The daily write-up
One dish, explained from first ingredient to final plate, with the reasoning behind each step rather than just a list.
Boneschargeae is a small editorial kitchen project. Each day we write up a single dish, explain why its ingredients work together, and leave room for you to make it your own.
We are not a shop and we do not sell ingredients. We write. Everything below is general informational content meant to make a weeknight a little more interesting.
One dish, explained from first ingredient to final plate, with the reasoning behind each step rather than just a list.
Slow Sundays, sheet-pan Tuesdays, and other rotating ideas that group writing around a mood.
Sensible substitutions for what you already keep at home.
Technique notes written without jargon.
Grouped reading lists so you can follow a thread of dishes across several days at your own pace.
This project began as a shared folder of notes between a handful of home cooks who kept texting each other about dinner. We were tired of recipes that read like spreadsheets, so we started writing them the way we actually talk: with context, small confessions about what went wrong, and the occasional tangent.
Everything published here is informational. We describe how dishes are commonly prepared and what flavours tend to sit well together. We do not give individual advice, and we encourage readers to use their own judgement about ingredients and preferences.
There is nothing to install and nothing to buy. The whole platform is built around the simple act of reading something new before you start cooking.
See the weekly themesEach morning the editorial team picks one dish or technique to focus on, often guided by what is in season.
The write-up explains the order of work, why steps happen when they do, and where you can comfortably improvise.
Take the parts that suit your kitchen and leave the rest. Nothing here is prescriptive.
A few example write-ups that show the tone you can expect across the site.
A one-pan idea built around pantry staples, with notes on adjusting the liquid for the pasta shape you happen to own.
Our take on the unhurried breakfast, with a short section on reading the pan instead of the clock.
A flexible tray of vegetables, plus a dressing you can shift toward citrus or vinegar depending on your mood.
"It reads like a friend describing dinner, not a manual."
I keep the journal open while I potter around the kitchen. The asides about what to do when something goes sideways are the part I actually return to.
Mara R. · reads on weekendsThe swap lists mean I rarely have to shop specially. I treat each post as a starting point and adjust from there.
Jonah D. · cooks for a household of fourOpen the recipe library, pick a write-up that matches your evening, and treat it as a conversation rather than a set of orders.