
"If my Ina Garten prayer candle could talk, it would tell you that we are living in a new era of chef idolatry and kitchen-culture curiosity, stoked by countless cooking shows, private-chef TikTok, and the runaway success of The Bear.. That's why I was surprised to only recently learn about CookUnity, a meal subscription service that has been around for about a decade,"
"Unlike other meal subscription services, CookUnity's meals aren't made in some opaque partnership with chefs. In the words of its site, every pink sauce penne dish and al pastor pork fajita bowl is "handmade by real, independent chefs who design their own menus and execute their own dishes. No factory teams." That also means everything is made in small batch quantities from the chefs and their own hand-selected teams."
CookUnity delivers fully prepared, chef-developed meals to customers' doors, produced in small batches by independent chefs and their hand-selected teams. Each chef creates and executes their own menu items and maintains a bio page describing their career. Subscription plans range from four to 16 meals per week, with filters for protein goals, low sodium, vegan options, and other dietary specifications. Menus vary by region, and the service can auto-select meals if subscribers forget to choose. CookUnity positions itself as an alternative to factory-made meal services by emphasizing chef authorship and a restaurant-like at-home experience.
Read at Eater
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