Launched this week
Foodsage
Scan food. See risks. Eat with confidence.
11 followers
Scan food. See risks. Eat with confidence.
11 followers
Foodsage is a food ingredient scanning app designed to support people managing autoimmune conditions and dietary sensitivities. Simply scan a product’s barcode or ingredient list and get personalized risk insights (Safe/Caution/Avoid) based on your health profile. It also suggests safer alternatives, lets you build a personalized safe food list, create shopping lists and even work offline for moments when you’re on the go.

From a UX standpoint, the key will be a smooth interaction — quick searches, smart auto-suggestions, easy filtering, and beautiful visuals. If FoodSage keeps the experience fast and friendly (even on mobile), it’ll feel like your personal AI chef in your pocket, not a clunky search engine.
Great launch! A few ideas that might enhance FoodSage even more:
• Weekly meal-plan suggestions based on your tastes
• Grocery list exports from recommended recipes
• Integration with delivery or grocery services
• Flavor or ingredient pair recommendations
Even without extras, it’s already solving a big pain point.
Hey FoodSage team — this is a really meaningful use of AI. I’ll be testing how personalized it feels across different diets (vegan, keto, picky eaters), how the search reacts when ingredients are ambiguous, and how fast the results load. Keep refining the recommendation model — your impact could be huge!
FoodSage is such a fun and useful idea — discovering food and recipes based on your tastes, ingredients on hand, dietary preferences, and mood feels way more intuitive than scrolling through endless lists. I love that it feels like a smart kitchen companion rather than just another recipe app. Congrats on launching!
What stands out about FoodSage is its use of AI to personalize food discovery: ingredient-based searches, filtering by diet or occasion, and smart suggestions that actually match what I want to eat right now. If the recommendations keep getting better with feedback and usage over time, this could be a go-to battle plan for meal planning.
I always get stuck on what to cook with whatever’s in my fridge, and FoodSage feels like the answer to that problem. Just tell it what you actually have, and it finds relevant meals — that’s incredibly motivating on busy days when I don’t feel like browsing 100 recipes.