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[338.86 --> 341.62] Do you want people to send you suggestions via email?
[341.82 --> 343.20] Maybe the contact page?
[343.42 --> 344.24] The contact page.
[344.30 --> 344.90] Anything like that.
[344.94 --> 346.02] If you've got a venue in mind.
[346.14 --> 351.26] I was thinking we did a few events for Red Hat Consulting when I was in London at BrewDog.
[351.78 --> 353.72] Those pubs are quite hip and trendy and modern.
[353.82 --> 357.22] They've got like a whole area upstairs that you can kind of rent out.
[357.32 --> 357.90] Some of them.
[357.90 --> 362.90] So maybe something like that would be nice because they're sort of half open, half inside type thing.
[363.04 --> 364.98] So kind of hedge our bets on the weather.
[365.48 --> 366.44] That's probably a pretty good idea.
[366.60 --> 367.30] Let's be honest.
[367.44 --> 368.28] Man, I'm so jealous.
[368.48 --> 369.36] Please take pictures.
[370.00 --> 371.28] I want to see it.
[371.56 --> 373.36] Maybe one of these days we'll get you out there, huh?
[373.46 --> 374.52] Maybe Fosdem.
[374.84 --> 375.48] I'd love to.
[375.80 --> 376.82] Definitely on my list.
[377.06 --> 380.70] It kind of got set back the last couple of years, but it's definitely on my list.
[381.58 --> 382.66] This is one of those episodes.
[382.90 --> 384.66] We have them, I think, about every other episode.
[385.28 --> 387.82] I'm going to have a bunch of work after this episode.
[388.02 --> 389.34] I just know it.
[389.60 --> 390.06] I know it.
[390.16 --> 393.32] And it's going to be because my wife's going to demand it.
[394.04 --> 395.36] You have come across something.
[395.54 --> 400.42] I feel like either you talked to me about it before off air or someone did.
[400.78 --> 403.34] It just doesn't seem right that we haven't talked about this on air yet.
[403.70 --> 410.18] Well, a couple of weeks ago, the Tandoor Project, a self-hosted recipe manager, released version 1.4.
[410.66 --> 413.90] So they've been in development for a year plus at this point.
[413.98 --> 416.86] So it's very possible you've seen it on Reddit at some point before.
[417.12 --> 417.56] Yeah, maybe.
[417.66 --> 420.06] But the 1.4 release has got some notable changes in it.
[420.06 --> 425.24] There's a whole new shopping list feature built in, which is pretty darn cool.
[425.78 --> 430.84] And so just to be clear, this is a recipe manager that you would run on your own system where they offer a self-hosted version.
[431.40 --> 434.16] And if we haven't talked about it on the show before, we should have.
[434.16 --> 438.46] Well, we've talked about Chowdown, and I'm fairly sure we've talked about Melee before.
[438.60 --> 441.18] If we haven't, I use both of those equally.
[441.80 --> 446.86] I still love Chowdown because it's a simple markdown-based system.
[447.02 --> 447.84] There's no database.
[448.18 --> 449.54] There's no craziness.
[449.54 --> 453.66] It's just a stupid, simple markdown plain text files.
[454.64 --> 463.04] But having a database gives you some nice features, like in Tandoor, for example, when you import a recipe, you can then add it into a meal plan.
[463.04 --> 466.68] So you could have a family-facing meal plan dashboard.
[467.60 --> 472.50] Take it one step further, the app knows which ingredients go into those recipes.
[472.84 --> 477.12] So you can say, excuse me, Tandoor, could you please add that to my shopping list?
[477.20 --> 483.72] And then pull that shopping list up when you're at the grocery store and just buy everything you need for that specific thing.
[484.28 --> 490.08] Now, what I saw in Reddit as a particularly interesting idea was some kind of like self-hosted HelloFresh.
[490.08 --> 502.88] Someone suggested to the developer that he integrates with Instacart's API with those recipes to order three green peppers and some chicken and whatever else you need for that recipe.
[503.54 --> 509.90] So you end up with this like self-hosted HelloFresh type thing, which I thought would be an amazing, amazing thing.
[510.48 --> 510.92] No kidding.
[511.20 --> 512.04] Brilliant idea.
[512.04 --> 518.96] This has another feature that you're probably about to touch on, but I just have to talk about because this is what won me over.
[519.62 --> 522.78] And it is one of the newer features they just recently implemented.
[523.00 --> 530.38] And it's this really slick import feature where you can give it the URL of a website that has a recipe.
[530.38 --> 537.48] I threw one of those, one of those like essentially a blog post where they tell you their whole life story just to give you a recipe and they have pictures.
[537.74 --> 540.36] Oh, I hate those so much.
[540.50 --> 545.58] I found like the worst one, man, where it has like slide over JavaScript and just all kinds of junk.
[545.84 --> 552.66] And I gave the URL to Tandoor and it actually processed the page.
[552.66 --> 559.38] It pulled out all the individual steps, all of the individual ingredients, and it itemized it all just perfectly.
[559.86 --> 561.00] I threw some simpler ones out.
[561.02 --> 561.60] It did great too.
[561.66 --> 564.72] But I was really impressed that it got that really complicated one.
[564.86 --> 573.14] And so it's like you just take this really, really long three-page post and condense it down into just a good block information you need.
[573.40 --> 574.38] And then you add it to your database.
[574.66 --> 575.88] And now you got that recipe.
[576.36 --> 576.76] It's amazing.
[576.90 --> 578.80] It will import the images from the website.
[579.04 --> 580.60] It will also pick out keywords.
[580.98 --> 582.16] Yes, yes, yes.
[582.16 --> 586.36] It will figure out the steps you need, the ingredients, everything.
[586.56 --> 588.42] So the import stuff is really slick.
[588.70 --> 594.56] And you can do one recipe at a time or you can just give it a list of URLs with a new line per link.
[595.16 --> 597.06] And it just works.
[597.20 --> 599.16] I mean, that's the best kind of works, right?
[599.74 --> 607.96] I had the wife use it because she was just yesterday talking to me about how, you know, my grandma used index cards.
[607.96 --> 611.38] And when I first started cooking, I created a binder, she said.
[611.44 --> 614.06] And I had all my recipes in this binder that I'd printed out.
[614.22 --> 615.62] But that's gone now.
[615.62 --> 618.48] And she wanted to start collecting her recipes again.
[619.26 --> 622.76] And so I had her sit down and input a few of them into this.
[623.04 --> 626.90] And I'd say within 15 minutes, she probably had four recipes added.
[626.90 --> 630.54] And she was testing the shopping cart feature to see how that works.
[630.54 --> 637.58] And then she was visualizing, okay, well, how would this work if I'm at the grocery store and I have my phone with me?
[637.92 --> 639.04] How would the UI look?
[639.10 --> 641.92] And so she, like, resizes the browser to see if it works okay on mobile.
[641.98 --> 642.66] And it totally did.
[642.70 --> 644.30] It looks like it's going to render just fine.
[644.30 --> 648.88] And so she had herself a list that she could just go down the aisle and check off as she buys.
[649.00 --> 653.04] And she experimented with seeing what happens if multiple recipes call for the same ingredient.
[653.20 --> 655.94] And if it gets the right amounts correct in the shopping cart.
[656.04 --> 656.80] And it does.
[657.00 --> 659.14] It just does a really good job with all that.
[659.34 --> 661.50] And it supports markdown for your cooking notes.
[661.90 --> 662.42] That is cool.
[662.52 --> 662.72] Yes.
[662.80 --> 664.78] I was going to touch on the comment feature at the bottom.
[665.10 --> 668.60] There's also another option to log a specific cook.