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Recipe Cart (my free extension) for Firefox and Chrome gives you a small notification you can expand to see the recipe in a simply formatted window. From there you can save a copy, print it to one page, and optionally view cost per serving or order ingredients.
As a person who includes recipes on my site with 400+ words only partially related to the actual recipe: nice. Websites do this because if they didn’t, Google wouldn’t rank them high enough to be found.
I own cookbookpeople.com, and it seems like a lot of our customers use printable recipe cards to put in our recipe binders and boxes. So I figured, why not organize them all into one place? Take a look and let me know what you think.
I made a website for saving and organizing recipes found online. While browsing for a recipe put cooked.wiki/ before the url and it gives you JUST the ingredients and instructions. Works with most sites and Youtube videos! You can edit your recipe and save it, each user as their own cookbook that can be shared.
The loan period is usually one hour, but you can renew it as soon as your time runs out. There's no charge for any of this--you just need to register for an Internet Archive account. The books were all scanned and saved as image files--meaning that you can't just copy and paste a recipe as editable text.
Here's the page: http://store.cookbookpeople.com/300-free-printable-recipe-cards/ I own cookbookpeople.com, and it seems like a lot of our customers use printable recipe cards to put in our recipe binders and boxes. So I figured, why not organize them all into one place?
BBC Good Food have a fantastic range, with a mixture of recipes from the magazine team and reader-submitted recipes. I'd suggest reading the comments, especially on the reader-submitted ones for potential pitfalls.