That’s one of several features designed with chefs in mind—probably high-end chefs, as the price tag for the tablet, which comes bundled with a stand you can place on a counter or mount under a cabinet, is a hefty $399 (although it’s currently on sale for a much more reasonable $199. That’s $30 less than the price of Amazon’s Fire HD 10, which delivers lower specifications.)
The tablet itself is top-shelf, with a crisp, bright 2043x1536-pixel display; an 8-megapixel front and a 13-megapixel rear-facing camera (for high-def food snaps); an 8-core, 2.1GHz processor; 2GB of RAM; 16GB of internal flash storage; an SD Card slot; and an FM radio. Wi-Fi and Bluetooth support are also included. It’s miles beyond the Key Ingredient’s earlier Recipe Tablet.
The Recipe Reader comes with Key Ingredient’s cookbook app, a recipe manager that can actually read directions aloud. I’m not sure that it has enough smarts to pace its read-back with the actual time required for specific actions, though, and you’re out of luck for directions that aren’t completely sequential. (Key Ingredient acknowledges the reader can’t handle all situations.)
You also get a kitchen timer app that lets you set times for several dishes (with the iPad’s clock feature, I can only set a single timer) and a weight and volume conversion app (which is handy if you want to use recipes from websites that use the metric system, but then why not add Centigrade/Fahrenheit conversion too). You can download additional apps from Amazon’s app store.
The Recipe Reader also hooks you into Key Ingredient’s website, which offers access to thousands if not millions of recipes, curated by Key Ingredient community members. You must create a free account to post and save recipes to your own custom cookbooks, but on the tablet you can only do this by typing them in or becoming a Prime member, a $20-per-year extra that (among other things) gives you access to a service for digitizing printed or handwritten recipes. You get one year of Prime membership free with your purchase of the Recipe Reader, but I had to contact Key Ingredient to activate it, apparently due to a bug. (In case you were wondering, Key Ingredient’s Prime membership is not at all related to Amazon Prime.)
Visit the Key Ingredient website and you can add recipes via a nifty Cookmark feature, a button that you can drag and drop to your bookmarks and activate by clicking when the browser is showing a recipe you like. This creates a cookbook entry that you can edit and save. You don’t have to pay for this feature, and the saved recipe will show up on the tablet app.
The Key Ingredient tablet certainly offers attractive value adds—my personal faves are the multi-dish timer and the bundled stand—and the hardware is first-rate. But I’m disappointed that Key Ingredient hasn’t figured out a way to import the digitized recipes I’ve already collected over the years in other apps and in text files.
Cuisine enthusiasts who don’t already have access to a spare tablet for kitchen use should take a look at the Key Ingredient Receipe Reader HD+. I think it’s a useful tool and would make a great gift for a tech-savvy chef—especially while it’s discounted to $199. Making a buy recommendation at its regular $399 price point would be a lot tougher.