For years now, I've been using a laptop and a homegrown Filemaker Pro database for recipe organization. I've got my own recipes and my wife's, plus all the great family dishes we've both inherited and that have been pa ed down over the years. I can quickly search for a given recipe or ingredient, print a recipe or sho ing list and so on. I've even toyed with the idea of permanently i talling an old SE in the kitchen ru ing such a database (my wife said %26quot o way" to this idea). But all of this might be moot now that I've found MacGourmet.I've been playing with the demo for a little while this afternoon, and it's really nice. The interface is similar to that of iTunes and iPhoto, in that you have a main recipe library that can be grouped in "list quot; like playlists (a etizers, brunch, etc.). Smartlists are also available.
Create notes dishes or wines you've tried, create a "relatio hi quot; between a certain wine and recipe, publish your recipes to .Mac, print sho ing lists, create iTunes-like ratings and a heck of a lot more. Check it out if you're the type who (like me) enjoys time ent in the kitchen.
MacGourmet requires Mac OS X v10.3 or later, and costs $24.95US for a single lice e.
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