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Say Mmm on Evernote

imageGood news for Evernote fans…now you can use Say Mmm to do more with recipes and grocery lists on Evernote.

Millions of people use Evernote to remember and organize all sorts of information, and that includes lots of recipes and grocery lists. With our new API integration, people can use some of Say Mmm’s more popular features for creating and organizing grocery lists right on Evernote. It’s free to use these features, and they can be enabled simply by logging in with an Evernote account at: http://www.saymmm.com/evernote.php

Here are some cool things you can do:  

See how it works in this video:

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With a free Say Mmm account, you can also plan meals with ease in the calendar, save time with smart grocery list features, share recipes with friends, and more. Plus, you can just click to send your plans and lists to your Evernote account to save and use on different devices.

There are several challenges in converting natural language text into organized grocery lists with nutritional info, so automatic grocery lists aren’t always perfect, but we think it will still save you from a ton of the work of typing and organizing everything. We hope you enjoy Say Mmm on Evernote and look forward to feedback and ways we can keep making it better. For more questions, check out our FAQ page.

What makes a recipe healthy…or not?

imageWhen you are trying out a new recipe, it’s nice to know how healthy it is, and we recently released a feature to estimate nutritional info for any recipe. Just copy and paste the ingredients or the link to the recipe here to get a nutrition breakdown and an organized grocery list.

Many larger recipe websites are nice enough to give you a the main nutritional values for their recipes, but sometimes it is hard to know why a recipe has the amount of calories or fat that it has. Since in most cases you only get totals for the recipe, you may not know which ingredients contribute the most to the various nutritional values and what you could do to change it. So Say Mmm has taken it one step further by showing the top ingredients that contribute to the calorie count, and we have just extended that to other other main nutritional values: Fat, Carbs, Cholesterol, Protein, and Sodium.

Take this example of Pancake-Sausage Muffins. Sound heavy? It’s actually not that bad at 120 calories a muffin (serves 18). But what about the sausage? Doesn’t that add a lot of calories and fat? That’s the interesting thing you can see with the ingredient breakdown. It turns out the flour and the butter add more calories than the sausage and the butter is responsible for most of the fat. Now the story might be different with regular sausage or if the recipe had more turkey sausage in it, but easily seeing it in proportion to the recipe gives a much better understanding of why a recipe may or may not be what you are looking for.

See the calorie breakdown by default:

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Or change to view other nutrient breakdowns, like total fat:

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Combine grocery lists for recipes

We recently added a new public feature that will automatically create an organized grocery list with nutrition information for any recipe or recipe link, plus give a nutritional estimate. We have had a great response from our users and were thrilled to see it recommended by Real Simple as one of their picks of the week for ways to simplify your life.

When making a grocery list its likely you’ll want to include more than one recipe as well as a other odds and ends, and this is a feature we have had for people with free Say Mmm accounts.  Now we are extending that to our public grocery list maker, so its easy for anyone to get a quick grocery list and nutrition estimate without logging in or even having an account.

After creating a grocery list on this page, just click the + icon at the top to add it to a combined list. We’ll remember it for you, and you can go back and add shopping lists from other recipes in the same manor. You can add and remove up to 10 lists and even click on edit to add and remove individual items. Then when you are ready to go to the store, just print it out.

Since it’s a public feature, bloggers can add smart grocery lists to their recipes just by adding a link or button to the blog. It works for individual recipe pages or just by having a button on the blog side area.  When readers click on it, Say Mmm can figure out if they are coming from a page with a recipe and automatically create an organized grocery list that they can use on its own or add to a combined list of grocery lists from recipes from anywhere.

Here are some images of how combined grocery lists work.  There is a new + button

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Then you can add and remove the lists in your combined list

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And when you are ready, print it out

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Say Mmm a finalist at the Founder Showcase

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We are happy to announce that Say Mmm was selected as a finalist in the upcoming Founder Showcase on Nov 8. The Founder Showcase is a quarterly start up pitch event that gathers top technology CEOs, investors, and early-stage companies in Silicon Valley for one action-packed night to network and help launch a promising start up to greatness. Michael Arrington, founder of Techcrunch, will be doing the keynote for the event, and we will be one of 10 companies in the pitch competition for this event on Nov 8.

Wish us luck!

Get nutritional information for any recipe

Curious how healthy a recipe is? Say Mmm has your answer.

We are happy to announce a new feature, unique to Say Mmm, that will estimate nutritional information for any recipe. All you have to do is copy and paste the list of ingredients or the link to the online recipe. Say Mmm will not only show you nutritional and daily percentage estimates, but also visually display which ingredients contribute the most to the calories.

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Some places online have nutritional information for their own recipes, but Say Mmm is the first site where you can just enter a URL or list of ingredients and get nutritional information for recipes from anywhere. There are a number of challenges in translating natural language recipes into nutritional estimates, and we have combined recipe and shopping list data from tens of thousands of Say Mmm users with nutrition facts from the USDA. It isn’t perfect, so we don’t recommend it for people following strict diets, but we think it works pretty well for getting a close estimate in the vast majority of cases. And the more people use it, the better it will get. Stay tuned for more.

For bloggers, you can share organized shopping lists with nutritional information for your recipes just by adding a link. See how easy it is here.

Automatic grocery lists for blogs

imageFood bloggers, what if you could just add a single button to your site that would convert any of your recipes into organized shopping lists? Wouldn’t that be a helpful feature for your readers? And if it were just a matter of copying and pasting some HTML text, with no installations or accounts to set up? Wouldn’t that be easy?

Well…now you can do that. And it’s free.

Say Mmm has a set of meal planning and grocery shopping tools that help people organize and use recipes from anywhere with less hassle, and we have extended some of these features to work directly on other sites. With just a click your readers can get an automatic organized shopping list without you or your readers having to install anything or even have a Say Mmm account.

Here is how it works. For most sites and visitors it works just by adding one of these image or text links to the recipe post or even the side bar or footer on your site. Then when a reader clicks on this, we can usually recognize the page that they came from by the referral information that browsers typically send, which is similar to how Google Analytics works. We then use this URL to find and automatically change the recipe ingredients from that page into an organized list of grocery items.

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In some cases, websites may block sending this information or users may have firewalls or restrictive browser security settings that remove this information. If we can’t tell what page the user came from, we will just ask them to put in the URL or ingredients. There is also an advanced option where you can embed the link of the page that has your recipe in the link you put on your site. It is a little extra work to change the link for each recipe on your site, but the nice thing about this option is we will always know the right page to look for the recipe, regardless of any special settings the site or browsers may have. Anyone can also use this option to share a shopping list link for a specific recipe in an email or on facebook or any page that doesn’t have the actual recipe.

For Say Mmm users, we also have publishing options to manually create and organize shopping items for recipes, and even combine them into meal plans and recipe indexes. We launched these earlier in the year, and based on the positive response we got from those features, we decided to take it one step further and do more of the work for people.

Any questions, feel free to email [email protected]

Automatically create grocery lists for online recipes

About a week ago, we added a new feature to automatically create grocery lists for recipes people enter in Say Mmm, an we are glad that a lot of people are enjoying how this works.  Thanks again to everyone that sent us a message with feedback.

We are also happy to announce that you can now just enter a link to any online recipe and have a grocery list created for that recipe.  There are a few other tricks we had to incorporate to make this work since there is a good amount of variety in how recipes are formatted and presented on different websites, plus there are a lot of other things on web pages that can make it a little tricky to find the right area with the ingredients.

We think its working pretty well now, though there are a few sites where it may not work or recipes that may need adjusting.  In these cases you can edit the items individually, and we added an “Edit list” link where you can copy and paste just the ingredients for cases when it doesn’t find them correctly.  So even in the tricky cases its still fairly easy to add a shopping list and we are continuing to make improvements.

Here is an example of how the grocery list looks when created from a link:

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And here is the online recipe from Taste of Home:

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Automagic grocery lists for your recipes

Automagic grocery lists for your recipes How many carrots in a cup of chopped carrots? Or ounces in a cup of sour cream? One of the pains of grocery shopping is that recipes are designed for cooking, not shopping. They don’t sell items in cups or teaspoons in the store, so you usually have to spend time figuring out what you need in terms of weights or items. Wouldn’t it be better if that was done for you?

We are excited to announce a new feature we have been working on for a while that will automatically check the ingredients in your recipes, convert those into items or weights that you would buy at the store, and categorize them by area of the store and whether it is a common pantry item or not. So for example, it will tell you that you need 4 carrots for 2 cups of shredded carrots or 8 oz for a cup of sour cream, and then organize these in a list for you.

We believe this is a first for the industry to dynamically convert regular text recipes and ingredients to items in shopping lists. It wasn’t easy, but using the hundreds and thousands of shopping lists items and recipes people have entered on Say Mmm, and a with a little fancy programming stuff (we won’t bore you with the details), we finally have something that we think works pretty well. It’s certainly far from perfect, but we wanted to get it out there, as we know it will save people a bunch of time from typing out everything, even if things need to be corrected here and there. Plus as we continue to update it, it will only get better.

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As our users already know, it can be very nice to have a shopping list automatically added from a recipe or whole meal plan. Before, users would only have to enter the shopping list for the recipe once to be able to use it over and over, but we thought it would be even better if it was done for you the first time as well. Let us know how you like it, and stay tuned for more to come soon.

One-click Meal Plan Gallery

Trying out new recipe ideas is fun, but it can be a pain to put together a plan and a list of everything you need. Now you can discover and use sets of recipes and meal ideas with all the planning work done for you on Say Mmm. You can browse through shared meal plans, and with just a click see all the recipes on one page and an organized grocery list on another page. Grocery lists are dynamic, so you can edit or add to them before printing them out.

By extending our recently launched My Meal Plans features, anyone can choose to publish and share their meal plans in our Shared Ideas gallery. It is also easy to share the direct link to the plan right on a blog or website, or even send it in an email. Here are a couple examples:

The gallery has reviews, ratings and tagging features to make it easy for anyone to come to the site and find something that’s right for them. We have added a few recipes and ideas from our favorite blogs to get things started, and anyone can add their own ideas and find ideas from others with similar tastes or dietary goals.

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Posted by Brian

Say Mmm graduates from the Founder Institute

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We are happy to say that Say Mmm is now a graduate of the Founder Institute, having completed the intensive 4-month program this past week.  The Founder Institute is both a set of educational sessions designed specifically for helping startups succeed, and also a global network of graduates and experienced mentors.  

My goal in entering the program was to evolve Say Mmm and define the next big ways it could help people, and I was not disappointed.  As a technology company, I believe it’s important to always be improving the product and service. Sometimes changes are gradual and sometimes you can make big leaps, and the Founder Institute pushes you towards making big leaps.  I am excited about some of the ideas we will be rolling out and the direction Say Mmm is headed.

What’s the Founder Institute like? A lot depends on what you put into it, and how committed you are to turning your vision into reality. It isn't easy, and of the 40+ founders that entered our class, only 12 graduated. No one said starting a company was easy though, so it is set up to help prepare you for the real world. The thing I liked most about the Founder Institute was the impressive list of mentors that are there to share their experiences and provide feedback and guidance to founders. Your peers in the program are another good resource, and you spend time in different working groups helping each other.

All in all a very good experience, and I believe the value of the program to Say Mmm doesn’t stop at graduation.

Posted by Brian