The revamped app emphasizes hyperlocal recommendations with a new "feed me" feature that surfaces recommendation within walking distance.
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Chefs Feed, which helps you eat like a master chef, adds more cities to its plate 0
July 9th at 7:45pm / Mashable / 0 opinions -
New York’s Immaculate Infatuation and its fresh take on content-based recommendations 0
September 15th at 8:08pm / The Next Web / 0 opinionsFood criticism has always been, for the most part, under the grip of the old guard. Accessibility, being relatable, and, as far as diction is concerned, readability were never much part of the protocol, and so any conversation surrounding the simple act of dining was kept to the printed page. But that doesn’t work anymore, certainly not in New York, where the Internet and multi-borough food culture have attracted a swarm of twenty-somethings and up....
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7 Apps to Help You Cook And Eat Like a Pro 0
January 2nd at 3:16pm / Mashable / 0 opinionsAuthor and food activist Michael Pollan has lamented that the Food Network and cooking shows have "transformed cooking from something you do into something you watch." But remember; those celebrity chefs can teach us a thing or two about how to cook. Maybe we're finding celebrity chefs' ease and comfort in the kitchen, their quick chopping skills, and their ability to tell when something is cooked to perfection a bit overwhelming.
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Meet Chefs Feed, the anti-Foodspotting 0
December 2nd at 8:00am / GigaOM / 0 opinionsCrowdsourcing may have liberated the restaurant review from the critics, but Steve and Jared Rivera think its also produced a lot of bad food recommendations. There answer was to create Chefs Feed, a food app where recommendations come solely from professional chefs.
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Chefs Feed, The App With Recommendations From Your Favorite Chefs, Unveils More Social Version 2.0 0
October 8th at 8:21am / TechCrunch / 0 opinionsWhenever I use a food or restaurant review app, I sometimes feel like I’m being overwhelmed with recommendations, and it can be hard to distinguish recommendations and reviews that are trustworthy from those that aren’t. Chefs Feed offers an intriguing solution to that problem — offer recommendations from high-profile, professional chefs. Chefs, after all, are presumably more knowledgeable…
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Chefs Feed will tell you where to eat 0
October 21st at 9:45pm / The Next Web / 0 opinionsThere are quite a few restaurant and food recommendation apps such as Dinevore, TV Foodmaps, Alfred, and Yelp. And that’s only a few of them. Chefs Feed aims to change…
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Chefs Feed, Quora, Clickables and More 0
October 7th at 10:00pm / Gizmodo / 0 opinionsChefs Feed: It's a restaurant guide app that distills recommendations by only showing you what the best chefs in your city eat. It's like being friends with these star chefs and texting them for recs every time you want to eat somewhere! You can search by chef, search by dish, find dishes per your location, see what the chefs in your city are tweeting at the moment, mark dishes off your to do list, rate them and more. Chef's Feed only supports the big cities-New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco and...
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Chef’s Feed for iPhone: Let the Best Chefs in the World Tell You What to Eat 0
September 29th at 10:00pm / Gizmodo / 0 opinionsI'm growing so tired of Yelp that I hate myself every time I use it. But! It's hard to find another food recommendation app that's quite as comprehensive. Chef's Feed isn't as all-encompassing, but it one-ups every other food app by showing you the food that chefs—AWESOME CHEFS!—like and eat. It's a restaurant guide app that distills recommendations by only showing you what the best chefs in your city eat. It's like being friends with these star chefs and texting them for recs every time you want...
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The Best iPhone Apps 5
October 30th at 3:00pm / Gizmodo / 0 opinionsThere's an ocean of apps out there. Whether you just got your iPhone and are feeling adrift or you're a salty old dog seeing what you might've missed, here are the absolutely essential apps. Twitter: Twitter thankfully didn't make too many changes when they gobbled up the already-great Tweetie 2 from Atebits—same clean interface, same Tweet swiping, and the same it-feels-so-good pull to refresh mechanism. Free. Facebook: The new, panel-based interface takes a little getting used to, but once you're...