My obsession with Dig Inn's seasonal sides led me to create a custom Claude Project that can generate copycat recipes and suggest new dishes based on whatever ingredients I have on hand. Here's how I built my AI sous chef and the exact prompt you can use to create your own.
My AI Sous Chef: Crafting a Custom Recipe Generator for Dig Inn Favorites
My Obsession with Dig Sides
I am a SUCKER for Dig (Inn) type sides and salads…give me a Kale Cashew Caesar, that roasted apples dish, don’t even get me started on whatever kind of cauliflower side they have on tap that month. I want “ALL DEM” as my son used to say when he was 3 years old, talking about one of his own special interests that definitely wasn’t salads.
The Recipe Project Idea
So I thought, 🤷🏻♀️, let’s make a Claude “Project” that encapsulates everything the AI needs to know to give me copycat recipes for these favorites, but also be able to generate new recipe based on the ingredients I either had in my fridge already, or an ingredient that I was especially craving that week.
Gathering Inspiration: Screenshots Method
Ok, time to do some screenshots. For those that don’t know, you can feed Claude (and most AIs) information not only through words you type in the chat area, but you can also upload documents, like PDFs, cut/paste text, and also upload photos. And that last one is what I did. You can add these files by clicking the “+” under the “chat with Claude” prompt.
Research and Building the Knowledge Base
I did a quick search for “classic” Dig (Inn) menus to see if I could get the name and ingredients of some more sides and salads. Once I had about 5 screenshots saved to my photos, I went into the Claude chat and added them to my new chat. Then I asked it to come up with a prompt that would help provide recipes and suggestions for new sides and salads based off of things I had in the kitchen.
Creating the Perfect Prompt
And here is the prompt that Claude came up with. Thorough, yet specific, with all the details I needed to instruct future Claude. From here I went to “Create Project” (in orange type usually on the upper right hand side).
Setting Up Your AI Kitchen Assistant
After naming and describing the project, I clicked the “Create Project” button. That takes you to a new window where you’ll see “Custom Instructions” with an orange link to Add Instructions. Click on “Add Instructions.” You’ll see a new window open with “How should Claude respond.” This is where I pasted the prompt that was created earlier.
Ready to Cook with AI
Once the prompt was entered in that window and I clicked “Save,” this Claude Project was good to go. Now I had a recipe generator and collaborator who knew my specific and delicious preferences for the kinds of sides and salads that I wanted.
Try It Yourself
Here’s a link to the prompt, if you want to try it for yourself. Once created, you can tell it what ingredients you have or want to work with, and it’ll give you suggestions for dishes and recipes.
Happy prompting, I mean eating!
Check out some of the things I made with my AI Sous Chef…including “Elevated Nachos” and “What do I do with these soft boiled eggs?”
When your brilliant ADHD kiddo struggles with daily routines, traditional methods fall flat. After months of frustration, I created visual to-do lists using Google Sheets and ChatGPT's image generation in just 20 minutes. The result? Mornings without nagging, an independent daughter who doesn't trigger her PDA (that "don't tell me what to do" response), and parents who can finally enjoy their coffee. Sometimes the simplest AI solutions make the biggest difference in neurodivergent households.
Morning Battles to Morning Wins: How AI Saved Our Routine
My daughter has both ADHD and remarkable intelligence. By 18 months, she was already stringing together 3-4 word sentences. We even have this hilarious photo where she's directing my husband to put HER shirt on the cat and then to take a picture of the cat wearing it! While her brilliant mind constantly amazes us, her neurodivergent brain also brings unique challenges to everyday activities that many take for granted.
One challenge in particular, we encountered daily—twice a day actually. 😐 FUN TIMES! With most neurotypical children, routines can be developed—they wake up and automatically brush teeth, get dressed, eat breakfast, pack their bags. With neurodivergent children like mine ALL of that goes out the window. Working memory—nonexistent, time blindness—LOTS of that though. Furthermore what might become automatic for neurotypical children often requires continued conscious effort for those with ADHD.
Enter AI. This time I actually wanted to give ChatGPT a spin, since I hadn’t in a long time. My go-to has always been Claude, but hey, we’re not exclusive 💍, so why not? The thing I actually like more about ChatGPT is its ability to create visuals to go along with whatever I’m working on. And today we are working on 🎉Visual To Do Lists 🎉.
These are the programs/apps I had open and at the ready: Google Sheets, ChatGPT, and my Photos app. So starting in Google Sheets, I just stole the premade “To Do” template from the options—great start, 🏃🏻♀️I’m halfway there . Then I deleted the “Date” column, renamed each row its own “to do”, and look, there’s already premade boxes to check off when each “to do” is completed. Looking good! 🙌
Next we needed to tackle the “visual” part of this 👀Visual To Do List🎨. Here’s where ChatGPT comes into play. After I had my list of “to dos”—for us it was all of my daughter’s morning routine: brush teeth, eat breakfast, refill water bottle, etc.—I took a screenshot of that list I had just created in Google Sheets. Dropped that screenshot into ChatGPT. Then asked it to create simple visuals for each item.
First try, it did pretty well, creating simple but clear line drawings of each “to do”. I think the key was in the prompting. When typing it in, I included the detail, “Please make sure these will be legible even at a smaller scale.”
Ok, now I had the little to-do “icons”. In ChatGPT, I saved each one to my Photos app. Then went into Google Sheets and inserted each icon into the row with the corresponding to-do. Pretty easy peasy. Once completed, I printed it out and slapped some clear tape on it (poor-man’s laminator 😏). The new visual to do lists went up on the wall of the kids’ room yesterday (I made one for morning, one for evening), and I’m happy to say my daughter seemed to take to it immediately.
There was no repetitive reminding, no frustration on our part, no push back on her part. I’d say it was a win. BONUS points for it helping to NOT trigger her PDA (Pervasive Drive for Autonomy). A lot of neurodivergent folks struggle with PDA. It’s basically when you were ABOUT to do something and then someone asks you to do it and LOOK AT THAT, NOW you don’t want to do it.
So for now, the morning rush and evening wind down are a little quieter and more focused in our household. We’ve got another tool in our tool belt. This one created in about 20 mins total with a game time assist from AI.
Here’s a look at that simple Visual To Do List.