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Say what you changed, hands still floury. Cook it better every time.

Mid-cook with sticky hands, speak the tweak instead of typing it into a phone. Every time you make the dish adds to a dated history — so next time you cook exactly the version you nailed, not a stranger's.

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What you capture

  • A spoken note mid-cook — more garlic, ten minutes longer — hands still sticky
  • A photo of the finished dish, each time you make it
  • A link to the original recipe, blog or video, kept beside your own notes

Tap the tag and the dish's whole journal opens on your phone — every cook, your tweaks, the photos and the original recipe, nothing to install to read it.

The best version of a recipe is the one you adapted — a little less salt, ten minutes longer in the oven, the cream swapped for crème fraîche — and a digital recipe book is where it should live. But that hard-won knowledge rarely survives to the next time you cook it. It was muttered over the hob and forgotten, or scrawled on a recipe card that's now splattered and illegible.

A little tag on the fridge, the spice jar or the recipe card turns that dish into a living cooking journal. Speak the change as you make it, hands still sticky, and it's saved; photograph the result; tap in the link to the original recipe, blog or video. Each time you cook it adds a dated entry, so your digital recipe book builds itself — a recipe organiser that grows by the doing, not the filing, so the best version stops getting lost.

1

Stick a tag on it

A cheap NFC tag on a stake, lid, box — anything.

2

Tap & add

Photos, notes, voice. Date and place captured automatically.

3

Tap to recall

Tap again, anytime, to see everything. No app to install.

Questions

Can I add a note while my hands are full?
Yes — speak the tweak as you cook and it's saved to that dish hands-free, no need to stop and type. More garlic, ten minutes longer, swap the cream: captured the moment you decide it.
Does it keep every time I've cooked something?
Yes — each cook is a dated entry, so the dish builds into a journal of how your version evolved, with the photos and notes in the order you made them.
Can I link to a recipe online?
Yes — attach the link to the original recipe, blog post or video, so the source sits one tap away beside your own changes.

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