Learn to build your own kitchen
strategy with these handy apps.
Every day, millions of aspiring cooks open
their refrigerator doors with every intention of whipping up an amazing meal;
instead, they freeze at the overwhelming sight of food-stocked shelves and
close the door. I call this a symptom of "refrigerator angst," and
unfortunately it doesn't end there. The next common symptom, which involves the
iPhone, consists of looking up the nearest restaurant that offers takeout, usually
with the help of an app like Eat24 Order Food Delivery and Takeout
(free, app2.me/5352) or GrubHub (free, app2. me/4306), and hungrily placing a
call.
Finding
your own cooking apps
Luckily, there are thousands of cooking
apps that can help ease you into the kitchen, but sometimes it's hard to find
the ones that mesh with your lifestyle. This is where I might be able to help.
As a passionate home cook and host of a food and cooking radio show called
Great Taste, I have a few recommendations to help you pick your go-to cooking
apps. In addition, I have a few friends and family members - whom I've vetted
as great cooks themselves - that can offer varying perspectives on what works
for them.
I'll begin by letting you know that Mark
Bittman's How to Cook Everything ($9.99, app2.me/3650), and Vegetarian How to
Cook Everything ($9.99, app2.me/4963) have become essential resources in my
virtual kitchen. Perhaps they'll become important tools in your kitchen as
well.
My Top Picks
Gojee - Fashion and Food
Price: Free
Website: www.app2.me/5353
Gojee
- Fashion and Food
Gojee features content from several hundred
food and fashion bloggers, and while much of the content focuses on fashion,
the food and drink sections are very robust. Many of the food bloggers are not
professional cooks, but they are young professionals who enjoy cooking at
home. Michael LaValle, co-developer of the app, told me he was looking for
bloggers “who had cool sites with great photos and content that was a bit
different.”
"Young people use the site because
it's fun, and they have a high tolerance for error. I think they respect the
effort put out by the amateur-cook bloggers who make up our network," said
LaValle. "I believe that 80% of the decision-making involving food is
visual and emotional, so those are two key elements built into the app.”
At the top of the Gojee app interface is a
space where you can complete the phrase "I crave..." For example, if
you type "I crave chicken,” you may see a gorgeous photo of Vietnamese
Chicken Pho Ga fill the screen. You can also get detailed information on the
ingredients, along with a link to the original post with the recipe.
Green Kitchen
Price: $3.99
Website: www.app2.me/5354
Green
Kitchen
The Green Kitchen app was developed by a
Stockholm, Sweden-based company called Amazing Applications. It includes the
most popular recipes from the vegetarian blog Green Kitchen Stories (www.greenkitchenstories.com),
plus recipes developed exclusively for the app. Featuring a variety of healthy
main dish, juice, and dessert recipes, Green Kitchen includes step-by-step
instructions, estimated cooking times, and shopping lists that can be sent using
email or SMS.
The creators of the app, Martjin Freij and
Jimmy Poopuu, concluded that most cooking apps were like recipe databases,
and the quality of the recipes and photos was lacking. Based on their analysis,
they decided to build an app that resembled a coffee table book - something
different and inspiring. Since they weren't cooks, they had to find someone to
put together the recipes. Jimmy's girlfriend was a follower of the Green
Kitchen Stories blog, so he contacted the blog's creators, David and Luise.
Though Martjin and Jimmy had thought that
David and Luise were from California, they found out that not only were they
Swedish, but by coincidence, they, too, were based in Stockholm. That
auspicious start led to the creation of an app that boasts simple navigation
and a beautiful design. Once you open the app, simply pick a photo, tap, and
all the information you need to create the dish is at your fingertips.
Top picks from Friends & Family
Rebecca's organized system
After choosing my top cooking apps, I
polled my family members. My daughter, Rebecca, has developed an organized system
that increases fun and efficiency in the kitchen. You can easily adapt this
procedure for your own use. “I utilize two apps regularly," she says, “and
feel that the result is exposure to a myriad of ideas that have made me a more
knowledgeable and better cook."
My
Daughter Rebecca uses Bloglovin' and Pinterest to follow interesting vegan food
bloggers
She subscribes to a number of food blogs on
Bloglovin' (free, app2.me/5355), like OhSheGlows, Smitten Kitchen, David
Lebovitz, and Chocolate and Zucchini. Every time she opens the app, it
automatically shows her those bloggers who have updated their sites with a new
post. When she sees something that resonates with her inner cook, she clicks on
it to review the original post. If the dish piques her interest, she pins it to
one of her many food boards on Pinterest (free, app2.me/4377), an app
she uses to organize her recipes, follow people who post creative recipes, and
repin the ideas or recipes she likes.
Rebecca recently changed her diet from
vegetarian to mostly vegan. "At the beginning, I really didn't have any
idea what to make, because I was a cheeseaholic. But I started searching for
vegan food bloggers through Bloglovin', and began following people who posted
interesting vegan recipes on Pinterest. Using these two apps has increased my
creativity in the kitchen," she concluded.
Alene's Healthy Food Choices
My sister, Alene, is a fitness fanatic who
also helps her husband and daughters make healthy food choices. "The
nature of our lives results in eating out several times a week," she
explained. “Knowing the nutritional value of the items on the menu is
important. I can pull out my iPhone and check the calories, number of carbs,
amount of sodium, and more. All of these important elements are easily
accessible." For people with serious health issues, these apps are an
essential tool to have at their disposal.
My
sister Alene uses Restaurant Nutrition and Fast Food Calories to help make
healthy food choices for her family.
Alene uses Restaurant Nutrition (free,
app2.me/2458) and Fast Food Calories (free, app2.me/5356) to look up
nutritional information. Another app to check out in the App Store's Nutrition
and Health section is the popular Fooducate (free, app2.me/4294).
Kathy's Top Pick
My co-host on Great Taste, Kathy DuBois, is
an extraordinary home cook. She's a big fan of Mario Batali's app Mario Batali
Cooks! ($4.99, app2.me/4248). "Fie cooks using great, simple, fresh
ingredients, and his instructional technique is simple, focused, passionate,
and fast," said Kathy. Each of the 63 recipes in the app includes a short
instructional video in which Mario actually makes the dish. In addition, there
are 25 videos covering basic kitchen techniques. All in all, the app features
over five hours of video.
My
friend Kathy likes the Mario Batali Cooks! app because Batali's instructional
technique is focused and passionate.
When we made marinara sauce and meatballs
on the air, Kathy went to the app and reviewed two relevant videos. "I
used several of his techniques. For example, to prepare one of the meatballs'
ingredients, he soaks bread in milk. Also, he simmers his meatballs in the
sauce rather than frying them, just like my Sicilian Grandma Gulla did. That
was fun to see."
Averting Refrigerator Angst
I hope these apps help to avert any
potential bouts of refrigerator angst, and that the ideas inspire you to
compile your own cooking-app arsenal. Next time you find yourself reaching for
your iPhone to make a hungry call for delivery, open a few apps instead -
you'll uncover a world of cooking delights.