
Recipes
Handwritten cards, finally safe.
Snap the card or type it out. Either way, it lives forever.
Capture Grandma's famous pie recipe, the story behind Sunday dinner, handwritten recipe cards, family photos, and voice recordings — before they're lost forever.
One family member pays. Everyone else contributes free.
Holiday · DessertFrom Grandma Mary's kitchen
Grandma explaining the crust
Andrea added a photo · Dad commented · 2 new memories
More than recipes
A recipe is just the beginning. With Tasted Table, every dish carries the people, the stories, and the voices behind it.

Recipes
Snap the card or type it out. Either way, it lives forever.

Stories
Why she made it. Who taught her. What it meant to everyone there.

Photos
Holiday photos, the finished dish, kids in the kitchen — all together.

Voices
Tap record. Capture the way she actually tells the story.
A recipe, fully remembered
Every recipe in Tasted Table is a small archive — a photo, a voice, a story, and the people who lived it.
Holiday · DessertFrom Grandma Mary's kitchen
Added by Andrea · shared with 8 family members
Grandma Explaining The Crust
1:24 — in her voice
"I learned this recipe from my mother in 1962. She always said the trick was cold butter and a colder kitchen — and never to roll it more than twice."
Family notes
John (Dad) · 2 days ago
This was Grandpa's favorite. He'd sneak a slice before dinner every year.
Emily · last Thanksgiving
She made this every Thanksgiving. Tonight Hazel licked the spoon clean — Mom would've loved it.
Built together
Invite parents, cousins, grandkids — anyone who has a memory worth keeping. Everyone can add a recipe, a photo, a voice recording, or a note in the margins.
Invite the whole family — no tech skills required
Record stories together, even from across the country
Everyone leaves comments and memories on every recipe

Grandma Mary
The original cook

Mom (Linda)
Keeper of the stories

Dad (John)
Best taste-tester

Andrea
The photographer

Hazel, 5
Apprentice baker
Grandma Mary added a recipe Sunday Pot Roast
Plus a voice note about why she always used a cast iron pan.
Dad commented on Christmas Eve Lasagna
“We've made this every December since 1987.”
Andrea uploaded a photo to Grandma's Apple Pie
Found this in a shoebox — Thanksgiving 1992.

The printed heirloom
Print your family cookbook as a linen-bound hardcover — recipes, stories, photos, and handwritten cards, beautifully typeset. Every recipe gets a small QR code that opens the voice recordings and videos behind it.
Recipes & stories typeset by hand
Photos & handwritten cards
QR codes for every voice memo
"Scan to hear Grandma explain the recipe."
Future generations open the QR and hear her voice, see the photos, and read the family's notes — straight from the printed page.
Why families use Tasted Table

Every dish, exactly as your family makes it — never lost to a missing index card.

Photograph the originals. Type up later. The handwriting stays beside it forever.

Tap record while she cooks. Save the way she actually tells it — every laugh.

Parents, cousins, grandkids. Everyone contributes. Everyone remembers.

Turn your family's cookbook into a beautiful linen-bound hardcover keepsake.

Hazel, at five, will one day read it to her own kids — and hear Grandma's voice.
"When my grandmother passed away, we thought her recipes were all we had left. Then we found the recordings of her explaining every holiday meal. Tasted Table became one of our family's most treasured possessions."

Andrea Caldwell
Keeper of the Caldwell cookbook
"My mom is 84 and not good with apps. But she can press a red button. We sat together on a Sunday and saved nineteen recipes — and her voice telling each one. I will treasure that day forever."

Linda Park
Mom, daughter, archivist
"We printed the cookbook for my dad's 70th birthday. He opened it, scanned the first QR, heard his own mother's voice — and cried. Worth every penny, ten times over."

John Miller
Father of three, grandfather of two
The recipe you'd be heartbroken to lose
Preserve your family's recipes, stories, photos, and voices for generations to come. Start with one recipe — the one everyone would miss the most.
One family member pays · Everyone else contributes free · Only one subscription needed per family