Let Me Cook - Less deciding. More cooking

by
let me cook turns "what do I even make?" into "dinner's on the table." It's a decision-first cooking coach — like Duolingo, but for cooking. Tell it what you've got and how you feel, and it proposes 2–3 doable dishes instead of overwhelming you with a thousand recipes. Once you pick one, it guides you through prep and cooking one step at a time, calmly, with a one-sentence reason behind each move. The result: less stress, real confidence in the kitchen, and skills that actually stick.

Add a comment

Replies

Best

Hi guys,

I'm Diyar, 18 y.o founder from Kazakhstan and builder of letmecook, turning "what do I even cook?" into a calm, guided decision.

Meet letmecook

Why?
I can cook fine once I've started — I just freeze at deciding what to make. Most recipe apps dump options on you and call it help. That decision fatigue is what kills the motivation to cook at all. I didn't need another giant recipe library. I needed something to just tell me what to make and walk me through it.

How?
LetMeCook makes the decision for you. It looks at what you have and what you can handle, then suggests 2–3 realistic dishes — no endless scrolling. You pick one, and it takes you through prep and cooking one calm step at a time, each with a short "why" so you actually learn instead of just following along.

What?
LetMeCook is a cooking coach for people who want to cook more but stall at the start. Think "Duolingo for cooking." It started as a web + iOS app and is growing into a full learn-to-cook system that decides, guides, and teaches — so cooking feels effortless instead of overwhelming.

Thanks to the Product Hunt community for the constant inspiration. We're actively iterating, expanding beyond the browser, and building toward calmer, more confident cooking for everyone. Feedback, thoughts, and real-world use cases are highly appreciated.

Tried it last night with random stuff in my fridge and it suggested a chickpea pasta I actually ended up making. The "why this step" bit felt less preachy than I expected, kind of like cooking with a friend who explains things without making you feel dumb.