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.
- I dig the simplicity of Cooklang - Thank you. I didn’t know i was waiting for Cooklang, but I am glad you connected me! 
- Interesting!! I’ll look into this! 
- 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. - Haha ! Good to keep your brain cells functioning 👍 
 
 
 
- 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 of that, my recipes are just a folder (and some subfolders) with markdown in Joplin. - I put my public stuff in a tiddilywiki because I can just take the file and save it to a public spot. - I use Obsidian and Syncthing for my personal stuff though. It has a bunch of searching, organizational, and plugin options. - Markdown ftw. 
 
- You think manually copying and pasting recipes in is easier than mealie? Okay. 
- ठेचा चिकन? Excellent taste my man - thanks! 
 
- 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 - So far I just keep recipes in whatever I’m using for notes. - Some of these dedicated programs look interesting though. Thinking about it, it would be handy to have some dedicated cooking features, like being able to search for recipes by ingredients. 
 
- 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. 
 
- 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.
 
 
- Oh, I see That sounds interesting, perhaps I’ll look into it sometime 






