You found the perfect weeknight dinner online — then spent five minutes scrolling past ads, a video that autoplayed twice, and a story about someone's trip to Tuscany just to reach the ingredient list. Saving a recipe from the web shouldn't be this hard. Here's the fastest way to keep the recipe and leave the clutter behind.
The problem with bookmarks and screenshots
Bookmarks pile up in a folder you never open, and the page they point to can change or disappear entirely. Screenshots are worse: they're not searchable, they don't scale on your phone, and half of them are cut off. Neither gives you a clean, usable copy of the actual recipe.
The one-step way to save any recipe
With Pinch of This, you paste the recipe's link and the app reads the page for you. It pulls out just the ingredients, steps, prep time, and photo, and drops them into a clean recipe card — no ads, no life story, no pop-ups.
- Copy the URL of the recipe from any food blog, recipe site, or social post.
- Paste it into Pinch of This.
- Get a tidy recipe card saved to your collection, synced across your phone, tablet, and computer.
What about sites that make it hard?
Even on pages that bury the recipe under a wall of content, the AI extracts the parts that matter. Every saved recipe also keeps a link back to the original source, so the creator still gets the credit — you're just keeping a personal copy you can actually cook from.
Why a clean copy beats a browser tab
Once a recipe is in your box, it's searchable by name or ingredient, it opens instantly at the counter, and it won't vanish if the original site goes down. That's the difference between hoarding links and actually building a collection you'll use.
Frequently asked
Is it legal to save a recipe from a website?
Saving a personal copy for your own use is generally fine — recipe ingredient lists themselves aren't protected by copyright. Pinch of This also keeps a link back to the original source so the creator still gets credit.
Does it work with recipes on Instagram or YouTube?
If the post has a URL, you can paste it in and the AI pulls the recipe details into a clean card.
Will my saved recipe change if the original page does?
No. You keep your own copy, so it stays put even if the original site changes it or takes it down.
Paste a link and get a clean, ad-free recipe card. First 20 recipes free — no credit card.
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