There are places like internet archive that preserve things like videos, images, audios, books and programs, but I have not seen any website that preserves only cooking recipes, do you know of any?
- Björn Tantau ( @bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de ) 4•3 hours ago
Don’t know about recipes in English. But in Germany https://chefkoch.de is popular. Popular memes are people completely mislabeling the difficulty of a recipe and the comments either showing how to make it much better or people complaining that it sucked after changing everything in the recipe.
- cartufer ( @cartufer@lemmy.blahaj.zone ) 1•3 hours ago
Though not the best example of archiving recipes, thought i’d mention !vintage_recipes@lemmy.world
- davel [he/him] ( @davel@lemmy.ml ) English9•11 hours ago
Uh… what? The Internet Archive archives web pages, and cooking recipes are on web pages.
- TheWeirdestCunt ( @TheWeirdestCunt@lemm.ee ) English1•11 minutes ago
Not all recipes are online though, I’m guessing OP meant something like r/old_recipies just without the Reddit part
- nis ( @nis@feddit.dk ) 3•9 hours ago
Not exactly what you are looking for, and not only cooking, but the Townsends channels has a bunch of old recipes and how to cook them.
- Drathro ( @Drathro@dormi.zone ) English13•13 hours ago
Self hosting Mealie could be a great option to take things into your own hands.
- Ephera ( @Ephera@lemmy.ml ) 2•7 hours ago
Looks like a cool software from a usability viewpoint, and that machine learning recipe import is probably actually quite useful for archiving other people’s recipes.
But for long-term archiving, I think just a bunch of Markdown files + images are a better choice.
To still get a searchable webpage, personally I’d use mdBook.
- Didros ( @Didros@beehaw.org ) 3•10 hours ago
Cooking recipes can not be copy written, even big name recipes are all over tge internet.