T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3704.1 | Just Saw Ad in Boston Globe | MRKTNG::WEINSTEIN | Barbara Weinstein | Tue Dec 08 1992 15:02 | 11 |
| If you live in the Boston area, the Boston Globe (I think it was today's,
but since I also looked at Sunday's paper this a.m. I cannot be sure.) had an
advertisement for their own software package. The software included
recipes and other stuff related to cooking and nutrition. It was $29.95
and orderable by mail.
I do not trust my lousy memory to remember to bring in and post the
specifics so if anyone else gets the paper, can you try and remember as
well.
Barbara
|
3704.2 | See topic 3132 | STRATA::STOOKER | | Tue Dec 08 1992 15:52 | 4 |
| I have a PC based recipe software package. I wrote about it in topic #
3132. Its pretty good, but does have its share of problems...
Sarah
|
3704.3 | Thanks | JUMP4::JOY | Happy at last | Wed Dec 09 1992 12:06 | 8 |
| Re .1 I've seen the ad for the Globe and will probably get that. I was
just looking for recommendations on some of the packages found in Radio
Shack or Walden Software, etc.
I'll also check note 3132.
Debbie
|
3704.4 | More info? | JUMP4::JOY | Happy at last | Wed Dec 09 1992 12:09 | 8 |
| Re: .2
Sarah,
Did you ever resolve the problems you outlined in 3132? Where did
you get the software?
Thanks
Debbie
|
3704.5 | Why?? | TNPUBS::MACKONIS | We are a compromise of nature! | Thu Dec 10 1992 13:30 | 16 |
| I will probably get "flamed" for this question, but why would anyone
want their PC to manage recipes?
I would want my PC as far from my kitchen as possible, to avoid spills
and water damage, etc. If I needed a recipe, I would have to turn on
the PC, search for the recipe and then print it out. Just as time
consuming as opening a book.
I have a shareware recipe program that I bought to help me organize
recipes for a cookbook I have been working on and print them out neatly
and in the same format for the publisher -- should it get that far, but
I still go to my card file or my loose leaf notebooks for recipes --
not the PC.
dana -- just curious
|
3704.6 | I don't even own a PC | BENONI::CARROLL | a woman full of fire | Thu Dec 10 1992 13:57 | 17 |
| A few reasons I can think of off hand...
to calculate nutritional information for recipes that don't have
them...
For the "I have a zillion recipes for black bean soup, I want to see
them all at once"...
For the "Lessee, I have pine nuts, cabbage and pork chops...show me all
the recipes that use those three ingredients" (aka What To Make with
Leftovers"...
For the "Where in the H*ll did I put Grandma's Peach Pie recipe" or
"Last year I made squash soup at Thanksgiving - where did I get that
recipe from?"...
D!
|
3704.7 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Thu Dec 10 1992 16:58 | 12 |
| OR as a random-but-balanced-menu generator, for those of us who tend to
eat a lot of one-food meals because we just don't feel like thinking up
an entire meal... Ideally, this would allow one to "balance" the meal
for various things as needed, from "high-calcium foods" to "cold meals
for summertime" to "utilize the best seasonal produce" to "what can I
make from the following things I found in the fridge?".
But I don't know of any one package that does more than one of these
things at a time, and I somehow haven't gotten around to writing my
ideal package yet. ;-)
-b
|
3704.8 | Let the PC do the walking... | JUMP4::JOY | Happy at last | Fri Dec 11 1992 11:09 | 12 |
| re: .5
.6 and .7 pretty much summed it up for me. Basically I don't want to
take the hours it takes me now to go thru the 60 or so cookbooks I have
when I want to find a particular recipe or to see "all the appetizers".
WE hope to one day add a scanner so we can scan in pictures to go along
with the recipes themselves.
And the PC will be in the basement, NOT in the kitchen.
Debbie
|
3704.9 | Plus, I can give away copies | CADSYS::CADSYS::LARRICK | Doug Larrick | Fri Dec 11 1992 19:01 | 9 |
| I just use the Mac to make the recipes legible and easy to replace
when they get food all over them. Print 2 to a page, cut out onto
index cards, store in a traditional recipe box. When I take notes
from a friend or relative or TV show, a year later I can't read
what I wrote more often than not.
The Mac does my cassette tape labels too.
-Doug
|
3704.10 | RECIPE prog. | GVPROD::SCHMITT | | Tue Dec 15 1992 11:01 | 40 |
|
I did put a programme at disposal of the DEC community last Xmas.
Basically what it allows you to do is the following :
you enter : a title
one or several origins/types (eg. Chinese, main course ,...)
a list of ingredients with associated quantities and
eventual remarks
the description of the recipe
In the search mode you can make any combination of the title (or
part of title), list of origin/type and/or ingredients.
What it does not do : it does not calculate anything (eg. nb of
calories, no automatic conversions, ...)
What it was meant for : - to classify/search recipes by any keyword
you have defined. You can easily print the recipe while consulting
a recipe (result of a search) and take the printing to the kitchen.
No more stains on your cooking book.
- to import ascii files. This means that if
you extract a recipe from notes, you can import it in the descrip-
tion of the recipe and complete the recipe record by adding the
title, origin/type and ingredients.
- to exchange recipes among several users
having the same prog.
- an automatic update of you keywords. This
means that as time goes on and you enter recipes, when adding new
recipes, the keywords can be selected (with the extension *) among
those already existing. You speed up your data entry and your database
is more consistent.
Last thing : it run on DOS environment. It comes with no manual as
the F1 key can be activate enywhere in the programme
where a complement of information is necessary.
If you are interested, just drop me a mail, I would be glad to send
you a version.
Marc
|
3704.11 | Thanks | JUMP4::JOY | Happy at last | Tue Dec 15 1992 12:57 | 7 |
| Re; .10
Marc,
My husband has already contacted you and we have the program loaded
on our PC at home. Thanks, its a start at least.
Debbie
|
3704.12 | Globe Software Feedback | MR4DEC::DERAMO | | Tue Jan 12 1993 22:30 | 3 |
| So did anyone ever order the recipe software from The Boston Globe? I'd
be interested to know whether it's any good.
|
3704.13 | I'll try it tonight | JUMP4::JOY | Happy at last | Wed Jan 13 1993 12:21 | 9 |
| My husband got it for me for CHristmas, but I'm embarrassed to say I
haven't really tried it out yet. Maybe that should be tonight's project
as hubby has been making subtle remarks like..."Gee, no one's used
JOY'S KITCHEN yet!...." (the icon name is customizable).
I'll check it out and report back.
Debbie
|
3704.14 | Master Cook Plus and Gourmet Rapide ? | MCC1::DITMARS | Pete | Fri Jan 15 1993 11:28 | 16 |
| Hi,
I've seen the above packages advertised and am looking
for "feedback" (no pun intended :^) on them. They're both
around $50 via a mail order house.
I'm looking for a package (preferably Windows 3.x based)
that allows you to categorize recipes, plan/save/print
monthly menus, and print shopping lists from the
menus.
Any recommendations?
regards,
Pete
|
3704.15 | I bought Micro Cookbook PC (windows version) | MCC1::DITMARS | Pete | Mon Jan 18 1993 11:26 | 22 |
| OK, so I'm impatient. I went to a PC show and this package
looked pretty good, so we bought it ($40).
This is what the box/documentation says.... we haven't put it
to hard use yet, so the "review" will have to wait:
- comes with 1,000 recipes (no limit to how many you can add)
- organize recipes into cookbooks
- search for recipes by various criteria (ingredients, meal, etc)
- build menus from recipes (no limit to number of recipes, etc.)
- include menus into other menus
- produce shopping lists from recipes or menus
- produce nutritional information on recipes or menus
- print recipes on recipe cards or standard paper
- more...
One note so far: they're serious about registering the product...
it lets you run it 10 times before cracking down... there's an
800 number to call to register that will make the package happy.
The software claims you can call 24 hours a day, but the person I
found answering the number at 8:00pm Sunday told me to call back
between 8-5 M-F PST.
|
3704.16 | Boston Globe pkg. - not so good | JUMP4::JOY | Happy at last | Mon Jan 18 1993 13:38 | 34 |
| Sorry for the delay....I tried out the Boston Globe Cookbook software
(from Arugula Kitchen Works) last night. It contains around 750 recipes
from the Globe, plus the ability to add your own recipes (250 limit
though). It seemed to work OK for the Globe Cookbook, although there
isn't a "search" capability. You can choose from a list of about 15
"groups" of foods (Poultry, Bread/Cookies/Cakes, etc), then scroll
thru those recipes alphabetically. It will let you make notes about
each recipe, add the ingredient list to a shoppling list, plan menus
based on recipes choices, modify recipes and save in your personal
cookbook and also has some basic nutrition info. It DOESN'T give you
the nutritional info for each recipe though, which I don't like. You
can ask for nutritional info on eggs, or flour, apples, etc. but that's
it.
So, if you want it as a way to keep track of all the recipes that have
been in the Globe over the past year or so, this would be good. The
program is called MenuPerfect. That's the good news.
For the bad news, the personal cookbook section doesn't work at all. I
entered a recipe last night and it doesn't work, period. I entered the
ingredients and all that was entered were the quantity and units (1
cup). The actual ingredient got lost somewhere. The help doesn't work,
you can't delete recipes once you've entered them (I now have 3
Cranberry Eggnog Bread recipes), the flow thru the program is awful (no
way to exit without exiting the whole program), etc. In other words,
don't try to enter your own recipes.
I'm calling Arugula today to ask for a fixed version or my money back.
So, .15, how is Micro Cookbook PC....I'm back in the market for
something.
Debbie
|
3704.17 | | HUMOR::EPPES | I'm not making this up, you know | Thu Jan 21 1993 18:14 | 6 |
| RE .15 -- So what do you think of Micro Cookbook?
-- Nina
P.S. Will it automatically adjust the ingredient amounts if you want to increase
or reduce the number of servings? (That feature wasn't in the list you posted.)
|
3704.18 | CD ROM | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Tue Feb 23 1993 12:28 | 9 |
| My husband bought one for us (CD-rom) to run on his PC. It's pretty good! It
even creates your shopping list for you!
Wish I could remember the name of it... I'll look tonight... but it's
made by a company called Chestnut. BTW: I've seen this one (and
others) at computer shows (PC trade fairs) - very reasonably priced.
Rgds,
marcia
|
3704.19 | MasterCook PC II | MAY18::bob | For Internal Use Only | Mon Sep 27 1993 16:54 | 8 |
| Has anyone had any experience with MasterCook PC?
Bon Appetit had it in one of their `ten-best' lists last December.
Thanks
bob
|
3704.20 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Thu Sep 30 1993 19:40 | 28 |
| I just had a shot at the "condensed" Micro Cookbook, and I have to say,
the software's worth about what I paid for it. (Luckily, that was only
$9.99, so it didn't break me; unluckily, it isn't very good.)
Functionally, it looks OK; you can do semi-involved wild-card searches
by ingredient, which is nice, and it generates shopping lists, and
allegedly (I didn't get this far) *does* adjust ingredients for you if
the recipe's made for 8 and you want to make it for 5. ;-)
The main problem I had with it was very basic - a couple of the files
were garbled when I installed it and I had to repair them before it
would run at all. Then it GPF'ed on me the first time I tried to save a
recipe.
It would seem that it isn't terribly robust, but (if one can figure out
how to get it to work without crashing, or can get into the rhythm of
"use, save, crash, re-boot, use") it does offer a moderately nice set
of features for the price. [Price ranges for nutritional/diet/cooking
software seem to be in the discount range (< $15), the "average" range
($30-$50), and the "professionals on expense accounts only" range
(+$200).]
I admit I'm not thrilled with it, and probably won't bother to try to
work out the kinks. If one of the mid-range packages gets decent
reviews I might try that, but otherwise I suppose it's write one
myself, or go back to pen and paper...
-b
|
3704.21 | Any more personal experiences? | HANNAH::BAY | Jim Bay | Fri Nov 12 1993 14:18 | 41 |
| I was wondering if there are any new reviews of PC software for
managing recipes, etc.
I read through this note, as well as 2731, 3132, 3383. The title of
2731 was closer to what I am really interrested in, though.
The other day I was making lunch for my wife. She complains that no
matter how little she eats, her weight stays the same. So I calculated
the fat content of her tuna sandwich, cookies, potato chips, cream in
her coffee, etc., and found it came to 45 grams! Not too bad, but that
was JUST lunch! Our physician recommended keeping daily fat intake to
between 30 and 40 grams.
I suddenly realized that we need to be a lot more conscientious about
what we eat. But I am not interested in tables, books, charts and
calculators littering the kitchen table. I was hoping to find software
that will help in planning meals and doing what-if scenarios and
tracking of our progress.
I stopped at a couple software stores, and was totally overwhelmed.
There are several packages out, but I could understand little about
them from the glossy print on the back of the box. I am really
interested in accounts from people who have actually used software for
similar reasons.
I am mainly interested in calculating and tracking nutritional
information about what we eat. But since meal planning will be a part
of it, being able to enter and call up recipes would be quite useful.
I've heard some of these programs even contain modules for creating and
tracking a work-out schedule, and for calculating the impact of
work-outs versus meal plans. And as many other useful features as
possible, like leftover planning, grocery lists, etc.
I asked this in the PC conference, and got a couple interesting
responses, but felt that this would be a better group to ask (fewer
Twinky eaters? :-).
The more the merrier!
Jim
|
3704.22 | eating & the computer | KAOFS::M_BARNEY | Dance with a Moonlit Knight | Fri Nov 12 1993 14:34 | 27 |
| Jim,
I have found having software for some things is wonderful. Genealogy?
Yes! Money management? Certainly! But, perhaps its just a personal
outlook, I have never been able to understand what the computer can
do for one in the culinary department. I have literally tens of
thousands of recipes, in books, magazines, leafets, photocopies and
extractions from this conference. Imagine the time it would take
to organize THAT on my Mac!
I find the there is a great difference between eating "right" and
finding a recipe you like - even if you find something with fewer
grams of fat; it will not make an impact on your eating in terms of
what you consume during the day.
Good habits do not have to be chained to charts, calculators and
weigh scales (or even software!). An overwhelming proportion of it is
involved in a little reading and a LOT of common sense.
I don't think you were surprised that those items you cited in
your wife's lunch were high in fat, right? Just continue on
being AWARE of what you eat - it'll do a lot more than the latest
software....
Sorry to have gotten on my soapbox Jim! 8-)
Monica
|
3704.23 | | AIMHI::OBRIEN_J | Yabba Dabba DOO | Fri Nov 12 1993 15:19 | 12 |
| excerpt from Dave Barry's How a computer changed my life:
Bob and Dorris Pullet of Full Horse, Texas, use their computer for many
things, such as keeping track of what kind of soup they have in their
pantry. "It has been a real boon to us," reported Doris. "In the old
days, we would have to open the pantry door and manually look inside to
see whether we had, say, chicken gumbo. But now all I do is turn on the
computer, enter my secret password, punch in a few simple commands and
within a matter of seconds the computer says 'CHKN GMB 2;87;74,' which
lets me know we have two cans of chicken gumbo with a depreciated value
of 87 cents, or 74 cents adjusted for inflation. And Bob is working on
a program that will keep track of the good forks."
|
3704.24 | Dave Barry's good, isn't he? | HANNAH::BAY | Jim Bay | Fri Nov 12 1993 18:05 | 56 |
| Y'know, I STARTED to put in a disclaimer requesting that those who
don't like using computers for these sorts of things to, most humbly,
refrain from commenting on my own humble opinion, but then I thought,
Nah!, this is an open-minded bunch!
But when I decided to put a note in here, I may have been working from
an incorrect premise. You see, this conference is for people who are
into cooking and recipes. I am not. IMHO, cooking is something that
should be left to the hired help or the resturant employees. That
isn't putting down people who like to cook. Quite the contrary, people
who like to cook absolutely FILL this world with wonderful cuisine for
the more portly and lazy of us to enjoy.
Some people like to build furniture, or cars. But I don't feel I
should have to build my own car just so I can drive, or build my own
chair, just so I can sit. And I certainly don't condemn those that
make it possible for me to "consume". But I think food is a chore.
Cooking it, definitely, and sometimes even eating it. Thats why I'm
not a reader of this conference (I did sneak in to ask about pasta
makers, but I should have gotten the hint then, when popular opinion
pushed the hand crank pasta maker - if I had wanted to WORK at making
pasta, I wouldn't have been buying a machine!).
But my reasoning was that, being a computer company, with a
computer-based product for sharing information (notes), and finding a
conference on the network on cooking, that I would find people into
computers AND cooking, and that might therefore help me find a computer
program to do things having to do with food.
I should have taken a cue from other notes that those enamoured of the
culinary arts may not wish to see their pastime sullied with the
presence of a computer. Personally, I'm quite into computers, and
though a cook can live without a computer, a programmer can't live
without food.
And although there are applications not well suited to computers (for
example, keeping inventory of the pantry), counting things (for
example, calories or fat grams) is what computers do best.
Eventually I hope to evolve a healthy lifestyle. However, going
without pizza seems like an unusual act to a child of the "ME"
generation of the 80s. Till I get accustomed to the wonders of a new
eating style that denies me my favorite greasy foods, I would like to
have the benefit of something tangible, like a hardcopy, to confirm
that the initial unpleasantness will indeed bear fruit in the coming
months or years. To someone that measures time intervals in
nanoseconds, a week is a long time for a positive response (FYI, I'm
not into gardening, either).
So, I apologize if I misjudged. It should have been a dead giveaway
that there have been less than 20 notes on software since 1984.
Thanks anyway! Bon appetit!
Jim
|
3704.25 | cooking snob? no... | GOLLY::CARROLL | a work in progress | Mon Nov 15 1993 10:05 | 38 |
| If you find cooking too much bother, I suspect you will find using a
computer to plan your meals even more-so.
I would say a better investment would be a book with nutrition values.
For a while, when you eat something, look it up in the book. Pretty
quickly you'll learn what things have high fat and what don't. Once
you get a "feel" for it, you don't have to plan, etc...you can just cut
back on the high fat things.
I eat a very low-fat diet that includes pizza. It includes frequent
pizzas made with low-fat cheese and turkey sausage, and occasional
pizzas loaded with all the goodies. The trick is the "occasional" on
the high fat items.
As for your high fat lunch - no need to "plan" a lunch like that, there
are easy, common sense ways to lower the fat that don't take any more
cooking than the original. tuna - low fat, needs no modification.
mayo in the tuna - use low fat mayo, and use less...or use yogurt
instead. chips - eat pretzels or no-fat corn chips instead. Cookies -
eat a piece of fruit, or low-fat cookies. cream in coffee - use milk
instead.
I am all for using computers for things that help - I don't think it is
because we COOK that we don't think it will help. In fact, I think a
computer would be much more useful for a real cook than a person who
wants to avoid work around food. If you really don't like putting that
much effort in to food, to cook it, just spend a little time learning
some "rules" and you'll be all set.
You may want to check out ROCKS::WEIGHT_CONTOL. There are topics in
there with low-fat cooking tips (many aren't for COOKS, just ordinary
folks who make things like spaghetti) and tips for brand-name low fat
foods.
D!
PS: For someone who hates to cook, you make a mean deep-dish pizza.
:-)
|
3704.26 | alas, poor Jim: | KAOFS::M_BARNEY | Dance with a Moonlit Knight | Mon Nov 15 1993 11:17 | 29 |
| Well Jim,
I am under the impression that that was a very defensive reply.
I didn't think I was so agressive in my note, but if it was
perceived as such - my apologies.
And if you mistake me for a culinary snob, full of
make-everything-from-scratch, I think I gotta correct you!
Presently, spouse and I work full time. We get home, 18month old
daughter in tow, at 6:15 pm each night. It is not practical for
me to do much more than bring the spagetti sauce up from the
freezer (having put it there after its creation from a all the
miscellaneous leftovers not yet gone bad in the fridge) and grab
a hand full of generic brand spagetti to cook.
This does not qualify me as a cordon-bleu class master, however,
it also does not allow me that planning time it would take to
fuss with software to create dinner. As D! said, its harder to
use the software than a simple nutritional hardcopy.
And there is plenty of non-chip-based info out there that can
help you out, at a fraction of the price, and time.
The thing that taught me a whole new universe of good eating
was Weight Watchers. They were a renaissance for me.
Deep-dish pizza, eh? Yum!
Monica
|
3704.27 | Peace! | HANNAH::BAY | Jim Bay | Mon Nov 15 1993 12:25 | 61 |
| Sorry, Monica! I tried to tone it down, but sometimes my biting wit
gets the best of me.
No offense taken, and none intended!
Call it a personality defect, if you will. I think I lean toward being
type A. I am the type that "stews" over things, like a major purchase,
for months, then suddenly - I want it NOW! Instant gratification, that
sort of thing.
For me, knowing that I am living a healthier life style, and eventually
will lose weight, have more energy, etc., sometime in the FUTURE isn't
good enough. For every calorie I cut, I want to see some TANGIBLE
result.
Of course, it doesn't work that way.
The same thing goes for people trying to stop smoking. There are NO
immediate tangible benefits, just craving and in the extreme case,
physical illness. One solution is a book called "21 days to stop
smoking". Its targeted mostly at people going cold turkey, and it
describes in detail all the chemical changes going on in your body for
each day since you quit. It tells you when all the nicotine is finally
out, when the cells have started healing, etc. And it gives ideas for
distracting or rewarding.
I've often wished that someone would write a book like this for people
trying to lose weight (also for people starting to age, but thats
another story). That way you could feel comforted that the discomfort
or inconvenience you put up with as you change your life style to
healthy eating has immediate benefits. They won't show up for months
(and the REAL benefit, of course, won't come till you are on-hundred
and one), but you can start experiencing them during the critical short
term, that makes or breaks your effort.
THATS why I want a computer program. I want to SEE how well I'm doing.
Positive feedback. Instant gratification. FAT is its own instant
gratification. Finding something to help you avoid it is tough. For
me, and engineer, numbers that show positive trends help. My finances
have gotten TREMENDOUSLY better (like, I'm out of debt!) since I got a
computer program that lets me watch as my assets grow and my
liabilities shrink. My efforts at exercise MUST be accompanied by
record keeping (ever since I was a kid).
I've always been a hyper, slender "kid", very active and in good shape,
even without an exercise program. However, as the smoke clears for
this baby boomer, I find the old metabolism starting to fail me, after
allowing me to have abyssmal eating habits my whole life. Lifetime
habits are hard to break. I need a "carrot", if you'll forgive the
pun.
So, I wasn't criticizing cooks, of any kind, in any way. I'm just
trying to explain that I need something to keep me going long enough to
develop new habits. So most of the arguments against using a computer
for cooking and or diet control, don't really apply.
Jim
(P.S. I haven't made a deep dish pizza for a LONG time, but now that
you mention it.... Agh! See! See!)
|
3704.28 | | DSSDEV::RUST | | Tue Nov 16 1993 16:03 | 35 |
| Re .27: Actually, I found something that sounds a little bit like
what you're looking for - though I presume you'd like a version that
worked a little better and didn't blow up as often. ;-) It's called
"Diet Expert," and I found it on the same discount rack as the cookbook
software I mentioned in .20. ("Diet Expert," though still quirky, was a
good deal more robust than the cookbook software was!)
The software allows you to enter everything you eat, grouping it by
meal/snack or just by day if you want; it includes a database of foods,
including basic ingredients ("flour, white"), veggies (raw and cooked),
different cuts of meat, and a selection of packaged foods as well. Each
one is coded with calories, fats (saturated and un-, poly- and mono-
and Uncle Tom Cobleigh and all), and a couple of screens full of
nutrients, and a mapping into "food exchanges" (used by Weight
Watchers and some other diet plans).
Once you've entered a day's or week's data, you can ask it to
summarize, and it will do its little best to supply charts (text and
graphs) of the nutritional and caloric information per meal (with a
daily average), give you some hints and tips as to what things you had
too much of and what too little, and so forth. It also includes a
"weigh-in" section (with a graph), so you could post those incremental
improvements...
It didn't have a recipe option per se, but you could "compose" your own
recipes by simply creating a new "food" for the database, and supplying
all the appropriate nutritional info yourself. (This was not as easy to
do as I'd have liked; it should have had an option to add up the
nutrients from existing database items, but I had to do that myself.
Perhaps there's a deluxe version of the software - this one only cost
$9.99! - that has a niftier interface and is a little more robust.)
Anyway, it might be something to look into, if you're interested.
-b
|
3704.29 | | GOLLY::CARROLL | a work in progress | Thu Nov 18 1993 13:28 | 22 |
| Well, if what you are looking for is a program that will calculate out
your nutrition for you, COOKS is probably not as good a place to look
as WEIGHT_CONTROL. I think there is a similar note in there, re: PC's.
I *still* think you'd be better off with a book - even what you are
looking for, ie: quick numbers. It'll take less time to keep a pad of
paper by the fridge, and every time you eat something, write down how
many grams of fat it contains in one column, and how many you are
saving from what you would *otherwise* eat in another column.
So, say you would ordinarily have tuna w/ mayo, chips, cookie and
coffee w/ cream - 45 grams fat. Make the substitutions I suggestion,
and cut the total fat to 10 grams...so write 35 grams in the "saved"
column. That's 315 calories in fat alone that you are saving (9
calories per gram.) A pound is approximately (depending on your
weight, metabolism, etc etc) 3500 calories. So, just by changing your
lunch in those small ways, you would lose a pound in a little over 10
days. (Change your dinner and breakfast similarly and you could triple
that speed.)
No PC required! :-)
D!
|
3704.30 | Cookbook on CD-ROM? | BUSY::RIPLEY | | Thu Dec 16 1993 14:02 | 10 |
|
I'm about to get a new pc with a CD-ROM and one of the things
that caught my eye was a CD-ROM filled with cook books and
I certainly hope "BEAUTIFUL PICTURES" of what it is that I
will be making. I really think this is a nice way to use the
computer and of course my wife is very excited about MY using
the computer to get psyched into doing some cooking! 8^)
Anyone gotten a CD-ROM cook book? I'd like your opinions.
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3704.31 | Thumbs Up for MasterCook II software | GODIVA::bence | Leave time for the unexpected. | Mon Jan 03 1994 16:54 | 20 |
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I've tried the "Silver Palate Cookbook" CD and returned it
almost immediately. The lookup and search facility seemed quite
slow (on a 486/66 with double-speed CDROM).
On a more positive note, I recently bought myself yet another
recipe program - MasterCook II. (I've tried several in the last few
years, both purchased and shareware). This one is a real winner -
an easy-to-use interface under Windows and the ability to
import and export recipes. You can set up multiple cookbooks, menus,
shopping lists, etc. Recipes can be scaled. Multiple print formats
are supported including 3x5 and 4x6 cards. The file formats are
conducive to easy backup on a per cookbook basis.
In the past I've tried (and given up on) Micro Kitchen Companion,
MenuMaster, Edna's Recipes, etc. One recent package I tried -
MicroCookbook V4.0 (by Pinpoint publishing) has a particularly nasty
file format that makes it difficult to backup to floppy, and a
Windows interface that that makes it all too easy to mistype ingredient
measurements when entering your own recipes.
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3704.32 | | MAY18::bob | For Internal Use Only | Thu Jan 06 1994 12:27 | 8 |
| re: -1
Could you contrast MasterCook II with Micro Kitchen Companion,
which I have but am not thilled with.
Thanks
b
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3704.33 | re: -.2 | DECWET::WOLFE | | Fri Jan 07 1994 19:04 | 1 |
| Could you give a ballpark price for MasterCook II?
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3704.34 | more on MasterCook II | GODIVA::bence | Leave time for the unexpected. | Mon Jan 10 1994 11:33 | 7 |
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It's been ages since I used Micro Kitchen Companion, but I don't
remember it being quite so easy to search and move things about
between cookbooks and categories.
I got MasterCook II for $30 at Lechmere (not on sale).
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3704.35 | Recipes V2.0 for Windows | JUMP4::JOY | Perception is reality | Thu Feb 03 1994 12:43 | 53 |
| I recently purchased Recipes V2.0 for WIndows from Odyssey Woftware
(Waldensoftware, $29.95). I'm very impressed! It comes with some number
of recipes (don't remember how many, not a HUGE amount), but it allows
you to create as many cookbooks as you want, the recipe input is
form-based and is "smart" plus it "learns" (e.g. enter "t" for unit and
it will fill in tbsp., continue typing and get to "ts" and it willl
fill in "tsp.", same for ingredients and category i.e. fruits, cereal,
nuts, etc). When you enter a unit or category or ingredient it doesn't
know, it adds it to its list and the next time will try and guess what
you're about to type. I find this speeds up the entry time
considerably. So the receipe entry piece is very nice.
It also does portion adjustments (e.g. recipe makes enough for 6 and
you only want it for 2, its adjusts the amounts). It has a search
feature, which allows you to enter up to 4 (I think) ingredients and it
will do either an "and" or "or" search. This is the "I have eggs, peas,
corn and chicken in my refrigerator, what can I make" feature. They
have many formats of reports you can create (for printing recipes or
shopping lists), plus you can create your own customized reports. It
builds shopping lists, keeps track of what you have in your pantry (if
you want to enter everything) and will tell you when you're running out
of something if you've used recipes which use a certain product.
It also allows you to enter nutrition information about each recipe
(their included recipes have it already), but doesn't calculate it by
itself.
And it has a couple of unusual features that I enjoy...one is a system
for keeping track of your COUPONS. You enter all the coupons in,
including the expiration date and amount off. Then, if you choose a
recipe that has an ingredient you have a coupon for, when you create
your shopping list, it will flag the ingredient. It will also keep
track of the expiration dates and tell you when coupons expire. Of
course, I don't know if I'll have time to enter the 100 or so coupons I
have, but its a nice feature.
The other neat feature is a restaurant "guide". It allows you to enter
in names of restaurants that you visit, put things like which credit
cards they take, phone, address, contact name, hours, etc. Plus you can
put comments about each and categorize them. This I think we will use a
lot.
It also allows you to import cookbooks from certain other software
packages, MKC and Micro Cook II might be the ones they support. I can
check if anyone wants to know for sure.
They have a technical support group you can call with questions.
They're based in Calif. This is a real slick, very professionally done
piece of software. I think anyone would find it well worth their
$29.95.
Debbie
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3704.36 | MicroSoft's Great Chefs? | TAVIS::JUAN | | Wed Sep 13 1995 06:55 | 6 |
| Did anybody see MicroSoft's Great Chefs CD ROM? Is it worth?
Comments?
Regards,
Juan-Carlos
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3704.37 | | RANGER::62993::bence | Sounds like a job for Alice. | Wed Sep 13 1995 14:23 | 16 |
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I've got a copy of the Microsoft Great Chefs CD-ROM. It's "hosted" by
Julia Child (the program name is MSJULIA.EXE ;-)) and contains a
subset of the chefs and recipes that were shown in her "Great Chefs"
TV program last year.
It contains bibliographic info, 4-5 recipes, and a video demo by each
chef. Jacques Pepin demos puff pastry, Jeremiah Towers demos trussing
and stuffing a chicken, Nancy Silverton demos her grape starter for
sourdough bread, etc.
There's also a glossary (with pictures) of ingredients and equipment.
This not an extensible recipe system for storing your own recipes, but
rather a sampler of recipes and techniques. I recommend it on that basis.
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