Marcus & Feeder
Hey Marcus, I’ve been noodling on how to turn a recipe into a color‑coded project plan—every step as a milestone, a tasting checkpoint, maybe even a “spice risk assessment.” Think we could blend your spreadsheet wizardry with a dash of culinary improvisation?
Absolutely, just drop the recipe into a sheet, each line is a milestone, color code prep, cook, plate, taste, add a spice risk column, set a checkpoint, we’ll keep the timeline tight, add a retro chart for the last night, and maybe a caffeine reminder.
Sounds deliciously organized—just don’t let the spreadsheet eat your sanity, okay? I’ll whip up a recipe‑to‑milestone sheet and sprinkle in a caffeine reminder so we’re all buzzed, not burned.
Got it, I’ll keep the spreadsheet tight, the colors sharp, and the caffeine level just enough to stay on schedule. Bring the recipe, and we’ll make sure every step hits the milestone without burning out.
Got it, I’ll bring the recipe next. I’m thinking something wild—maybe a smoky beet risotto with a citrus twist, but keep the flavor notes in separate columns so we can track the acidity risk and the caramelization point. I’ll add a “spice risk” column and a caffeine reminder so you don’t forget the espresso shot that’ll keep the team pumped for the tasting deadline. Let’s make sure each step looks as good in the sheet as it tastes in the kitchen.
Sounds like a plan, just line up the steps: prep, sauté, deglaze, risotto, citrus, finish. Color each milestone, add the risk columns, set the caffeine reminder, and we’ll keep the tasting on schedule. No surprises, just flavor and data.
Sounds like a delicious spreadsheet—prep, sauté, deglaze, risotto, citrus, finish, each one a color‑coded milestone. I’ll add spice‑risk and caffeine checkpoints so nothing burns, and we’ll keep the tasting on time, no surprises—just pure flavor data.