Home Cookin Recipe Software
An easy to use recipe database, grocery manager, and meal
planning calendar.
Recipes:
Chapters:
|
Grocery Lists:
Meal Planning:
Customer Support:
|
Purchase Home Cookin Deluxe for $44.95 and receive
the latest version on a CD-ROM with over 12,000 sample
recipes.
1. Order online with your credit card at:
www.HomeCookinRecipeSoftware.com
2. Or, send a check or money order for $44.95 (US
Funds Only) payable to:
Mountain Software
6911 NE Livingston Road
Camas, WA 98607
If you purchase online, and do not need the CD or sample
recipes, you can select email delivery for only $34.95
The trial version of Home Cookin is fully operational for 15
days. After that time, most functions will be disabled.
Registration provides you with the following benefits:
- Unlimited use of the program
- No trial version "Nag" screens
- FREE unlimited support by email
- FREE upgrades for two years
Visit our web site at www.mountain-software.com
to learn more about Home Cookin and our other products.
You can check for updates and see the program's revision
history at
www.HomeCookinRecipeSoftware.com/upgrade.htm.
The Home
Cookin FAQ Page has answers to frequently asked questions.
Solutions to many common problems are available for immediate
access.
Email us at: support@mountain-software.com
if you can't can't find the answers you need on the FAQ page.
Please include the Home Cookin version number, and the version
of Windows you are using. Any additional information you can
provide, such as the steps you are taking, or the hardware you
are using, will help us diagnose the problem and offer a
solution.
As always, if you have a comment or suggestion for future
updates, we would love to hear from you!
The Home Cookin program and documentation are Copyright
1996-2010 by Anthony Watson, all rights reserved. Any
unauthorized duplication of the program or documentation is a
violation of federal copyright laws. The trial version of Home
Cookin may be distributed freely, provided all original and
unmodified files are included.
This product has been tested extensively and to the best of my
knowledge will not cause problems of any kind. However, neither
Mountain Software nor the author (Anthony Watson), will be held
responsible for any damage occurring to your system or other
software. I also make no guarantee as to compatibility with
other software or hardware configurations.
Home Cookin was written by Anthony Watson using Power BASIC for
Windows. This document was written using CSE HTML
Validator.
The first screen you see when you open Home Cookin is the
Index screen. A list of chapters will be displayed on the left
side of the screen, and a list of recipes on the right. To view
a recipe, first select a chapter, then click twice on the
desired recipe to view it on the Recipe screen (or select the
recipe and click the Recipe tab). You can also select recipes
from the Meals screen to view them on the Recipe screen.
Scroll through longer recipes - using the slider on the
right side of the recipe screen, or rotate the scroll wheel on
your mouse (if available). You can also use the up/down cursor
keys, Page Up/Down, Home, and End, to navigate long
recipes.
Flip through recipes - by clicking the Left or Right
arrow buttons, or by using your left and right cursor keys. To
view recipes in another chapter, you must return to the Index
screen and select your desired chapter. (Hint: You can select
the "All Recipes" chapter if you want to flip through all
recipes in your entire collection.)
Return to the Index screen - by clicking the Index tab
or press the Enter key. You can toggle between the Index and
Recipe screens using the Enter key.
Make changes to the current recipe - by clicking the
Edit button. When the recipe editor appears, make the desired
changes then click the Save button to return to the Recipe
screen.
Find text in the current recipe - by clicking the Find
button on the recipe screen. Enter the text you want to search
for, then click OK. All text that matches your search will be
highlighted (this is a simple search that matches any string
you type in).
Resize the current recipe - by clicking the Resize
button on the recipe screen. Enter a new serving size then
click OK. You may print or export the recipe in it's resized
form, but it will return to the original measurements the next
time you view the recipe. To permanently resize a recipe, you
must Edit the recipe and click the resize button on the editor
screen.
Delete the current recipe - by clicking the Delete
button on the recipe screen, or press the delete key on your
keyboard.
Add the recipe to the meal calendar - by clicking the
New Meal button. Change the date and meal time, if desired,
then click OK.
Email a recipe or save it to a text file - by clicking
the Export button. Select the
format you want to use, then click the Email or File
button.
Print the current recipe - by clicking the Print button.
Select the print layout you want to use, then select your
printer and a font. Adjust the position and card spacings, if
needed, then click OK.
Select Grocery Items Quickly - by hovering the mouse
pointer over any word in the ingredients. Click on the
highlighted word to quickly search for that item in the grocery
list. For example, if a recipe asks for "1/2 cup corn" you can
click the word "corn" to search the grocery list.
- Click the Index tab.
- Select a chapter to save the recipe in.
- Click the Add Recipe button.
- Type in the recipe Title, Ingredients, and
Directions.
- Click the Serves button to enter the number of
servings it makes.
- If you wish, load or paste in a photo.
- If you wish, click the Spell Check button to
check spelling.
- Click the Save button in the text editor.
If you have informational text such as food glossaries,
measurement equivalents, family stories, etc. you may want to
use the
Add Text function.
The text editors support many commands common to Windows
applications:
Cursor Movements:
Next Word............... Control/Right
Cursor
Previous Word........... Control/Left Cursor
Beginning of Line....... Home
End of Line............. End
Start of text........... Control/Home
End of text............. Control/End
Page Up................. Page Up
Page Down............... Page Down
Text Block
Operations:
Mark Block.............. Hold Shift and Use
Cursor Keys, or mark with mouse
Delete Block............ Mark block, then Delete key or RIGHT
click mouse
Copy to Clipboard....... Mark block, then Control/C or RIGHT
click mouse
Cut to Clipboard........ Mark block, then Control/X or RIGHT
click mouse
Paste from Clipboard.... Control/V, or RIGHT click text
Convert to upper case... Mark block, then Control/U
Convert to lower case... Mark block, then Control/L
Strip carriage returns.. Control/Return
TIPS:
- Press the Tab key to cycle through the editor
fields.
- Set the Servings to zero if you do not want to see a
servings display. This is useful for things like loaves of
bread, sauces, and other items that aren't always served
individually.
- Once you have entered the number of servings for the
recipe, you can click the Resize button to permanently
resize the ingredients.
- Home Cookin supports JPG, GIF, BMP, and PNG image
formats. If you load or paste an image larger than 600x400
pixels, it will be resized to approximately 400x300 pixels
before being added to your recipe. To save an image larger
than 400x300, you must resize it with a graphics program
before adding it to Home Cookin.
- Home Cookin only allows one photo for each recipe.
However, you can join multiple images in a graphics program
and save the montage to a single image. Then load that image
to your recipe.
From time to time, you may find information you want to
store in Home Cookin that does not fit well in a standard
recipe record. These may include food glossaries, measurement
equivalents, family stories, etc. To better accomodate this
type of information, Home Cookin includes a special text
record.
- Click the Index tab.
- Select a chapter to save the recipe in.
- Click the Add Text button.
- Type in the recipe Title, then enter your text into the
main text field.
- If you wish, load or paste in a photo.
- If you wish, click the Spell Check button to
check spelling.
- Click the Save button in the text editor.
Tips:
- See Add a recipe for
information on the various keyboard commands.
- Information text does not include a serving size, and
therefore cannot be resized. Recipes should be stored using
the Add Recipe function.
- Click the Index tab.
- Select the recipe you want to edit.
- Click the Edit button.
- Edit the recipe as you wish (change the text, import a
photo, resize the ingredients, check spelling, etc.).
- Click the Save button.
Tips:
- See Add a recipe for
information on the various keyboard commands.
- You can also Right click a recipe on the Index screen to
edit it.
- Click the Edit button while viewing a recipe on the
Recipe screen.
Home Cookin includes a built-in spell checker which can be
accessed by clicking the Spell Check button when you
Add a recipe, Add
information text, or Edit a
recipe. You also have the option to spell check recipes
during importing.
- The spell checker will show the first misspelled word
when it opens. If no words are misspelled in the current
recipe, it will show No more misspelled words.
- When a misspelled word is found, locate the correct
spelling in the dictionary (usually close to the word Home
Cookin highlights). Then click the Replace button, or
click twice on the correct word.
- If the correct spelling is not in the dictionary, click
the Add button to add the word to the dictionary.
Enter the correct spelling in the Watch For field and
leave the Replace With field blank. Then click
Save. Remember to Replace the misspelled word
in your text after adding it to your dictionary.
- Click the Next button to locate the next
misspelled word.
- If you want to abort the spell checker, or no more words
are misspelled, click the Quit button to return to the
editor.
Tips:
- If you want to ignore a misspelled word, simply click the
Next button to move on to the next word.
- You can correct a word without adding it to the
dictionary, by clicking the misspelled word at the top of the
spell checker. Make the desired changes, and click
OK.
- You can add additional dictionary words at any time.
- If a word in your dictionary is spelled incorrectly,
select that word and click the Edit button. Make the
desired changes, and click the Save button.
- If you want to remove a word from the dictionary, select
the desired word and click the Delete button.
- If you frequently need to replace a commonly misspelled
word, you can use the auto-replace feature of the spell
checker (For example, to automatically change recipie
to recipe, or tbsp to tablespoon). Add a
dictionary word, with the incorrect spelling in the Watch
For field, and put the correct spelling in the Replace
With field. Click Save when you are finished.
- Click the Index tab.
- Check the boxes next to the recipe(s) you want to
delete.
(Press Control+A to select all recipes in the current
chapter).
- Click the Delete button, or press the Delete key
on your keyboard.
- Click OK to verify the delete operation.
Tips:
- You can also Right click a recipe on the Index screen to
delete it.
- Delete a recipe from the Recipe screen by clicking the
Delete button.
While you can find a recipe by browsing through the main
Index lists, it is often easier to use the Find
function:
- Click the Index tab.
- Click the Find button.
- Enter the text you are looking for (See below)
- Check the fields you want to search (Default is title
only)
- Check the All Chapters option to search all
chapters, or uncheck it to search the current chapter.
- Click the OK button.
Tips:
- Searches are not case sensitive.
- The search terms can be in any order (i.e. butter
sugar will find the same recipes as sugar
butter).
- To match a phrase, enclose the terms in quotes (i.e.
"peanut butter").
- To exclude a search term, precede it with a dash (i.e.
-butter).
- To match any of a list of words, precede each term with a
slash (i.e. /butter /margarine).
Examples:
- Do I have a recipe for Curried Chicken?
- Enter curried chicken
- Click the OK button (Defaults to Title search
only)
- What can I make with potatoes, corn, and ground beef?
- Enter potato corn "ground beef"
- Uncheck the Title search field
- Check the Ingredients search field
- Click the OK button
- What kind of salads can I make with walnuts or pecans?
- Enter salad /walnut /pecan
- Check the Ingredients search field
- Click the OK button
- Do I have any clam chowder recipes that aren't New
England style?
- Enter "clam chowder" -"new england"
- Click the OK button (Defaults to Title search
only)
- Click the Index tab.
- Check the boxes next to the recipe(s) you want to
print.
(Press Control+A to select all recipes in the current
chapter.)
- Click the Print button.
- Click the Layout field to select a print
layout.
- Click the Printer field to select your desired
printer.
- Click the Font field to select a font for
printing.
- Click the OK button to print your recipe(s)
Tips:
- All print layouts assume your printer is set to standard
8.5x11 inch letter size paper, regardless of what paper you
are actually feeding. Make sure letter size paper is selected
in the printer properties when you choose your printer.
- You can adjust the location of the cards on the page, by
dragging the card in the preview window (top-left card with
multi-card layouts), or by pressing the keyboard cursor keys
(Up, Down, Left, Right). Most printers cannot print within
1/4 inch of the papers edge, so keep this in mind as you
adjust the card positions.
- With multiple card layouts, you can adjust the space
between cards by dragging the right-hand or lower cards. Or,
hold down the Control key and use the keyboard cursor keys
(Up, Down, Left, Right).
- Not all printers feed paper the same way, especially when
manually feeding index cards. You may have to change the
margin settings to align the printouts with your cards.
- If you are printing one of the multiple card layouts on
plain card stock, click the Print Card Outlines option
to provide lines for cutting the cards out.
- Click the One Recipe Per Card option if you want
to limit the number of recipes printed on a card.
- Click the Print Photos option if you want to print
attached photos with the recipes. Obviously, the photo will
only be printed if one is attached to the recipe. Because of
the limited space on index cards, this option is best
restricted to full page layouts.
- You can also print a recipe by clicking the Print
button on the Recipe screen.
- Click the Index tab.
- Check the boxes next to the recipe(s) you want to move or
copy.
(Press Control+A to select all recipes in the current
chapter.)
- Click the Move or Copy button.
- Select the chapter where you want the recipes to be
moved/copied.
Many recipes can be found on web sites, newsgroups, mailing
lists, or even other recipe applications. Home Cookin lets you
import these easily, saving the work of retyping every recipe.
You may import recipes from text files, or copy them to the
clipboard in other applications (i.e. web browsers, email
clients, or newsreaders) and import from the clipboard.
- Click the Index tab.
- Select the chapter you want to save the recipe(s)
in.
- Click the Import button.
- Select the file you want to import, or click the
Clipboard button to import a recipe that has been
copied to the clipboard.
- Select your desired import method:
- The Automatic import method supports recipes
exported from Mastercook, Meal-Master, Big-Oven, Cookbook
Wizard, From Scratch, From My Kitchen, Living Cookbook,
Now You're Cooking, Recipe Processor, or Computer
Chef.
- The Manual import method will let you save
recipes that do not adhere to any of the supported
formats.
- The Information Record method will save the
recipe as generic text.
Normally you should leave the method set to Automatic.
If the recipe format cannot be determined, Home Cookin will
fall back to the Manual import method. The only time you
may need to purposely select the Manual method is if the
Automatic method is not importing a recipe properly.
- Check the sort by category option if you want the
recipes to be sorted by their defined categories. If the
category does not exist as a Home Cookin chapter, a new
chapter will be created automatically. If the recipe does not
specify a category, the recipe will be placed in a chapter
called Undefined Chapter.
- Check the Spell Check option if you want to
check spelling before saving
the recipe. (Spell checking during importing will
significantly slow down large import sessions.)
- Click OK to import the recipe(s).
Manual Importing:
The manual import is used when Home Cookin cannot detect a
recipe automatically, or when you specifically choose the
manual import method. This allows you to select the various
recipe segments yourself, and save the recipe in Home Cookin.
- Select the recipe title by clicking on the line of text
that contains the recipe title. Then click the Title
button.
- Optional: Select the line that specifies the number of
servings for the recipe. Then click the Yield
button.
- Select the ingredients lines by clicking on the first
ingredient and dragging down to the last ingredient. Then
click the Ingredients button.
- Select the directions lines by clicking on the first line
of the directions and dragging down to the last line of the
directions. Then click the Directions button.
- Click the Save button.
If the text contains additional recipes, you can repeat
the process with those. Click the
Done button to return
to the
Index screen.
Tips:
- If you do not select a yield for the recipe, Home Cookin
will default to four servings.
- After you select a recipe segment, you can Right click
and select the segment type, instead of clicking the button
at the bottom of the screen.
- Many documents like Word Documents (.doc) or web pages
(.htm) include special formatting and control characters.
Trying to import these directly into Home Cookin will likely
result in garbled text with lots of strange characters.
Instead, you should load the file into the application that
created it, and Copy the text to the clipboard. You
can then import the recipe into Home Cookin.
NOTE: Recipe importing is not an exact process. There are
many items that can cause the import functions to work
improperly, or not at all. These include inadvertant editing to
the original text files, reformatting by various network
processes, file corruption, embedded control codes, etc. Home
Cookin has been designed to accomodate many of the problems you
are likely to encounter, but you may need to edit the recipe
after importing.
If you are having difficulties importing a recipe, you can
always
Add a new recipe, then copy
and paste text between your application (i.e. a web browser)
and the recipe editor. In a few situations, this may provide
better results than importing.
To make it easier to exchange recipes with other users, Home
Cookin allows you to export recipes from your collection.
- Click the Index tab.
- Check the boxes next to the recipe(s) you want to
export.
- Click the Export button.
- Select your desired export format:
- Home Cookin with photos - Use this format anytime you
exchange recipes with other Home Cookin users. The photo
will be encoded as text characters along with the recipe
text.
- Home Cookin, text only - This format is fairly
generic which may be preferable if the recipient does not
use recipe software.
- Meal Master - A very common recipe format supported
by most recipe applications.
- Mastercook - A newer, but also common, recipe format
that is supported by many applications.
- XML - This format can be processed by other
applications to perform various tasks. Experienced
webmasters can also use this format to display recipes on
their web sites.
- Select your desired destination:
- Click the File button to export the recipe to
a file. When the file selector appears, navigate to your
desired folder, then type in a filename for your recipe
(i.e. Recipe01.txt).
- Click the Clipboard button to export the
recipe to Windows clipboard. You can then Paste
the recipe into any other application (Notepad, Word,
Newsreaders, etc.).
- Click the Email button to send a recipe by
email. Your default email client will open with the
recipe in the message body. Address the message, change
the subject line if you wish, and add any additional
text. Then send your message.
Tips:
- The Email option requires a properly configured
MAPI compliant email client. If you are having trouble with
this function, you can always export to the clipboard then
paste the recipe into your email message manually.
- If you are posting recipes to a newsgroup or public
forum, the Meal-Master or Mastercook formats will provide the
greatest compatibility for other users.
- You can also export a recipe by clicking the
Export button on the Recipe screen.
As your recipe collection grows, you may end up with many
similar recipes. This frequently occurs when you import recipes
from public sources. Recipes may be renamed, ingredients
reorganized, or the directions edited for clarity. But the
recipes may otherwise be very similar.
The duplicate locator performs a statistical analysis of each
recipe, then compares statistics to locate those that are
similar. This allows Home Cookin to identify similar recipes
even when some words are mispelled, ingredients or directions
are in different orders, or the titles are different. You are
then given the opportunity to compare the matches and delete
the ones you no longer want.
- Click the Index tab.
- Click the Locate Duplicates button.
- Compare the two recipes (You may keep both recipes,
delete one, or delete both).
- If you want to delete the recipe on the left, click
the Mark Recipe 1 button. Click the button a
second time to unmark the recipe.
- If you want to delete the recipe on the right, click
the Mark Recipe 2 button. Click the button a
second time to unmark the recipe.
- Click the Right arrow button or press the right
cursor key to compare the next pair of duplicates.
- When you are finished comparing the duplicates, click the
Delete Marked Recipes button. Marked recipes will be
deleted, and you will be returned to the Index screen.
Tips:
- No recipes will be deleted unless you mark them for
deletion!
- The statistical analysis is usually very accurate, but
you may encounter a few "false" matches from time to time.
This is a normal side effect of the analysis process.
- When two recipes match Exactly, the newest recipe
is automatically selected for deletion. You can still unmark
exact matches if you want to keep them, or click the
Unmark All button to clear all of the duplicate
marks.
Home Cookin organizes recipes into a series of chapters.
Every recipe is assigned to one (and only one) of these
chapters to allow for easy organization. When you want to
browse for recipes, you begin by selecting the desired chapter,
then scrolling through the list of recipes in that
chapter.
- Click the Index tab.
- Scroll through the list of chapters using the on-screen
slider, or place the mouse pointer over the chapter list and
rotate the scroll wheel on your mouse.
- Click on the desired chapter. All recipes in that chapter
will be listed on the right side of the Index screen.
In addition to the regular chapters, there are four
reserved items at the top of the chapter list:
- All Recipes - This item will show ALL recipes in
your collection, regardless of which chapter they may be in.
This is an easy way to determine how many recipes you have,
by looking at the recipe count at the bottom of the Index
screen.
- Search Results - This item will show the recipes
that were found in the last Find operation.
- Recipes Selected For Meals - This item will show
the recipes you have selected on the Meals screen. Recipes
must be in Home Cookin's database to appear in this
list.
- Recipes With Photos - This item will show the
recipes that have attached photo's. This can be handy when
you aren't sure what you feel like making and just want to
look at some pictures for ideas.
- Click the Index tab.
- Click the Chapter button.
- Select Add New Chapter from the popup list.
- Type in a title for the new chapter.
- Click the OK button to save your new chapter.
You can also access the popup list by
Right
clicking anywhere in the chapter list.
- Click the Index tab.
- Select the chapter in the chapter list.
- Click the Chapter button.
- Select Edit Current Chapter from the popup
list.
- Edit the chapter title as you wish.
- Click the OK button to save the chapter.
You can also edit a chapter by
Right clicking the
desired chapter in the chapter list.
- Click the Index tab.
- Select the desired chapter from the chapter list.
- Click the Chapter button.
- Select Delete Current Chapter from the popup
list.
- Click OK when asked to verify the delete
operation.
You can also delete a chapter by
Right clicking the
desired chapter in the chapter list.
NOTE: When you delete a chapter, ALL recipes in that chapter
will also be deleted!
Occasionally, when you delete recipes from your collection,
you may be left with chapters that do not contain any recipes.
This may also occur if you have added extra chapters in
preparation for other operations such as importing. In either
case, you can delete the empty chapters individually, or you
can use the Purge Empty Chapters function to perform
this task automatically.
- Click the Index tab.
- Click the Chapter button.
- Select Purge Empty Chapters from the popup
list.
- Click OK when asked to verify the purge
operation.
You can also access the popup list by
Right
clicking anywhere in the chapter list.
The Find Chapters feature lets you locate recipes
that exist in multiple chapters that share a similar name. For
example, searching chapters for cake will display
recipes from both the Cake and Cheesecake
chapters.
- Click the Index tab.
- Click the Chapter button.
- Select Find Chapters from the popup list.
- Enter the text you want to search for.
- Click OK.
You can also access the popup list by
Right
clicking anywhere in the chapter list.
The grocery screen lets you maintain a list of grocery
items. When you're ready to go shopping, use the New
List function to reset the item quantities and erase the
selections from your last shopping list. Then prepare your list
by setting the quantities of the items you need.
- Click the Grocery tab.
- Click the New List button.
- Choose how you would like to reset the item quantities:
- Defaults: Set items to the default quantity
defined for that item. For most items, this will be zero,
and the item will not be selected when you start a new
list. However, you can edit the items you purchase
frequently (such as bread and milk), and enter a default
quantity. These items will then be selected automatically
each time you start a new list with the Defaults
option.
- Zero: Set all item quantities to zero,
ignoring default quantities.
- One: Set all item quantities to one. This is
typically used when you want to print a master list of
all grocery items. One reason you may want to do this is
to record the costs of your favorite items when you go
shopping.
Tip: Press the Enter key after clicking New List to
select the
Defaults list option.
You will most likely end up with several hundred items in
your grocery database. While you can scroll through these one
by one to find the items you are seeking, this would be very
time consuming. It is much faster and easier to use the
Find function:
- Click the Grocery tab.
- Click the Find button.
- Enter the item you are looking for.
- Click the Item button.
Tips:
- You can click on an ingredient name on the Recipe
screen, to quickly search for that item in the grocery
database.
- Finding an item DOES NOT select that item for your
shopping list.
- You can enter partial phrases to locate items (i.e. Type
green to find green pepper, green onions, etc.. Or
type, root to find root beer or arrowroot
powder).
- Press the Enter key after typing your search
phrase to perform an item search.
- You can also click the Store or Location
buttons after entering a search phrase to locate items by
those fields.
Once you locate an item in the grocery list, you must select
a quantity for that item so it will be printed with your
shopping list.
- Click the Grocery tab.
- Find the item you need, then Left click the item
to highlight it. You can also use the keyboard cursor keys to
highlight items.
- To increment the quantity (add one), click the Up
button next to the quantity, or hold down the Control key and
press your Up cursor key. You can also increment the quantity
by pressing the Enter key.
- To decrement the quantity (subtract one), click the
Down button next to the quantity, or hold down the
Control Key and press your Down cursor key. You can also
decrement the quantity by pressing the Delete key.
Notes:
- Reduce the quantity of an item to zero to remove it from
your shopping list. The item will remain in the grocery
database for later selection.
- See Deleting Grocery Items if
you want to permanently remove the item from your
database.
If an item is already in the grocery database, simply
select the quantity you need for
your shopping list.
If you cannot find the item you need in the database, you can
add a new item. You will then need to select that item to have
it added to your shopping list.
- Click the Grocery tab.
- Click the Add button.
- Enter the item name, a location, and the cost of that
item.
- Click the Save button.
Tips:
- Leave the store field blank unless you only
purchase that item at a specific store.
- Use generic descriptions for the location field
(i.e. produce, meats, dairy, etc.). This works better with a
variety of stores, and doesn't require changing as stores
reorganize.
- Round all costs up to the next 25 cents. This provides a
bit of a buffer for price differences between stores, or
price fluctuations at your usual store. It also minimizes the
amount of maintenance you need to do on your item
prices.
- When the cost of your actual shopping trips start to vary
significantly from the estimate in Home Cookin, you should
update the prices in your database. Compare your grocery
receipt with the prices in Home Cookin and change them
accordingly.
- If you frequently select this item for your grocery
lists, you can enter a default quantity. The item will then
be selected automatically each time you start a new grocery
list.
- To make item selection easier at the store, you may want
to provide more details about the items you add to your
database. For instance, instead of entering "Corn", you might
enter "Corn, Whole Kernal, 14 ounce".
NOTE: Adding a new item to the database does not select that
item for your shopping list. Set the quantity as desired after
adding a new item.
If you need to change the description, cost, default
quantity, or other information for an item, you can edit that
item:
- Click the Grocery tab.
- Highlight the item you want to edit.
- Click the Edit button.
- Change the various item fields as you need to.
- Click the Save button.
Tips:
- You can also edit a grocery item by Right clicking
the desired item.
- Editing an item will not change the selected quantity.
You can update prices, change locations, etc. without
affecting your shopping list.
- See Adding Grocery Items for more
tips on editing your grocery items.
To remove an item from your shopping list, simply reduce the
quantity of that item to zero. Items should only be deleted
when you are sure you will never select them again.
To permanently delete an item from your grocery database:
- Click the Grocery tab.
- Highlight the item you want to delete.
- Click the Delete button.
- Click the OK button to verify the deletion.
Tips:
- You can also delete an item by Editing the item
and clicking the Delete button.
- Click the Grocery tab.
- Set the item quantities as desired for your shopping
list.
- Click the Print button.
- Click the Printer field to select your desired
printer.
- Click the Font field to select a font for
printing.
- Drag the on-screen preview, or use the cursor keys to
adjust the printing position.
- Click the OK button to print your shopping
list.
Tips:
- The printed list will be sorted by store and location to
make your shopping trips easier.
- The print function assumes your printer is set to
standard 8.5x11 inch letter size paper. Check your paper size
in the printer properties dialog after you select your
printer.
The Meals screen displays a daily meal listing on the left
side of the screen, and a monthly calendar on the right. The
calendar will open to the first meal or the current date (if no
meals are defined) when you first open the Meals screen. After
that, the meal calendar will always return to the last date you
accessed.
- Use the wheel on your mouse or the up/down cursor keys to
move forward and backward through the meal list. You can also
use the Page Up/Page Down keys, or the on screen slider to
navigate the list.
- Click the Left Arrow and Right Arrow
buttons to change months quickly. You can also use the
left/right cursor keys to change months.
- Click the Today button to jump to the current
calendar date.
- Click the First Meal button to jump to the first
meal in your meal plan. This is a quick way to jump back in
time if you keep old meals for a long time.
- Click the Last Meal button to jump to the last
meal you have planned. This is convenient when you are
planning meals weeks or months in advance.
The Meals screen lets you plan meals as far ahead as
you wish, and keep old meal plans until you remove them. In
most cases, you will probably delete meals from the Meal
calendar after you prepare them, or drag them to new days on
the meal calendar. However, you can delete all meals at once if
you want to wipe the entire meal list.
- Click the Meals tab.
- Click the check box at the top of the Meal list, or press
Control+A to select all meals.
- Click the Delete button, then click OK to
verify.
You can attach any recipe in Home Cookin to a date on the
meal calendar. This lets you plan your meals in advance, and
quickly access them later when you are ready to prepare
them.
- Locate a recipe on the Index or Recipe
screen.
- Click the New Meal button. By default, the
selected meal(s) will be attached to the current calendar
date. If you are selecting a single recipe from the Recipe
screen, you can change the date and meal time before
submitting. New meals will default to whatever default time
(breakfast, lunch, dinner, etc.) you have selected on the
Options screen.
- When you are finished adding recipes to the meal
calendar, click the Meals tab and move or copy the meals to your desired
dates.
You can also add notes to any calendar date. These can be used
to indicate birthdays, special holidays, dining at a
restaurant, or to reference pages in printed cookbooks (i.e.
"Chicken Soup - Easy Cooking, page 40").
- Click the Meals tab.
- Click twice on the desired calendar date.
- Type in your note.
- Click the OK button or press the Enter key.
Tips:
- You can place as many recipes or notes on a calendar date
as you wish.
When you add meals to the meal list, they are placed on the
current date by default.
- Move the meal by clicking with the Left mouse
button and dragging to the desired date. This is useful when
you are initially organizing your meal plan, or if you do not
prepare a meal as planned and need to reorganize.
- Copy the meal to another date by clicking with the
Right mouse button and dragging to the desired date. Copying
meals is useful when you plan to have the same meal on
additional days (leftovers), or if you plan to make the meal
again the following week.
You may keep old meal plans as long as you wish. However,
the meal calendar will be easier to navigate and organize if
you remove meals after you prepare them. This keeps the
database size to a minimum, and allows you to better see which
meals you still have not prepared.
- Click the Meals tab.
- Check the boxes next to the meals you wish to remove.
Click the check box at the top of the meals screen or press
Control+A to select all meals on your calendar.
- Press the Delete key on your keyboard.
- Click the OK button to verify the deletion.
Tips:
- Removing a meal from the meal list does not delete
the recipe from the recipe database.
- If you did not prepare every meal on an earlier meal
plan, it is often easier to remove the meals you prepared,
then move the remaining meals to new dates. If you clear the
meal list, you will be forced to find the remaining recipes
and add them to your meal list again.
- Click the Meals tab.
- Check the boxes next to the meals you wish to include in
the meal list. Press Control+A, or click the check box at the
top of the meals screen to select all meals in your meal
plan.
- Click the Print Meal List button.
- Click the Printer field to select your desired
printer.
- Click the Font field to select a font for
printing.
- Drag the on-screen preview, or use the cursor keys to
adjust the print position.
- Click the OK button to print your meal list.
Tips:
- If you do not select any meals, Home Cookin will print
your entire meal plan.
- The print function assumes your printer is set to
standard 8.5x11 inch letter size paper. Be sure that paper
size is selected when you choose your printer.
Once you have arranged your meal plan, you can print your
recipes directly from the Meals screen. This is helpful for
printing the recipes you are making for dinner, or if you want
to print the recipes you'll be preparing that week.
- Click the Meals tab.
- Check the boxes next to the meals you want to print.
Press Control+A, or click the check box at the top of the
meals screen to select all meals in your meal plan.
- Click the Print Selected Recipes button.
- Click the Printer field to select your desired
printer.
- Click the Font field to select a font for
printing.
- Drag the on-screen preview, or use the cursor keys to
adjust the print position.
- Click the OK button to print your selected
recipes.
Tips:
- Selected notes will not be printed when you print
selected recipes. Print the meal list if you need a printout
of your notes.
- The print function assumes your printer is set to
standard 8.5x11 inch letter size paper. Be sure that paper
size is selected when you choose your printer.
- This documentation may be accessed at any time by
pressing function key F1, or by clicking the
Help button in the upper right corner of the Home
Cookin window.
- When you are ready to quit Home Cookin, click the
Quit button in the upper right corner of the window
title bar. Home Cookin is designed to save all changes as
soon as possible, but if you quit while editing a recipe,
grocery item, etc. your changes may be lost.
- Most buttons have keyboard equivalents (underlined letter
on button), and the main tabs can also be activated by
pressing the first letter of the tab name.
- The Home Cookin window is automatically sized to fit
screens 1100x850 or lower. For higher resolutions the window
size will be fixed at 1100x850 and centered on your screen.
If you move the window while the program is running, you can
Right click the title bar to re center the window on the
screen.
- When you edit or delete a recipe, the record is simply
flagged as deleted in the data file. This allows faster
program operation, but the deleted recipes still take up
space on the drive. When the size of all deleted records
exceeds 50,000 characters, Home Cookin will automatically
rebuild the file when you quit the program. This eliminates
wasted space, checks for corrupted records, and sorts the
file for easier access. If you wish, you can also clean the
database manually by clicking the Clean Up button on
the Options screen.
- Home Cookin was designed primarily as a recipe database.
However, some users have found it useful for a variety of
alternative tasks such as poetry/song collections, home
inventories, or a flexible personal information manager
(PIM). Any task requiring a compilation of many small text
files could be well served by Home Cookin.
- Home Cookin has been refined over many years of daily use
and is the latest in a long line of recipe programs:
- 1990 - "The Atari Cookbook" was created on an 8-bit
Atari 600XL.
- 1991 - "The Antic Cookbook" was published in the
January 1991 issue of START magazine.
- 1991 - "The Recipe Box" was released for the Atari ST
computer line.
- 1993 - "The Mac Recipe Box" was released for the
Apple Macintosh.
- 1993 - "The Amiga Recipe Box" was released for the
Commodore Amiga.
- 1996 - "Home Cookin 1.0" was released for Windows on
the PC.
- 2002 - "Instant Home Cooking" (a four disk bundle
including Home Cookin) was released in retail
stores.
- 2002 - "Snap 12,000 Recipes" (AKA Home Cookin Light)
was released in retail stores.
- 2005 - "Home Cookin 5" was the first fully 32-bit
Windows version.
- 2010 - "Home Cookin 6" is released with new editors,
better screen displays, and a new meal manager.