It is reasonably good at parsing recipes on the web, figuring out what's an ingredient and what's a direction, although I've found for some recipes with complicated HTML it may not parse ALL of the directions (like, for this roast chicken it got through about step 7, and then just didn't have the rest). When I abandoned Evernote I was able to move all my recipes over without having to do any editing at all. I've entered a number of recipes by hand on my iPad, but every time I do it I ask myself why I haven't just paid for the desktop version so I can use a physical keyboard. Note that Paprika on the desktop is a separate purchase from Paprika on a tablet, but you can have one account that syncs between them. posted by 2 cats in the yard to Computers & Internet (12 answers total) 5 users marked this as a favorite Some reviews complain about lack of OCR/having to type in recipes from cookbooks, but that could just mean someone hasn’t figured out the right way to do this. txt files but that is only in context of output from one other cooking app, and while it has instruction for importing “other files” it doesn’t say what file types. Frequent favorite Paprika seems to do most of this but I am not sure about the importing part.
Ability to access the recipes on other devices, though if that is needed for the import-from-cookbook-function I do have a 4-ish year old MacBook Pro and a 2-ish year old iPhone, both on current OS/iOS. Ability to share recipes, other than exporting as I mentioned above. Integration with shopping lists, pantry lists, menu planning, etc
Ability to export in PDF or some text format would be nice. Some folder or tag capacity would be nice. Ability to enter recipes entirely manually (by typing) Ability to scale both weights and volumes OR ability to use the Apple Pencil to write on the file manually (so I can do the math in my head and just write the numbers on the screen) Ability to work with units in weights and/or volumes OCR (and content being organized correctly) from a PDF would be awesome but I’m guessing that’s a pipe dream. I can get them from cookbook -> PDF or text, but if you have some other/better way I am open to that too. What I am really getting at here is the ability to enter recipes from cookbooks. Ability to import recipes from a text file (bonus if it can put the right content in the right place) or PDF. Ability to download/import recipes from web pages and keep just the relevant parts (no stories, photos, links to other recipes, etc)
(Please note that each version is sold spearately.)ĭownload APK (93.21 MB) Paprika 3 3.2.0 for Androidĭownload APK (45.44 MB) Paprika 3 3.1.6 for Androidĭownload APK (48.28 MB) Paprika 3 3.1.5 for Androidĭownload APK (48.27 MB) Paprika 3 3.1.4 for Androidĭownload APK (48.26 MB) Paprika 3 3.1.1 for Androidĭownload APK (47.83 MB) Paprika 3 3.0.5 for Androidĭownload APK (26.69 MB) Paprika 3 3.0.I am in search of an ipad recipe app that has the following:
Paprika Cloud Sync is not available.You can upgrade to the full version at any time (via in-app purchase) to unlock unlimited recipes and cloud syncing.Other PlatformsPaprika is also available for iOS, macOS, and Windows.No internet connection is required to view your recipes.Free VersionAll features are available in the free version of Paprika, except: Offline Access - All of your data is stored locally.Bookmarklet - Download recipes from any browser straight into your Paprika Cloud Sync account.Recipes support multiple print formats including index cards. Print - Print recipes, grocery lists, menus, and meal plans.
Import - Import your recipes from other desktop and mobile apps.Timers - Cook times are automatically detected in your directions.Search - Organize your recipes into categories and subcategories.
Launch Sale!To celebrate the launch of Paprika 3 for Android we are placing the new app on sale!. The description of Paprika Recipe Manager 3