Want to Save Recipes from Websites Instead of Losing Them?

You find a recipe online. You think, “I should make that.” Then three weeks later you cannot remember whether it was in Safari, Messages, email, Notes, or some cooking site you forgot to bookmark.

Mangerate helps you turn recipes from websites into recipes you can actually keep, search, cook from, and organize.

Download on the App Store Visit Mangerate.com

Bookmarks are not a recipe collection

Saving a web page is easy. Finding it later is the hard part.

A bookmark still leaves the recipe inside someone else's website. The page might change, disappear, load slowly, hide the ingredients behind a long article, or simply get buried in a folder you never open.

Mangerate is designed for the moment when you want to stop collecting links and start building your own recipe library.

Example: open a recipe in Safari, use the Share button, send it to Mangerate, and save it into your collection for later.

From website to recipe card

When a website provides recipe data in a format Mangerate can read, the app can extract the important parts and create a recipe entry for you.

Not every website is structured perfectly, but when the recipe data is available, Mangerate makes saving it much faster than copying and pasting by hand.

Keep the original source

Imported recipes can keep a link back to the original website. That gives you the best of both worlds: the recipe is saved in your own collection, but you can still return to the source if you want to see comments, background notes, or updates.

Organize recipes after importing

Once a recipe is saved in Mangerate, it becomes part of your library. You can search it, tag it, mark it as a favorite, rate it, add notes, move it between collections, or share it with others.

That is the difference between saving a link and saving a recipe.

Useful for everyday cooking

Website import is especially useful if you regularly cook from online sources: food blogs, cooking magazines, family sites, regional recipes, or recipes shared by friends.

Instead of trying to remember where each recipe came from, you can collect them in one app and cook from them when you are ready.

Import, then cook

After importing, recipes are ready for Mangerate's cooking features. You can view ingredients clearly, follow preparation steps, use Cooking Mode, create grocery lists, scale recipes, and convert units when needed.

If you have been looking for an iPhone recipe app that imports recipes from websites, Mangerate is available on the App Store.

View Mangerate on the App Store