Brimm vs SuperCook — which pantry-first cooking app fits you?
SuperCook is the dominant pantry-based recipe search engine. It's been around since 2008 and indexes millions of recipes. If you've ever searched "what to cook with chicken and broccoli," you've probably landed on it. So if you're considering Brimm, the obvious question is: how is this different?
Honest answer: Brimm and SuperCook solve the same general problem (cook with what you have) but make four very different design choices. Here's the side-by-side.
Side-by-side
| Feature | Brimm | SuperCook |
|---|---|---|
| Pantry input | Photograph your fridge or pantry — vision OCR pulls every ingredient automatically. | Type each ingredient by hand from a long checklist. |
| Recipe count | ~28,000 (food + cocktails) | ~11 million (web-aggregated) |
| Cocktails | 4,000+ vintage and modern drinks. Half are pre-prohibition manuscripts. | Limited; food-focused. |
| Recipe quality control | Every recipe ranked on real cook performance. Failures go to The Great Archive. | Web-scraped quality varies wildly. No central editorial. |
| Expiration awareness | Recipes ranked by what's about to spoil first. | No expiration tracking. |
| Hands-free cook mode | Voice walkthrough (Pro). "Next step." "How long?" | None. |
| Mobile | Native Android (May 10, 2026). iOS later. | Web + iOS + Android. |
| Pricing | Free with 20 swipes/day. Pro $4.99/mo or $59 lifetime. | Free with ads. Pro removes ads. |
| Visual design | Vintage warm aesthetic, cuisine-tinted recipe cards. | Spartan / functional. |
When SuperCook is the better choice
If you want the biggest possible recipe database without caring much about consistency, SuperCook wins. 11 million recipes vs 28k is a real gap. SuperCook scrapes the web continuously, so for any niche cuisine or ultra-specific dietary need, you'll find something.
SuperCook is also better if you don't mind typing your ingredient list manually every time. The interface assumes you're going to scroll through hundreds of checkboxes. For some people that's relaxing.
And SuperCook works on iOS today, which Brimm won't until late summer 2026.
When Brimm is the better choice
If the friction is "I can't be bothered to type 30 ingredients into a checklist every time," Brimm wins immediately. One photo, every ingredient extracted, no typing. That's the wedge.
If you cook with perishables and the real problem is throwing away spinach because you forgot you had it, Brimm's expiration ranking is unique. SuperCook gives you "recipes you can make"; Brimm gives you "recipes you should make tonight before food spoils."
If you also want cocktails alongside food (especially the pre-prohibition vintage corpus), no other app spans both.
And if you want a curated catalog with ranking on actual cook performance instead of a giant pile of web-scraped recipes of variable quality, Brimm is curated; SuperCook is exhaustive.
The 60-second test
Open your fridge right now. Count the items you can see. If the answer is more than 12, the type-it-all-in friction of SuperCook is real. Brimm's photo scan turns that into a 3-second action. If the answer is "I have 4 things and I want to find every possible thing to make from them, including obscure recipes," SuperCook's database depth wins.
Most home cooks don't have 4 things; they have 30. That's the slot Brimm fits.
Brimm is launching on Google Play May 10, 2026. Free tier with 20 swipes a day. Pro adds vision OCR, voice cook mode, family sharing, and the meal planner for $4.99/mo.
Comparing other apps? Brimm vs Cooklist · Brimm vs Yummly