

"Home bread baking at its finest," and with a very excellent pun in the name. This group is not limited to cucumbers! Fermentation nerds welcome, too. The Most Pinterest-Friendly SubRedditsApparently homesteaders and DIY-ers were able to set aside their butter churners long enough to create instructional subReddits on some very useful topics! On Reddit, weed-smokers are referred to as "trees." So, as you can imagine, Treecipes loses any pretensions to highbrow cooking: It asks users to submit their ideas for "delicious omnoms for stoners." Taco pizza. It looks like the theme this week is macaroni and cheese! (See here, here, here, and here.) Precious! 52 Weeks of Cooking encourages its users to use a new ingredient or theme each week and post the results. Pretty sure that most posts have a slow-cooker theme, but the group's description doesn't specify, so we're just taking a wild guess. You can also troubleshoot recipes with the crowd (one user, for example, asked, "Does the same weight of chunks of chicken take less time to cook than a pork roast?").

This forum is so serious about requiring recipes, they will remove your post (you'd better believe it!) if you submit a picture without instructions.

This is a very popular option, but only for those who have the "best recipe ever." Also, you can't post a recipe unless it's in the form of a Rage Comic. Some are drastically more helpful than others all are delightful. ACTUAL Recipe-Related SubRedditsAs our eighth-grade computer teacher would remind us, the Internet is also a teaching tool! So we find lots to appreciate in the world of recipe-forward subReddits. This is literally just a thread filled with pictures of lemons in bowls. (Runner up: Who can eat this many olives!?) We can do this!) In fact, if you post an attractive photo, it'll be deleted, sucker. It's oddly fascinating, and the point is to post really ugly pictures. The rules are even easy to follow: "Post pics and reviews of your favorite beers." K thanks.Īs we were saying, re: porn…anyway, an embarrassingly large amount of time was spent looking at pictures in this forum. This forum is pretty cool, though, and all seem really active and knowledgeable. (Try a few examples on your own, right now).
#REDDIT UP AND DOWN ARROWS HOW TO#
How to win the Internet: Place the word "porn" after any noun. Users of this forum have eaten everything from the quaint (a very meticulously decorated lemon cheesecake) to… Taco Bell supreme nachos.ĭo not even attempt to post pictures to this site if your baking routine involves a box of powdered cake mix you will be up against stuff like this "simple" Easter cake, this crazy Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles deal, and this 22-minute video tutorial on making cake look like a hardwood floor. The point here is food porn and overshares, not recipe swaps. The instructions for Today I Ate are simple: users must post pictures with descriptive titles, and are encouraged-but not required-to also include ingredients or instructions. Why does the Internet exist if not for us to post voyeuristic food photos? Don't fight it these subReddits were created solely to sate your weird curiosity for what other average folks are cooking, eating, and drinking-and to cater to your need to share in kind. There is surely a perfect subReddit for your culinary needs read on to discover which one it is. We dove deep into the dark recesses of Reddit, searching for its most specific, weird, and wonderful food-themed forums. Convinced that taking pictures of lemons lovingly arranged in a ceramic bowl is your own unique hobby? Not even close. Think you're the only person who drinks beer in the shower? Think again. We've become engrossed, as of late, with these food-themed Reddit forums not just because we like to talk about and obsess over food, but because we find them utterly fascinating. But while Reddit (which, as it happens, is our corporate sibling here at Condé Nast) can be culturally relevant, topical, and newsworthy, the fact that it's controlled by readers-millions upon millions of them-also allows it to veer off into the delightfully weird. Posts are ranked according to the amount of "upvotes" they receive, letting the cream rise to the top-and making them more visible. It's a user-run community of posts, articles, and pictures of and about, well, almost everything. To understand the weird world of Reddit's eerily specific food subReddits, you must first understand Reddit.
