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Discover LudwigThe phrase "a recipe from a" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when referring to a specific recipe that originates from a particular source, such as a book, website, or person.
Example: "I found a recipe from a famous chef that I can't wait to try for dinner."
Alternatives: "a recipe by a" or "a recipe sourced from a".
Exact(25)
Here's a recipe from a commenter.
But one chef gets cagey and wrangles a recipe from a resident.
This year I'm using a recipe from a recent visit to Arkansas.
What should not have surprised us was that a recipe from a Southern city had an eye on calorie counting.
We'll publish a recipe from a cookbook for you to try; the following week, the book's author will join Julia Moskin and readers in a live video chat.
To calm down I seized on a recipe from a garlic grower in California that sounded like an Americanized version of the spectacular lasagna in Genoa.
Similar(35)
Maytag said the technology would, for example, let a consumer send a recipe from an interactive TV to a refrigerator, which would take an inventory of ingredients needed.
And I loved some of Underbelly's "non-fancy desserts," like a tender half-moon fried strawberry pie and a wedge of vinegar pie, a relic of a recipe from an age when lemons weren't sold year-round.
The Hamilton Cookbook then presents a selection of Original & Adapted Recipes - a fascinating pairing of a recipes from a cookbook published in Hamilton's Day and Kumin's modern adaptation of each recipe.
Here's a recipe from the highly reliable David Leite for a baked, five-spice version.
This is an updated version of a recipe from my 2011 book Angela's Kitchen.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com