1
h4xx3r
6y

[googling devRanters before wasting time with Google]
Any of you does know of a cooking app/service where you can input the food that you have, the tools that you have and get back the recipes ordered by, for example, time-to-cook, the cooking difficulty and tastiness (the last one defined as how much of flavoured is the final meal)?

Comments
  • 2
    No but when you've learnt to cook it you can host a meal on my site ;) https://www.eataway.com
  • 2
    Srsly though maybe try https://foodcombo.com/
  • 2
    Im leaving a tactical comment but if you have instant ramen, you can just chop up whatever you have at home and cook it as a proper ramen, make sure to add some kind of onion and boil eggs on top.
  • 0
    @fullslack thank you, I'll try it out

    On another note, I think of cooking as a waste of time when I can enjoy the most basic healthy and edible food(taste is not a necessity), on your app I could only help with mediocre recipes for people that don't need that much flavor in the food... <.<
  • 0
    @ganjaman ramen isn't a common meal in Italy xD
  • 0
    @norman70688 she is from Asia and she doesn't consider instant ramen healthy
  • 2
    Crap, I saw something exactly like this a while ago, but I can't remember it for the life of me
  • 1
    No, but Yummly is pretty close. You can put the ingredients you have on the table and snap a pic, and it will give you a menu.
  • 1
  • 1
    🔪
  • 1
    There should be the Barilla app, but it's only for pasta 😂
  • 1
    Try Cookpad as well. Had a nice search by ingredient feature last I saw.
  • 2
    @fullslack tried food combo, delusional.
    I did input a good mix of pastas, oils and vegetables and I got a recipe for fried onions -_-

    Meanwhile reading behind a box of pasta I found a recipe that with those same ingredients is feasible, garlic, carrots and mushrooms fried for a bit, add and mix boiled pasta and add pieces of cheese and mix again...

    All this ingredients where also the input of foodcombo <.<
  • 1
    @iAmNaN too many ingredients to put on a table, this way of doing assumes you know already what is a general good match, something that I don't even want to bother myself...
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