If you want a service to fetch recipes from around the web, Cooked is a good option. It can turn any web page into a recipe, then let you annotate it with your own notes and tag it with interactive tags. Cooked also can create smart shopping lists that are sorted by aisle in the supermarket, and it can import recipes from other apps and files. The service is designed for all ages and abilities, and it's free to use, though a Patron tier ($10/month) adds some features.
Another option is BakeSpace, a community food site that's part recipe, part cookbook, part social network. Members can create their own cookbooks with multimedia elements and social links. BakeSpace features include a big recipe database that's categorized and a BakeBot AI Recipe Maker that can generate recipes and then modify them based on your preferences. It's good for foodies who want to find recipes, share their own and connect with like-minded people.
Last, Flavorish is an AI-powered recipe app that generates meal ideas based on the ingredients you have at home, your dietary restrictions and your health goals. It also has features like a customizable cookbook, organized shopping lists and offline use. With free and premium tiers, Flavorish can help you meal plan and shop for ingredients.