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Foodista.com: The Ultimate Foodie Website

Foodistas%20Barnaby%20%26%20Sheri.JPG A new website, Foodista.com, Seattle-based and launched today, promises to do for food what Wikipedia has done for the rest of the universe.

You want to tinker with that recipe you found online? Go right ahead. Anyone can edit Foodista.com, it's a wiki. It's also a comprehensive directory that links ingredients, techniques, tools, and pictures.

Designed and built by three local entrepreneurs, Foodista is the brainchild of Amazon veterans Barnaby Dorfman (ceo), Sheri Wetherell (vp editorial) and Colin Saunders (cto). Dorfman, who also worked at Internet Movie Database, realized that people looking for information about movies, say, tend to use the web, but that people are still inclined to use cookbooks when it comes to recipes. Sure, there are a couple of big sites for cooking: allrecipes.com (based in Seattle, recently purchased by Readers Digest) and epicurious.com being the two biggest. But those sites aren't particularly user-friendly, and are anything but "interactive."

So the trio came up with a different model. (That's Dorfman and Wetherell in the photo.) Their physical space is a collaborative loft in lower Queen Anne. There's no giant server platform; they use Amazon Web Services. Privately owned with no outside funding. And if the Wikipedia model of collaboration is any guide, they've got a million foodies ready to turn the wonders of cloud computing into the Next Big Thing.

By the way, if you're a blogger linking to Foodista, there's an "embed" tab on every content page that creates a logo linking back to that page (recipe, tool, photo). For instance, this embed leads to the Tiramisù recipe:

Tiramisu on Foodista

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Comments [rss]

  • ronaldholden

    Suppose it is too obvious to suggest that readers can comment on recipes, can adjust recipes, can post their own recipes. Also, that no one complained about the term "fashionista," so now you get Foodista.

  • Amy

    Sorry, can't get past the name. Foodista? Please.

  • sevenless

    Except, that recipe seems to make no sense:



    Step 5: Whip the cream until stiff peaks hold, and fold gently into the egg mixture.



    Gotcha...



    Step 6: I use a spatula, but you could use a metal spoon.



    Fine, I have both...



    Step 7: Beat vigorously



    Wait, what?



    Step 8: Season the cream with salt and pepper



    Ok, now you've lost me.



    Step 9: and so on...

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