
Recipe Software
Shopping Around
If you are visiting this web page, you are probably
comparing several recipe products. You may have read a
few recipe software reviews, or have downloaded a few
programs and tried them out. Unfortunately, most reviews
are inaccurate, and new users typically only spend a few
minutes with a software product to determine what it can
or cannot do. The true capabilities of Home Cookin are
often overlooked.
In addition, most shoppers compare "features", rather
than looking to see if a program really does what they
want it to do. Product "A" has more buttons than product
"B", so it must be better, right? Not always. In most
cases, the features that sell a program are rarely, if
ever, used in day to day operations. It's like a car with
shiny chrome and lots of gadgets. It looks nice on the
showroom floor, but what really matters is how it feels
to drive and what it will cost to operate. Also, keep in
mind many features claimed by competing products are
available in Home Cookin as well, they are just accessed
in easier ways than having specific buttons for every
feature.
Don't Be Misled By Comparison Charts
As you review recipe software products, you will likely
run across comparison charts like those at
Top Ten Reviews and
Living
Cookbook. Obviously, each vendor is going to promote
the features their software offers while downplaying the
features of their competitors. Unfortunately, these lists
are frequently inaccurate.
For example, the Living Cookbook chart claims Home Cookin
is unable to copy recipes from the internet, and that it
only supports Meal-Master and Mastercook recipes. In
fact, Home Cookin has the widest support of any recipe
product and is able to import recipes from Mastercook,
Meal-Master, Big-Oven, Cookbook Wizard, From Scratch,
From My Kitchen, Living Cookbook, Now You're Cooking,
Recipe Processor, and Computer Chef. Home Cookin also
makes it easy to import unformatted recipes from web
pages, newsgroups, other applications (like Word),
etc.
Home Cookin can also scale recipes, add a photograph to
each recipe, perform advanced "and/or" searches,
eliminate duplicate recipes, spell check recipes, plan
meals days/weeks/months in advance, calculate grocery
costs, arrange grocery lists by aisles, and many other
features Living Cookbook claims is not supported. Other
features like a
searchable glossary are not
immediately apparent because Home Cookin lets you include
as many glossaries or other reference material as you
wish in your recipe collection, all of which are fully
searchable.
Some charts like the Top Ten Reviews, give Home Cookin
poor ratings because there are no predefined fields for
ratings, sources, comments, etc. when, in fact, this is
by design. Home Cookin lets you enter this information as
part of the recipe itself. So you aren't limited by a
short sources field, and can add as many comments or
ratings as you wish. Any additional information you
choose to include is fully searchable with the rest of
the recipe, and will export to other applications intact
when you share recipes with other users.
Which Features Will You REALLY Use?
Features sell software. The same way commercials show
cars racing down city streets, trucks driving over
mountains of boulders, and sexy women selling everything
from cosmetics to hamburgers. They look great in
advertisements, but once you lay down your hard earned
money, what will you really be doing with that
software?
Unless you are on a restricted diet, you probably won't
be calculating nutritional information for your recipes.
Sure, you may play around with it for a while, but
eventually your main focus will be organizing your
recipes and preparing meals you enjoy. Even if you do
perform a nutritional analysis, it will only be an
approximation. If you have ingredients that aren't in the
database, or in an undetermined quantity (i.e.
Salt
and Pepper to Taste), the calculations will not be
accurate. Nutritional values also vary wildly from one
brand to the next, which throws off the calculations
unless you plan to indicate specific brands in all of
your recipes.
Another feature frequently promoted is an
automatic grocery list. While this sounds good on
paper, it's really not something that works well in
practice. You rarely need to buy every ingredient for a
recipe, and the ingredients are usually listed in sizes
you wouldn't buy at the store anyway (when was the last
time you bought 1/2 cup of flour at the store?). Not to
mention meals for which you don't use a recipe (grilling
a steak, for instance), or the extra items you'll need
like toothpaste, detergents, and paper products. I
discuss this common misconception in more detail on the
FAQ page.
While features are flashy, Home Cookin focuses on the
tasks you will perform from day to day. Nearly every
feature competing software offers is available in Home
Cookin, though not necessarily through a dedicated button
or menu item. If we don't offer a feature in Home Cookin,
it's probably because there are practical real-life
reasons why they don't work well.
Do Your Research
You wouldn't buy a car without a test drive, so why
purchase recipe software without trying it out first?
I encourage you to try out as many recipe programs as you
can. Everyone has their own individual requirements, and
no single product will meet the needs of all users.
Download the trial versions and
see how they work for your needs. Try the tasks you are
likely to perform on a daily basis. Type in a few
recipes, see how easy it is to find the recipes you are
interested in, and how easy it is to print the recipe or
email it to friends?
Also consider what your future needs might be. Will you
need to pay for additional recipe collections? Is the
program flexible with recipe ingredients, meal planning,
or grocery lists? Is it easy to add new recipes you find
on web pages, or from a friends email? Can you use the
program without internet access if you are traveling or
your network goes down? Can you create real cookbooks for
your family?
I have spent over 15 years refining my recipe products,
and truly feel Home Cookin is the easiest to use recipe
software available. I hope you will enjoy it too! I would
be happy to answer any questions you may have, whether
you purchase my software or not. And I'm always
interested in hearing your ideas and suggestions for
future improvements. I respond to all emails within 24
hours, usually within a matter of minutes. If you do not
receive a response, I did not receive your message, so
please feel free to contact me again.
Best wishes on your search for recipe software!
Take care,
Anthony Watson
Mountain Software
support@mountain-software.com