Instagram is one of the biggest recipe libraries on the internet — and one of the worst to actually cook from. Recimarry pulls the caption, the creator's own comments (where ingredient lists often hide), and the spoken transcript of short reels, then turns them into clean recipes you can follow at the stove.
Android version coming soon.
You scroll past a perfect 30-second pasta reel. You tap the bookmark. A month later, your saved folder has 412 posts, none of them organized, and the one you actually want is buried somewhere between an outfit reel and a sunset.
Even when you find it, half the recipes have "recipe in comments." Half of those comments are someone else asking *what's* in the comments. Real ingredient lists often live in the creator's own pinned comment, not the caption.
Recimarry pulls all of that — caption, creator comments, spoken reel audio — and gives you back something you can cook from.
Only for posts you can already see. If the account is private and you don't follow them, Instagram doesn't share the content with Recimarry either.
When the recipe is hidden in the creator's own comment, Recimarry pulls that comment specifically — it's a common pattern in food Instagram. Random commenter posts aren't pulled.
Yes. For short reels (around 2 minutes or less), Recimarry also reads the spoken transcript and combines it with the caption — so the ingredient ratios from the caption and the actual cooking steps from the audio end up in the same recipe.
Yes. The caption is the same for the whole carousel, so Recimarry pulls it and saves the primary image.
Yes. Every new user gets 40+ free recipe imports to try the app out — no subscription, no monthly cap.
Recimarry handles recipes from anywhere you find them:
Android version coming soon.