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Morsel: cook, share, eat icon

Morsel: cook, share, eat

Morsel: cook, share, eat is an iPhone app to record and share what you cook—recipe posts, photo uploads, and engagement notifications.

Morsel: cook, share, eat

What is Morsel?

Morsel: cook, share, eat is an iPhone app for recording and sharing what you cook, so you can see what your friends are making. Its core purpose is to help users capture recipes and food posts, then share them within a social feed.

The app is developed by Saldor, Inc., and users can post recipes and engage with other people’s content through likes and comments, according to the App Store “What’s New” notes.

Key Features

  • Record and share what you’re making: create posts tied to your cooking so others can view your updates.
  • See what your friends are making: browse a feed of food activity from other users.
  • Upload recipes from photos: add recipes by capturing content from photos (introduced in version 1.1.3).
  • Tag friends in dishes: tag people in recipes you make or share together (introduced in version 1.1.3).
  • Collaboration support for meals: add collaborators on meals and share posts outside the app (noted in version 1.2.4).
  • Share extension for recipes: use an iOS share extension to open Morsel when viewing a recipe online or in another app (introduced in version 1.2.3).
  • Notifications for engagement: get notified when people like or comment on your posts (introduced in version 1.2.1).

How to Use Morsel

  1. Install Morsel on iPhone (requires iOS 17.0 or later) and open it to access the feed.
  2. Create a new post by recording what you’re making; alternatively, upload a recipe from photos.
  3. Add details to your recipe post, including tagging friends in the dish when applicable.
  4. Share your post—using the in-app share workflow, and (per recent updates) via collaboration and sharing features that can extend outside the app.
  5. Engage with others by liking and commenting, and enable notifications to be alerted to new likes or comments on your posts.

Use Cases

  • Sharing a home-cooked meal with friends: post what you cooked so friends can see it in their feed.
  • Building a personal recipe collection from photos: upload recipes from images you already have and turn them into shareable entries.
  • Cooking with others (collaborative meal posts): add collaborators to a meal and coordinate a shared posting experience.
  • Saving or sharing recipes discovered online: use the share extension to open Morsel from another app while viewing a recipe.
  • Staying engaged with your community: monitor likes and comments via in-app notifications to keep up with responses to your food posts.

FAQ

  • Is Morsel available on my device? The App Store listing states compatibility for iPhone with iOS 17.0 or later, and it also lists Mac compatibility (macOS 14.0 or later with an Apple M1 chip or later) plus visionOS (visionOS 1.0 or later).

  • Can I share recipes/posts from other apps? Yes. Version history notes a share extension that lets you open Morsel when viewing a recipe online or in another app.

  • Can I upload recipes from photos? Yes. The “What’s New” section mentions that you can upload recipes from photos (version 1.1.3).

  • Can I invite others or collaborate on meals? Yes. The listing notes that you can add collaborators on meals (version 1.2.4).

  • How do engagement notifications work? The update notes say you can get notified when folks like or comment on your posts (version 1.2.1).

Alternatives

  • Photo-based recipe sharing apps: If you mainly want to document meals and share photos/recipes, look for apps that focus on recipe publishing and social feeds.
  • Recipe bookmarking tools with web clipper/share: If your priority is capturing recipes from the web or other apps, consider workflow-focused bookmarking tools that support saving or sharing links.
  • General social networking apps: For broader social discovery, general feed-based platforms can provide a similar “see what others are making” experience, though they may not be tailored to recipe creation and photo-to-recipe workflows.
  • Dedicated cooking/community platforms: For users seeking stronger community features around cooking (e.g., discussions or recipes as the main content type), a cooking-first community app may better match your workflow than a general photo sharing app.