'Canned and Jar Goods,' etc.), so I don't have to waste a lot of time correcting the technology's incorrect assumptions. (I wish I could say the same for my iPhone's Auto Correct!). Potential problems: Capturing and entering recipes works best on a computer, while grocery shopping and using the recipes is best done from a mobile device, so getting the most from Paprika means buying the app for more than one device. (It's possible the iPad version of the app combines the best of both worlds, but I haven't tried it.) Splurge-worthy? At $19.99 for the Mac app and $4.99 for the iPhone, iPad, and Android apps, Paprika is more expensive than the usual under-$2 app, but the features and ease of use make it worth the extra money.
Recipe organization is a very personal thing. I always wanted to love because I know so many smart cooks who swear by it, but I'm a stickler for formatting; I want a standard, easy-to-follow format for all my recipes if I'm going to bother organizing them in one place. And don't get me started on all the unattractive, difficult-to-read recipe organizing apps out there. If I'm going to spend hours staring at an app on the computer, in the grocery store, and while cooking, I want it to be nice to look at and a pleasure to use. Paprika is both. I've been using it for a couple months now and I've not only made progress on adding all the recipes I've had scattered around the web, I've also been more systematic about immediately searching for and adding recipes that catch my eye in magazines, newspapers, or blogs.
Quite simply, Paprika provides everything I've been looking for in a recipe organizing app: simple yet intuitive recipe capturing, Cloud syncing across multiple devices, easy-to-read formatting, and good-looking design. If these features are in line with what you're looking for too, Paprika is definitely worth a try. Find It!, $4.99 - $19.99, available for the, & Related: Apartment Therapy Media makes every effort to test and review products fairly and transparently.
The views expressed in this review are the personal views of the reviewer and this particular product review was not sponsored or paid for in any way by the manufacturer or an agent working on their behalf. Originally published January 2013.