🥔 OhAPotato

From fridge to fork — cook what you have.

OhAPotato is a free, AI-powered recipe finder that helps you cook great meals from the ingredients you already have at home. Instead of searching for a recipe and then shopping for a long list of items, OhAPotato works the other way around: you tell it what's in your fridge and pantry, and it finds the best recipes that match.

How It Works

Select ingredients from a visual grid covering proteins, produce, dairy, grains, and pantry staples. OhAPotato searches multiple recipe databases — including Edamam and Spoonacular — and returns ranked results based on how many of your selected ingredients each recipe uses. Kitchen staples like salt, butter, garlic, olive oil, eggs, and flour are pre-selected by default so you don't have to tick them every time.

Features

🔍 Ingredient-based recipe search 🧂 Kitchen staples management 🗓️ Weekly meal planner 🛒 Grocery list builder 🥔 My Pantry tracker 📊 Nutrition breakdown 👨‍🍳 AI Chef Mode 🍳 Step-by-step Cook Mode

What You Can Cook

OhAPotato covers hundreds of ingredient combinations. Whether you have chicken breast and broccoli, pasta and canned tomatoes, ground beef and taco shells, or just eggs and cheese, the app finds matching recipes ranked by ingredient match percentage. Results include cook time, difficulty, serving size, and full nutrition information per serving.

Chef Mode

For any recipe, Chef Mode uses Gemini AI to provide Michelin-level cooking insights: the techniques involved, the food science behind the dish, ingredient substitution ideas, plating suggestions, and drink pairings. It's like having a professional chef explain exactly how to make a great version of the recipe.

Meal Planner

The built-in weekly meal planner generates a full week of breakfast, lunch, and dinner suggestions matched to your dietary preferences, with calorie and macro targets per meal. You can customise for vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, dairy-free, low-carb, paleo, and keto diets. A built-in shopping list collects everything you need for the week.

Ingredients Available

Proteins

Produce

Dairy

Grains & Pantry

Frequently Asked Questions

Is OhAPotato free?

Yes, completely free. No subscription required. If you enjoy using it, you can support the project by buying us a coffee.

Do I need an account?

No account is required to search for recipes. Creating a free account lets you save favourite recipes and access the meal planner.

How accurate are the recipe matches?

Each result shows a match percentage based on how many of your selected ingredients the recipe uses. Results are sorted so the closest matches appear first.

Does it work on mobile?

Yes. OhAPotato is fully responsive and works on any smartphone or tablet browser.

Cooking Tips & Guides

OhAPotato also publishes practical cooking guides to help you cook smarter and waste less food:

Cooking Tips & Guides

Practical guides to help you cook better meals, waste less food, and make the most of whatever's in your kitchen. Written by Michael Morris, food writer and founder of OhAPotato.

How to Use Up Vegetables Before They Go Bad

The average household throws away nearly a third of the vegetables it buys. This guide covers the difference between wilting and spoiling, a "use it up" hierarchy based on age, five dishes that use up almost any vegetable, blanching and freezing techniques, and storage habits that reduce waste significantly.

The 12 Pantry Staples That Make Any Meal Possible

Keep these twelve ingredients stocked and you'll never stare blankly at your fridge again: olive oil, salt, black pepper, garlic, canned tomatoes, dried pasta, rice, eggs, butter, soy sauce, onions, and canned legumes. This guide explains what each one does and why it matters.

Batch Cooking 101: Cook Once, Eat All Week

Two focused hours on Sunday can mean the difference between eating well every night and ordering takeaway. This guide explains the batch cooking framework — cook a grain, a protein, and a sauce — with a practical weekly plan, storage guidelines, and the tools that make it easier.

Knife Skills: The Complete Beginner's Guide

Nothing transforms cooking quite like confident knife skills. This guide covers sharpening and honing, the correct pinch grip, the guiding claw hand, five essential cuts (dice, julienne, chiffonade, brunoise, chop), and how to break down common vegetables efficiently.

How to Season Food Properly: The Complete Guide

The single thing that separates good home cooking from great restaurant food is seasoning. This guide explains what salt actually does at a molecular level, how to season at every stage of cooking, the role of acid in balancing flavours, and how to taste and adjust throughout cooking.

Meal Planning for Beginners: A Realistic Step-by-Step Guide

Good meal planning isn't about optimising every meal — it's about removing enough daily decisions that cooking feels manageable. This guide covers how to plan for the week you actually have, not the week you wish you had, with templates, shopping strategies, and ways to avoid burnout.

How to Eat Well on a Tight Budget

Eating well doesn't require spending a lot. This guide covers the cheapest protein sources per gram, which vegetables give the best nutritional value per pound, how to use cheaper cuts of meat, batch cooking for economy, and how to reduce food waste to stretch your budget further.

Smart Ingredient Substitutions Every Home Cook Should Know

Out of an ingredient mid-recipe? This guide covers substitutions for common dairy, egg, acid, fat, flour, and fresh herb situations — with explanations of why each substitution works and when it won't.

How to Cook Protein Perfectly Every Time

Whether you're cooking chicken breast, salmon, steak, eggs, or legumes, the principles are the same: temperature control, resting, and understanding what heat does to protein. This guide covers each major protein source with specific temperatures, timing, and the most common mistakes to avoid.

How to Reduce Food Waste at Home

The average household throws away around $1,500 of food per year. This guide covers smarter shopping habits, first-in-first-out fridge organisation, how to use vegetable scraps for stocks and broths, composting basics, and the psychology of why we waste food and how to change it.