| Some Background: Within the last year, I started down the route of eating out less and being more conscientious of what I was cooking. Google searches are a pretty good resource for finding recipes with one caveat, you can't store the recipes. I would save my favorites to a folder in my browser, but eventually, that folder became 120+ recipes links and ver time consuming to filter through when I wanted to make something. I built FeastGenius to solve the problem of finding and organizing all those recipes. With the site, you can do the following. - Add your own recipes. - "Clip" recipes from anywhere on the web. - Find a recipe on the site you like? You can save it to your profile so you can easily find it later. - Organize recipes into collections and share them with anyone. - Search from 20,000+ recipes. - plus filter by calories or macros (if your an iifym nerd like me).
- Find the top trending recipes added to the site. - Since I'm on reddit way too much I thought it would be fun to use the same algorithm they do for
organizing trending posts.
I would love to hear the feedback from the hackernews community. I'll take the suggestions into consideration as I continue to build. |
I realize there might be some copyright issues, but for me, as a user, they don't exist when I copy recipes to my own private collection, so I would expect any online version of it to behave the same way. It needs to keep full versions of every recipe and an optional "source" link.
I'm not interested in calorie counting as a central feature, so the way the site functions right now is not dramatically better than just keeping a plain bookmark list.
EDIT - I can formalize my main gripe now.
Above, you describe the site as a way to _organize my recipes_, where in reality it's more of community _index_ of recipe _links_ with some diet-oriented extras. That's the main issue. It doesn't actually do well what you describe at the top, but it does well some other thing that's mentioned at the bottom.