How do you organize your recipes? #1217
Replies: 4 comments 5 replies
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Same for me. so maybe it can be realised the easy way when the search function will be enhanced a big advantage would be in this context to import the ingredients to the keywords with one click another advantage would be that you wouldnt forget a keyword like geografic, type, etc at the moment i put a lot of background info of ingredients in the description field -- might be a lot btw. more pictures might be nice - smaller ones for intermediate steps - so others can follow easier. ---- maybe in future i experienced that web sites do not last forever conclusion when importing a site the system can parse in total its ok so when adding a recipe once a week or so no problem anyway its a good app and i hope it will grow and last forever |
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wow. I just found out when adding manually great !!! much much faster |
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hi yes you made it clear. thanks @Benedikt81 |
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after a big hassle here so all my metadata like geo, history, etc, goes to a new recipe the advantage is that the orginal recipe keeps short |
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Currently, we have two ways to organize our recipes:
There is no hierarchy in both, whereas in many cookbooks you would have a hierarchy like this:
1.1. Poultry
1.2. Pork
1.3. Beef
2.1. etc.
You can also have a regional categorisation/tagging:
1.1. Japanese
1.2. Korean
1.3. Chinese
I don't want to suggest new features at the moment, but want to know how you approach the issue.
What I do: I have basic categories which roughly resemble the categories of this page. (sorry, it's German, but you can just take a good all-purpose cooking book)
I put the same category in the keywords of the recipe and then add other categories which also apply to the recipe. For example a Lasagne Bolognese gets Pasta, Casserole, Pork, Minced Meat. I also add every ingredient which is significant to the dish as a keyword. So I wouldn't add onions for the Lasagne, but Bechamel Sauce and Tomatoes. Being a spice nerd I also add spices like Basil and Oregano.
In case you wonder, why I do that. I am not fond of wasting food. If I have an ingredient in the fridge which I don't want to spoil, I can open the list of recipes and save the food.
Another keyword I put in íf the food is vegan or vegetarian. If it is vegan, I don't put in vegetarian. I have no need for lactose- or gluten-free keywords, as I have no acquaintances who are on such diets, but it would go in there if needed.
Lastly, I put in one or two geographical keyword. For example, for Pirogi, I put in Eastern European and Polish to resemble a bit of the mentioned hierarchy.
That way, I have a neat selection of recipes by region, category and ingredient. So far, it works well, but the amount of keywords I get is obviously massive.

I'm curious how others do it.
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