• poppy@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Or your library, some even digitally so you can just get them on Libby and not have to drive to the library! Plus then you can screen cap your favorite recipes. 😁

      • Steeve@lemmy.ca
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        1 year ago

        But they’re all from the 90s at best, so as long as you like shake and bake, casseroles, and jello with fruit chunks in it…

        • Traegs@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          I mean, it’s not usual to find more modern books at a thrift store. Yeah a lot of them are old, but newer ones are there.

          Even among the old ones there are some that are sought after, like Betty Crocker’s Cooky Book. Best snickerdoodles of my life.

  • I_Has_A_Hat@startrek.website
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    1 year ago

    95% of the time, there is a little button/link somewhere near the top of the page that says “Jump to Recipe”. Click that and you’ll go straight to the recipe.

    • LordOfTheChia@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      “Print Recipe” works better when available. That puts the ingredients and steps in one page (usually).

      You can also print it to PDF if it’s a recipe you want to keep.

    • scops@reddthat.com
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      1 year ago

      Oftentimes they’ll have a Print button as well which reduces the page down to just the ingredients and steps.

    • Stabbitha@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Second Allrecipes. If anything there’s a 1-3 sentence intro to the recipe by the author, then the recipe. And it’s not overloaded with ads, and their app is halfway decent. Oh, and their comments are actually helpful. Rather than the typical “I replaced these core ingredients and it was shit. 0 stars”, it’s more “I replaced this for this reason and this is how it affected the recipe”; they’re actually a great way to crowdsource recipe modifications because the userbase doesn’t appear to be complete morons, and a lot of the comment mods are better than the original recipe.

  • evasive_chimpanzee@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I think what happened is that back in the day, recipes were super sparse and crappy. Think of the typical “grandma’s recipe” written on an index card with half of the ingredients not listed as having any specific amount, and the only directions would be “mix” and “put in a hot oven”. Then you had websites that basically did the same thing. Allrecipes is a good example of this; not too much fluff, but there are so many crappy recipes on there. Unless you know who made the recipe (like chef john), it’s hard to trust a lot of them.

    Then you had websites like serious eats where they wouldn’t just give you the recipe, they tell you how and why they made choices about ingredients, process, etc. That stuff is all super helpful if it’s what you are looking for, so Google et al. would give them and sites like them search priority. They also need to make money, so the added space for advertisement is a plus for them.

    Now, anyone can spend a little bit of money to start a website, throw down a lot of useless preamble, and get the same search engine priority as serious eats. Most of those are garbage.

    No one is going to do the work to put out great recipes for free, though, so there’s gotta be some compromise. If you are willing to spend money, there’s a lot of great cookbooks, and the ebook versions of them are easily searchable. New York times cooking, Bon Appétit, and America’s test kitchen/cooks illustrated have extensive catalogs of fairly barebones recipes if you are willing to spend money on a subscription.

    There’s also apps and browser extensions that chop the unnecessary stuff off of a recipe, but just keep in mind that a lot of those sites that pop up when you just Google a recipe suck.

    I think some of the best recipes you can get with no pay wall or unnecessary text are from the websites of companies that actually sell ingredients or equipment because they are basically just advertising for themselves. For example, king arthur baking company has good bread recipes cause they want you to buy their flour. Similarly, anson mills has a lot of good stuff. Those companies have dedicated test kitchens of professionals.

    What I wish I had was a way to create a whitelist of sites/authors that I could search for recipes

    • themajesticdodo@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Unless you know who made the recipe (like chef john), it’s hard to trust a lot of them.

      If it’s Chef John, it’s legit.

  • GraniteM@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Open the recipe, with all the personal anecdotes and whatnot. Ctrl+F “Print”. This will take you to the print button that is nearly always right above the actual recipe. You can also download the printed recipe pdf for later reference.

        • VindictiveJudge@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          The X axis is time, the Y axis is steps or ingredients or something. The leftmost column is just ingredients. Check out the marshmallow one, for instance. The first step (upper left corner) is to soak the attached ingredients (gelatin and water) for ten minutes. The box below about boiling is simultaneous, but attached to different ingredients. The step after that is to mix the two batches you just produced together. Then mix in the salt until fluffy, then mix in vanilla. Let it cool for three hours, then cut it, then top with the final ingredient, which is powdered sugar.

        • Thavron@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I checked out the parmesan cheese bread, and going off that I think one column of instructions pertaina to everything to the left of it.

    • unfinishedsentenc@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Seconding this. It’s not free after the trial but you don’t have to weed through a bunch of pop up ads, auto play videos and narrative essays in order to get to the recipe. I personally like the comment sections on there to learn how other people change the recipes and experiment.

    • Fashtas 🇦🇺@aussie.zone
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      1 year ago

      Interesting site but not without flaws, first recipe I looked at was essentially just “use a off the shelf bottle of curry paste to make a curry and cook some rice. Cooking time 315 minutes”

      Gonna check through it though, seemed to have a nice variety, with a lot of cultures listed

  • TMPinSYR@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Not exactly answering your question but it’s related.

    My understanding is that you can’t copyright a recipe just like you can’t copyright data. The author’s anecdotes, however, CAN be protected via copyright. So adding the stories to the recipe some copyright protection.

  • Deepus@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    The the paprika3 app, it has a in apo browser where you can find the recipe you want and yhen hit the download button to save only the recipe. You still have to trawl thtough the shit the forst time but when you come to make it again its all just sat there waiting nicely for you

    • UndulyUnruly@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      What? You don’t have to trawl through any shit in Paprika. I don’t even wait for the page to load the “accept cookies” dialogue.

      Navigate to a recipe of interest, hit the download button in Paprika. Bam! There is the recipe, ingredients and description only, no fluff.

      If you don’t want to save the recipe because you don’t like it, just discard and don’t save.