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39 comments
  • It's not the answer you're probably looking for but, my cookbooks. I happen to have a bunch of old cookbooks I've inherited from family members and friends. It takes some research skills sometimes, but it works.

    I also maintain a personal blog site which is my online cookbook. It's not only my own recipes, but also a link dump. When I find a good, non-AI article I'll share it there like a clipping with the usual tags for how I catalog things. It takes a bit of discipline, but for me its second nature by now. It also lets me take notes on how a recipe worked out, and what substitutions or adjustments I'd like to make next pass.

  • Eatingwell has been my go-to lately. I see lots of things that look enticing from triedandtruerecipe on imgur, too.

    Check out this riggies recipe. You won't be disappointed.

  • Public service reminder: Your local Library carries cookbooks. When AI has destroyed cooking, get a Library card.

  • if you're looking for baking stuff, King Arthur Flour has a lot of good and reliable recipes (and if you have problems, a help line, heh.)

    But generally, I find them on the internet or wherever. I'm not a fan of allrecipes or other recipe aggregates. I generally don't trust YT recipes unless they're someone whose got some chops, so to speak. (rando content creator recipes make me cry harder than onions.)

    I'll also pass on any recipe touted as "easy" or similar. Not because I don't like easy, but because a lot of times they take dubious shortcuts or add things that don't really belong. For example, you really should use a ham hock for your pea soup. (or at the very least, pork/bone broth,) yes, it takes time. yes, it maybe more complicated. But it's not nearly as good otherwise... and it's not that difficult, really.

39 comments