1. Epicurious. Containing more than 25000 recipes, Epicurious is a great cooking application for beginners and experience chefs alike. The recipes are organized in a neat manner and the instructions are easy enough to follow. But the best part is: Epicurious is absolutely free. iPad of professional recipes from the pages of Bon Appetit and the now-defunct Gourmet magazine (Website).

2. American Recipes. In the mood to make a delicious American Recipe? Find delicious Traditional American Recipes with the American Recipe App. With this handy app you can find recipes such as Baked Stuffed Shrimp, Crab Quiche Lorraine, Chicken Spaghetti, Pizza Beer Beef and even a recipe for Honey Ribs. The App will show you the ingredients needed for the recipe as well as the steps required to complete your culinary masterpiece

3. Dinner Spinner is a Free app for the iPhone andiPod Touch that lets you spin your way to a great meal. If you don’t know what you want eat or cook, give it a spin! Tap what type of dish you want to make, what ingredient sounds good and how much time you have to prepare it. It’s Fun, it’s Quick and it’s Easy!

4. BigOven is a pretty intriguing option among the many iPhone recipe apps you can download at the App Store. It has more than 170,000 individual recipes, so BigOven may have more recipes than any other iPhone app. Designed from the ground-up for the iPad, this new BigOven app lets you look up virtually any recipe by title, keyword, or ingredient. It easily builds a grocery list from one or more recipes. It helps you get unstuck for dinner with great ideas, and shows you photos and ratings from real cooks. Together with www.bigoven.com, you can post your own recipes and photos online, and then have them easily available in a convenient application on your kitchen countertop.

5. Whole Foods Market Recipes app. For a free recipe app, Whole Foods Market Recipes (Free) includes a good amount of content. The app has a solid collection of recipes, and features like a shopping list and the ability to search by ingredients you already have on hand make the Whole Foods app a winner. Whole Foods did a nice job with this recipe app, especially the interface. It’s nice to look at and easy to browse, and it was very speedy over a WiFi connection

6. EasyRecipe This Android cooking app provides you with around 10,000 recipes of popular dishes and the cooking skills neeeded to prepare those dishes. It allows you to browse, search and save any recipe you like on your Android phone. The app has three main features – search, favorites, and recipe index. When searching for a dish, you can just enter an ingredient that you would like to cook and the app will list down all the dishes that use that ingredient. Select a dish and the app will display an introduction about the dish and other information including cooking skills, ingredients and nutritional facts related to the dish. If you like a particular dish, you can save it to your favorites and the app will store it on your phone allowing you access to it later on. The recipe index includes more than 10,000 popular dishes and their nutritional value, arranged by most popular, main ingredients, categories, cuisines, courses, appliances, and holidays

7. The Cook’s Illustrated application allows users to search for a recipe for specific items, as well as navigate through the available recipes in the app by category. Categories of recipes represented in the app include: Vegetables, Salads, Pasta, Stews, Meats, Grilling, and many others. Once you select a certain category you then have to select a country such as “French” or “Indian” before you are taken to a page of recipes. The recipes are exceptionally well organized, making it easy to find a specific recipe within the application fairly quickly. What’s really great about Cook’s Illustrated, however, is that recipes come with videos to show you how it’s all done. Many recipes are provided free of charge, but a subscription is necessary to unlock all the member’s only recipes.

8. How to Cook Everything app, This free iPhone cooking app is an incredibly useful tool which includes 100+ basic recipes, including many best Thanksgiving recipes. If this is your first time preparing a Thanksgiving meal, you’ll find the timing charts for defrosting and roasting turkeys are particularly helpful. The app’s interface is pretty sleek, although there are no pictures to accompany the recipes. Even so, the app does include an integrated cooking timer and shopping list. How to Cook Everything also has more cooking instruction than nearly any other recipe app, with videos on everything from how to sharpen knives to how to roast a chicken.

9. The Woman’s Day Cooking Assistant app brings you recipes from the editors of the Woman’s Day magazine. The app has a list of featured articles about food with accompanying recipes, and the articles change periodically. As with other recipe apps, you can either type in a keyword to search or you can browse through them by category (Cuisine, Main Ingredient, Holiday Recipes, Budget Recipes, Course, Cooking Method, Quick & Easy and Low-Calorie). Each category has subcategories, and as you narrow down your browsing, you’ll see a variety of different recipes. As you read the recipe you can automatically add the ingredients to a shopping list with a simple tap. You can also add recipes to a favorites list so they’re easily accessible for later

10 Digital Recipe Sidekick is an interactive Android Application that allows you to use your phone as a interactive recipe reader. DRS comes preloaded with 14 recipes, but you can import more recipes from the DRS Library or from AllRecipes.com (both are accessible within the app). Digital Recipe Sidekick is a free app that will help you build, manage, and share your recipe collection; it will also read recipes to you, hands-free, step-by-step. Using DRS is simple–just select a recipe and press Start Cooking. You then have three control modes to choose from: ‘Speech and buttons’, ‘Claps and buttons’, and ‘Buttons only’. Next, you set the sensitivity of the microphone to High, Medium, or Low.

Sourced from zepy

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