I actually use GPT-3.5 (the free one) for my meal planning, GPT-4 seemed like it was smarter than it needed to be and it works pretty well - Claude should also work. The trick with LLMs, as always, is to avoid treating them like people and treat them more like a tool that will do exactly what you ask of them. So for instance, instead of "What should I eat for dinner?" (which implies personality, desires, and preferences and can throw it off), you should ask "List meals I can make using (ingredients) and other common ingredients" and then "Write a recipe for (option)" which are both mostly objective questions. You can ask for a particular style, culture, etc too. Also keep in mind its limits, it knows cooking from ingesting millions of cooking blog posts, so it won't necessarily know exact proportions or unusual recipes/ingredients/combinations.
this post was submitted on 30 Sep 2023
12 points (100.0% liked)
Food and Cooking
6446 readers
1 users here now
All things culinary and cooking related. Share food! Share recipes! Share stuff about food, etc.
Subcommunity of Humanities.
This community's icon was made by Aaron Schneider, under the CC-BY-NC-SA 4.0 license.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
I don't know about a specific one, but i tried via Bing with OK results. It mostly pulled from one source that had 72 recipes, and then a couple from sources it didn't link to in the body. There were links to the sites used at the bottom, but you would have to search for the specific recipes.
https://sl.bing.net/dI2wnTP2lUW
Edit: Well crap. Apparently that link will only work in MS Edge