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  2. Food.com - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food.com

    Food.com. Food.com is a digital brand and online social networking service featuring recipes from home cooks and celebrity chefs, food news, new and classic shows, and pop culture. Food.com was launched in September 2017 and offers recipe, photo, articles, and video content on the web as well as video streaming and smartphone apps.

  3. Allrecipes.com - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Allrecipes.com

    Allrecipes.com was founded in 1997 after Hunt and Shepherd had trouble finding a cookie recipe on the Internet. The recipe sharing and cooking community website began as an offshoot of one of Seattle's first web companies, Emergent Media. The company's original website was CookieRecipe.com.

  4. Yummly - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yummly

    Yummly is an American website and mobile app that provides users recipes via recommendations and a search engine. Yummly uses a knowledge graph to offer a semantic web search engine for food, cooking and recipes. In 2014, Yummly had 15 million active users in the US and launched international websites in the UK, Germany and The Netherlands.

  5. RecipeBridge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RecipeBridge

    Current status. Active. RecipeBridge is a vertical search engine for recipes , founded by Milwaukee based entrepreneurs Andy Theimer and Bill Brennan. It was established in December 2007 [2] and a beta version was launched in 2008 which makes it the oldest dedicated recipe search engine on the web . The current version was launched in April, 2009.

  6. Neiman Marcus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neiman_Marcus

    Cookie recipe urban legend. Dating back as early as the 1930s, rumors started to circulate about a woman and her daughter who were out to lunch at Neiman Marcus and for dessert shared a chocolate chip cookie that they loved so much they asked the server for the recipe. The server said that the recipe would cost "two fifty" and the woman agreed.

  7. Food website that ‘fixed’ recipes taken down - AOL

    www.aol.com/food-website-fixed-recipes-removing...

    Recipeasly was taken down after it drew criticism from online food writers and bloggers.

  8. Google Search - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Google_Search

    The feed contains a "mix of cards" which show topics of interest based on users' interactions with Google, or topics they choose to follow directly. Cards include, "links to news stories, YouTube videos, sports scores, recipes, and other content based on what [Google] determined you're most likely to be interested in at that particular moment."

  9. List of online encyclopedias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_online_encyclopedias

    List of online encyclopedias. This is a list of well-known online encyclopedias that are accessible or formerly accessible on the Internet . The largest online encyclopedias are general reference works, though there are also many specialized ones. Some online encyclopedias are editions of a print encyclopedia, such as Encyclopædia Britannica ...