

Physical challenges might make grocery shopping difficult or even impossible. Intellectual challenges may make it difficult to understand which recipes are most healthy and which groceries need to be purchased to make those dishes. However, planning, organizing, and shopping for the food that make us the healthiest can be a challenge for people with some disabilities. Health and proper nutrition are important for everyone – whether or not a person has a disability. If you're like me and you spend a lot of time in the kitchen, Paprika is definitely worth a download.Written by Wade Wingler on January 15th, 2015 January 13th, 2015. Recipe manager apps have been around for a long time, but Paprika's one-click recipe downloader and cloud syncing with the iPhone and iPad are worth the price of admission by themselves. The interface is also very mouse-driven, which may be a potential turnoff for the keyboard enthusiasts out there.
INFORMATION ABOUT PAPRIKA RECIPE MANAGER MAC OS X
Anyone still running Mac OS X Snow Leopard is out of luck. The only possible stumbling block for potential buyers is that Paprika requires OS X Lion. Being able to sync everything to my iPad is a killer feature.Īt US$19.99, Paprika is significantly pricier than its iOS equivalents, but it's priced well in line with similar Mac apps. Creating and managing recipes on the Mac is easier than it is on the iPad, but carrying my Mac into the kitchen is out of the question.
INFORMATION ABOUT PAPRIKA RECIPE MANAGER FOR MAC
This feature alone makes Paprika for Mac invaluable. To send recipes to your iPad or iPhone from your Mac, just click the syncing icon in the lower left of Paprika's window. Paprika for Mac comes with this service enabled for free, and once you've created an account on Paprika for Mac you can share information on your iOS device(s).

It's been available on the iOS apps for some time, via a US$9.99 per year in-app purchase. and metric measurements, so you may still have to dust off your second-grade memories of fractions.Īs someone who owns the iPad app, I'm interested in Paprika's syncing service. This last function can occasionally get confused by recipes with both U.S. Like a few other recipe manager apps, Paprika also includes a meal planner, a grocery list function that allows you to add recipe ingredients to your shopping list with one click, and a "scale" function that will allow you to scale recipes up or down depending on how many servings you want to make.

It's slower than the one-click solution, but still faster than adding a recipe entirely by hand. You'll find individual clipboard buttons for Name, Ingredients, Directions, and so on at the bottom of the screen, which you can fill in as needed. This one-click function supports many sites, but if you've found a site isn't part of Paprika's database, all is not lost. You've just created an entire recipe with a single click. If you find one on a site that Paprika supports, click "Save Recipe" in the upper right-hand corner to import it into Paprika's database. To get started, click on the Browser tab in Paprika's side bar to bring up Google (you can change the app's search options via the preferences). The app's built-in template allows you to enter ingredients, instructions, prep time, cook time, and serving sizes manually, but Paprika's powerful, built-in web browser will "grab" recipes from many sites with a single click. By subscribing, you are agreeing to Engadget's Terms and Privacy Policy.
