Paprika, on the other hand, is more like a custom Markdown editor where you can bold certain text (which is handy for splitting ingredients and instructions into separate lists with their own “headings”) and even add in-line links, (url_here). AnyList keeps ingredients and steps separated as individual items, à la spreadsheet cells.You have to then tap “Show Full Recipe” to reach the recipe itself, an extra step that again demonstrates AnyList’s greater focus on groceries. On iPhone, tapping into a recipe brings up only an ingredient list at first, where you can quickly add things to your shopping list.On iPad, the ingredients are listed above the preparation steps rather than having the sections side by side, so you can’t view both lists simultaneously like you can in Paprika.Tapping an ingredient only adds it to your shopping list of choice, which goes back to AnyList’s focus being more on grocery shopping than cooking. There’s no way to cross off added ingredients or completed steps as you work your way through a recipe.However, there are some things that make AnyList a bit less ideal than Paprika as a recipe app:
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