Subscribe to get Weekly delicious and simple recipes to your inbox
Stop Losing Recipes You Love
If you cook often, you probably collect recipes from all over the internet.
One comes from a blog.
Another from a cooking website.
A few are saved as screenshots on your phone.
Some are bookmarked somewhere in your browser.
At first it works. But after a while, finding the recipe you want becomes surprisingly difficult.
You remember the dish.
You remember roughly when you cooked it.
But actually locating the recipe again? That’s another story.
Why Saving Recipes Is Still Messy
Most people save recipes in ways that were never designed for cooking.
Bookmarks pile up quickly. Screenshots get buried in your camera roll. Notes apps turn into endless lists. Pinterest boards grow into chaotic collections of dishes you may never find again.
When it’s time to cook, the process often turns into searching through multiple apps just to locate one recipe.
That’s not exactly convenient when you’re already hungry.
A Simpler Way to Save Recipes
Imagine having one place where every recipe you like can be stored.
Instead of juggling bookmarks, screenshots, and tabs, you could simply save recipes directly from websites and organize them in a personal collection.
Something like that could allow you to:
- Save recipes instantly from websites
- Keep everything organized in one place
- Find recipes quickly when you need them
- Access them easily while cooking
No more digging through random folders or trying to remember where you saved something.
We’re Exploring an Idea
Because so many readers visit our site looking for recipes they want to cook again later, we started thinking about a simple tool that could help with exactly that.
The idea is straightforward: a place where you could save and organize recipes from your favorite cooking websites.
Before building something like this, we want to know if people would actually use it.
Interested in a Recipe Saver?
We’re currently exploring the possibility of creating a tool that helps you save recipes and keep them organized.
If that sounds useful to you, you can join the early access list by writing to us an email and be the first to hear when we share more about it.
Your feedback will help us understand if this is something the cooking community really needs.



