Cooking with your iPhone is a lot tastier when you have the right recipes and culinary techniques. Here's our list of the best apps for turning your iPhone into a pocket sous chef.


Note: For a look at the flip side of the mobile OS coin, check out the best cooking and recipe apps for Android.


Cook's Illustrated

Cook's Illustrated has become a favorite lately, being a free and extremely rich iOS cookbook filled with useful features in an elegant interface. It's exactly the app you're looking for if you're an Apple geek and you like to cook. Finding a recipe is pretty straightforward, in that you can search or browse, but once you find what you're looking for you have lots of great features to make the cooking or baking process a lot easier. Like many cooking apps, you have the requisite shopping list feature. What's also really nice is that Cook's Illustrated has a timer built-in to each recipe so your iPhone can keep you on task. What's really great about Cook's Illustrated, however, is that recipes come with videos to show you how it's all done. Many recipes are provided free of charge, but a subscription is necessary to unlock all the member's only recipes. What you get for free is great, however, so you get a pretty good test run before deciding whether or not you want a subscription.

Cook's Illustrated; iTunes App Store

Epicurious Recipes & Shopping List


The free Epicurious app draws from Epicurious' recipe database, given you tons of great options based on whatever you want. The app has a bunch of filters that allow you to find a recipe based on whatever strikes your mood. Randomly, I went for an American-style apple and bacon dish and ended up with ten options, so you're able to be a little unusual and still end up with quite a few choices. If you're looking for something really specific, you can always search for it. Like most cooking apps these days, Epicurious makes it easy to get what you need at the store by providing a shopping list feature, plus if you need to consult any recipe that you like you can always add it to your favorites to find it fast.

Epicurious; iTunes App Store

Allrecipes.com Dinner Spinner


I've been using the Allrecipes.com web site for many years and have found lots of great recipes—so long as they were highly rated. Dinner Spinner does a great job because you basically pick out what meal you want (it does a lot more than just dinner), the dominant ingredient, and how long you want to spend making it. Once you've done that you can view any matches it can find—it doesn't always find a recipe, like if you select a 20 minute beef dessert. Once it does it'll start you off with an option and then you can swipe through to see the rest. If this is too basic and you want more options, you can grab the pro version for $3.

Allrecipes.com Dinner Spinner / Pro; iTunes App Store

Evernote


Wait, what? Evernote's not a cooking app! It isn't, but if you've ever needed a cross-platform, recipe-syncing solution you need Evernote. It's great for keeping track of recipes you gather from all over, but it's also an excellent shopping list manager. You can add check lists to Evernote, so it's really easy to build a quick grocery list. If you really want to save some time, you can create ingredient checklists to add to your recipes and just copy and paste them into a new note each time you go shopping. Put a few recipes in that note and you've got a grocery list in just a few minutes. Evernote's not really a cooking app, specifically, but it's free and it's versatile enough to warrant a spot on this list.

Evernote; iTunes App Store

Whole Foods Market Recipes


Although Whole Foods is sometimes known for being pricey, they've got a free app with a lot of great recipes. It's especially helpful if you have—or are cooking for anyone with—special dietary needs. Recipes can be easily sorted for vegans, people with gluten allergies, or for anyone just looking for something that's low fat, high in fiber, or any of the many other options the app provides. One of the neatest features of the app, however, is you can tell it a few ingredients you have on hand and you'll be provided with recipes that use them. Oh, and of course, the Whole Foods app has a shopping list, too. Would it be a cooking app without one?



Whole Foods Market Recipes; iTunes App Store

How to Cook Everything


Based on the kitchen bible of the same name, kitchen guru Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything app (you remember Bittman—earlier this week he showed us how to save time and avoid headaches in the kitchen) delivers on its name. It's a big recipe book that has tons of options (if you pay the $5, otherwise you get a sampling) and all the necessary features you'd want from a kitchen companion, like a recipe timer and a shopping list.




How to Cook Everything / Pro; iTunes App Store

Honorable Mentions

Cooking apps have a certain popularity on the iPhone, but many of them get really niche and specific. That doesn't make them any less awesome if they suit your needs, but maybe less appealing to the general population. Here are our honorable mentions for the food category, featuring some more specific apps that are nonetheless really great.



Got any favorite iPhone cooking apps? Let's hear 'em in the comments!