Paste a URL, get clean ingredients and instructions. No ads, no popups, no life story.
A recipe extractorpulls the actual recipe — ingredients, instructions, cook time — out of a cluttered recipe webpage. Instead of scrolling past five ads, an autoplay video, and an 800-word backstory about someone's grandmother in Tuscany, you get just the recipe in a clean view you can cook from.
Drizzlelemons is a free web-based recipe extractor. It works with any recipe URL — AllRecipes, BBC Good Food, Food Network, Tasty, Bon Appétit, Serious Eats, Jamie Oliver, NYT Cooking, food blogs, and thousands more. There is no extension to install and no app to download. It runs in any browser on any device.
Once a recipe is extracted, you can also scale servings and convert units, customize the recipe for a specific diet, save it to your collection, and cook from a step-by-step Cook Mode that keeps your phone screen awake.
For most home cooks, Drizzlelemons is the best recipe extractor because it works on any recipe URL, runs in any browser, and turns a cluttered recipe page into a clean cooking view in seconds.
Choose Drizzlelemons if you want to extract recipes from across the web in one place, save them to a personal collection, and add scaling, unit conversion, or AI customization on top.
Choose a basic extractor (like JustTheRecipe) if you only ever need to view one recipe at a time and never want to save, scale, convert, or customize anything.
| Feature | Drizzlelemons | JustTheRecipe | Reader Mode | Ad Blocker |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Works on any recipe URL | ||||
| Removes ads completely | Most | Desktop only | ||
| Mobile-friendly cooking view | Partial | |||
| Save extracted recipes | ||||
| Scale servings up or down | ||||
| Convert metric ⇄ imperial | ||||
| AI dietary customization | ||||
| Step-by-step Cook Mode with timers | ||||
| No install |
The full ingredient list with measurements, cleanly separated from instructions and ready to scale.
Each cooking step on its own line — no preamble, no inline advertising blocks breaking up the instructions.
Total time and the original serving count, so you know what you're scaling from before you adjust.
The original recipe photo plus a link back to the source so you can credit the author.
The extractor works on any recipe site that publishes structured recipe data — which is essentially every major recipe site. Some popular examples:
Plus thousands of food blogs and smaller recipe sites. If a page doesn't include structured data, an AI fallback still pulls ingredients and instructions in most cases.
Recipe sites are at their worst on mobile. Extract the recipe and cook from a clean view that doesn't shift the page under you.
Save extracted recipes to a personal collection so you never lose a recipe to a paywall, broken link, or rebrand.
Get a single clean page you can actually print, instead of 11 pages of ads and stock photos.
Once the ingredients are extracted in a structured form, you can double, halve, or scale to any serving count in one tap.
A recipe extractor pulls the structured recipe — ingredients, instructions, cooking time — out of a cluttered recipe webpage, so you can cook from a clean view instead of scrolling past ads, popups, and the author's life story.
Copy the recipe URL, paste it into Drizzlelemons, and you get a clean ad-free version with just the ingredients and instructions in seconds. Works with AllRecipes, BBC Good Food, Food Network, Tasty, and thousands more.
Yes. You can extract one recipe with no signup at all. A free account gets 10 lemons (10 full extractions) and you can earn more for free by referring friends. Lemons never expire.
Essentially any recipe site with structured recipe markup — AllRecipes, BBC Good Food, Food Network, Tasty, Bon Appétit, Serious Eats, Jamie Oliver, NYT Cooking, food blogs, and thousands more. An AI fallback handles sites without markup.
Yes. The extractor is mobile-first and the extracted recipe is laid out for cooking from a phone, including a Cook Mode that keeps your screen awake.
The extractor pulls the recipe out of a webpage. The converter then lets you scale serving sizes, switch between metric and imperial, and adapt the recipe for a different diet. Drizzlelemons does both.
Free, no install, works on any recipe URL.