The private cookbook app for people who'd rather cook than scroll. Save what you love, pass it down, cook from it tonight — without the ads, the pop-ups, or the nine paragraphs about a trip to Tuscany.
Most cooking apps are trying to get you to scroll. Nana's is trying to get you to cook. Here's what that changes.
No trending carousels. No recommendations. Your library is what you saved, what you wrote, and what your family sent you — and nothing else.
Serif type, cream pages, generous margins. A recipe you open at 6pm should feel like one you'd want to read — not an SEO slurry with a listicle about Bologna.
Your grandmother's ragù belongs to your family — not a platform. Vaults let you share specific recipes or whole books with the people you actually cook for.
Four things Nana's does well. Everything else, it gets out of the way of.
Paste a link, snap a photo of a cookbook page, or scribble it in by hand. Nana's parses the ingredients, extracts the steps, and files it cleanly — so all your recipes look like they were written by the same thoughtful editor.
Organize by cuisine, by season, by person. A Vault can be a Sunday dinner rotation, a baby-food binder, or the forty recipes your mother-in-law insists you master. Share any Vault with a tap.
A cookbook should feel like a kitchen, not a feed. Quiet, warm, and full of the food you actually cook — nothing else asking for your attention.
Free to start. No ads, no AI serving you someone else's recipes. Just yours — kept well.