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EatWhat is an AI recipe and meal-tracking app for iOS with a very specific focus: helping users end the “what should I eat tonight?” dilemma. Users can enter a dish name, ingredients in the fridge, taste preferences, dietary restrictions, or even just type “surprise me,” and the app will return a practical recipe with serving sizes, steps, and timers. It focuses on Hong Kong kitchens and broader Asian home cooking, with its page claiming 1,100+ recipes across 9 Asian cuisines.
Its AI capabilities mainly cover natural-language recipe search, recipe matching or generation, scaling portions by number of diners, ingredient substitutions, and adaptation to dietary restrictions. It supports tags such as halal, vegetarian, allergies, and gluten-free. In the Fitness module, users can also log meals by photo or text to track calories and macronutrients such as protein, carbs, and fat. Language support is a strong point: it supports English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese, Tagalog, Indonesian, and Thai, and highlights that users can ask questions in Cantonese or English, making it friendly for multilingual households in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia.
The app is free to download and use, and the page says no credit card is required. Pro is an optional subscription, with terms listing $2.99/month or $17.99/year, auto-renewed through Apple ID. Free users face limits: they can only view recipes from the past day, save up to 10 favorites, and customize recipes 3 times per month. Pro unlocks the full recipe library, unlimited customization, unlimited favorites, and daily updates. One thing to note: the marketing copy’s claim of 1,100+ recipes does not fully match the terms’ description of Premium offering “200+ recipes.”
The strengths are its focused use case and simple onboarding. It connects recommendations, recipes, timers, and nutrition logging into a complete cooking workflow. Asian cuisine coverage and multilingual support are key differentiators. The drawbacks are that it does not disclose the underlying model, accuracy metrics, or data-processing approach, and there is no visible information about Android, Web, API, or third-party integrations. The terms also state that it does not guarantee the accuracy of nutrition, allergen, or cooking-time information, so it should not be fully relied on for health-related or allergy-sensitive decisions.
EatWhat is best suited to iOS users in Hong Kong, overseas Chinese communities, or Southeast Asian households who often cook Asian food. It also fits people who want to manage calories without complicated logging. Access from mainland China is not clarified in the main text, so App Store availability, network connectivity, and subscription payment reliability remain unknown. If it is not usable, alternatives include 下厨房, 豆果美食, Cookpad, or general-purpose AI tools such as ChatGPT and 豆包 to generate substitute recipes.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on eatwhat.xyz official site.
eatwhat.xyz is an Hong Kong AI Apps provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach eatwhat.xyz directly.