Being able to manage my growing recipes collection was the reason I selected Living Cookbook back in 2013. Importing recipes, planning menus, controlling my standard inventory items and creating grocery lists from recipes work seamlessly. I have been avidly waiting for an update to Living Cookbook 2013. Living Cookbook 2015 makes this really easy. What we want to be able to is make it easy to share a read-only copy of recipe collections so friends and family can view, print or copy all of the recipes in the collection and any new ones as they are added. The second collaboration scenario is heirloom recipes or family favorites. And all changes are immediate since everyone is working with the same online version of the cookbook. All of this happens without any imports, exports or e-mails. The editor reviews the submissions and exports the final draft. The contributors add and edit their respective recipes. In Living Cookbook 2015 the cookbook owner (usually the cookbook's editor) shares the cookbook with the contributors. We wanted to make it much easier and intuitive. If the cookbook involves multiple contributors, the task of importing, exporting and editing multiple recipes from multiple sources can be cumbersome. use Living Cookbook to create their fundraising cookbooks. Lots of schools, churches, non-profits, etc. The first, and most obvious, is fundraising cookbooks. There are two collaboration scenarios that we wanted to address.
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