I found tandoor, mealie, etc too bloated and complex for a simple catalogue of recipes. my solutions was mkdocs.
i do have to write out each recipe in markdown but this gives me a chance to read each recipe in detail and understand it before it goes into my catalogue.
You think manually copying and pasting recipes in is easier than mealie? Okay.
Whatever does the trick for you! For me its mealie, because my wife loves to find new recipes online, and I just can’t stand dealing with these sites. So import by URL is my main feature, then I tweak it as I go, no more dain bramage from terrible sites.
If you’ve got the recipe though - yeah markdown or cooklang rocks as a solution!
I love mealie. I can steal online recipes, catalogue them, adjust them to my liking, plan all the shopping. Definitely a core self hosted service in my house.
e: I was so excited I didn’t realise I just parroted everything you said.
No worries I completely get it!
I can’t have gluten, so a big advantage for me is importing and modifying, and yes sometimes taking pictures with notes so I can make easier adjustments next time. Definitely the right fit for us, but I can understand OP wanting something leaner if their needs are lighter for sure.
I started with WordPress + Cooked, then moved to WordPress only, and am currently looking to convert all recipes to markdown as well. Will give mkdocs a try.
I am documenting my recipes in obsidian (which essentially is nothing else than mkdocs :p)
The main feature I want is portion scaling. So I can type the number of servings and everything gets multiplied. Is that possible in obsidian via a plugin or with mkdocs?
Nextcloud Cooking app
Not sure.
As cooking is like art anyway, I usually wing the amounts beyond the 2nd try.
Only on the 1st try I’ll actually hardcore follow the recipe. For unusual large amounts I’ll manually calculate.
ठेचा चिकन? Excellent taste my man
Same for me with Markdown. Love the simplicity.
I went through a phase a while back of evaluating a bunch of note-taking and to-do apps, and hating almost all of them for being proprietary products with so much vendor lock-in.
I eventually settled on Joplin because it just uses plain old markdown, and allows you to selfhost the storage back-end so you own your data.
So because if that, my recipes are just a folder (and some subfolders) with markdown in Joplin.
I dig the simplicity of Cooklang
Interesting!! I’ll look into this! Thanks!!
Thank you. I didn’t know i was waiting for Cooklang, but I am glad you connected me!
Wow ! I will still try mealie /Tandoor for family purpose and ease of use. If it doesn’t work as expected, I will totally try this out !!
One question if you don’t mind,
servings Indicates how many people the recipe is for. Used for scaling quantities. Leading number is used for scaling, anything else is ignored but shown as units.
Does this function work well? I didn’t saw any examples so maybe you could tell me :)
Thanks !
I’m not sure as that’s not a feature I used at all. I normally scale recipes in my brain, for better or worse hahah.
I’m using the cookbook plugin for Nextcloud.
If mealie was too bloated, Nextcloud definitely isn’t going to be the answer.
This. Its a bit slow but the auto import is a life save and the app is really nice with the ability to easily scale the portions or keep the screen awake.
Wait, do you guys have editors specifically for recipes?
I write mine in an .epub (using Calibre) and send it to my 7" e-reader