brimm tracks what's in your kitchen (pantry, fridge, bar) and serves up what to cook tonight, ranked by what's about to die. Plus nearly 4,000 cocktails, vintage and modern. Every recipe is ranked on real cook performance. The ones that fall short go to The Great Archive.
brimm is a kitchen-first Android app that tracks what's in your pantry, fridge, and home bar. Then serves up what to cook tonight, ranked by what's about to expire. The catalog ships with 23,745 food recipes plus 4,253 drinks, including 3,925 cocktails (vintage lifted verbatim from public-domain bartending books, plus modern builds with photography). Every recipe is ranked on real cook count, save rate, and ratings. The ones that fall short go to The Great Archive to be reviewed, tested, improved, and only republished when they earn their way back. The Tonight deck caps at ten swipes a day on the free tier, an anti-doom-scroll constraint that turns finite attention into real cooking decisions. brimm Free is $0 forever; brimm Pro is $4.99 per month and unlocks family sharing, voice cook mode, the meal planner, and the waste-dollar dashboard. Public launch on Google Play is May 10, 2026, with iOS following about 60 days later.
Expiring food sits at the top. Pantry-match percentage shows what you already have. Cards tint by cuisine: sage for Italian, plum for Japanese, saffron for Indian. Swipe right on what you'll cook. Missing ingredients auto-add to your shopping list.
Snap your shelves. Brand-name ingredients, leafy greens, jars of paste, extracted in seconds with expiration dates pre-filled. Items running low or hitting their date get flagged. Items you reorder for three weeks running become CORE. Auto-restock toggle, your call.
Save a recipe, missing ingredients land in shop. Check off what you've bought, your pantry updates automatically. Restock the things expiring this week with one tap. "Unlock more recipes" tells you what to grab to open up four more dishes.
Tap "Plan it for me." brimm picks seven dinners that use what you have, prioritize what's expiring, and vary the cuisines so you don't eat pasta four nights running. Swap any meal without burning a daily swipe.
Bootlegger recipes lifted verbatim from cocktail books going back a century. Mixologist builds with photography, glassware, and "pan it" partner credits. One tab. Flip a switch.
"Use two large silver-plated mugs with handles. Ignite the liquid and pour it back and forth, four or five times, the appearance of a continued stream of fire." The Blue Blazer, 1878. Original text, original measures, original ritual.
Photographed builds. Modern measures. Glassware, ABV, partner-bar credits. Tap "Pan it" to give the bar that invented the drink credit. Snap bar, Shop, Plan as quick actions on every card.
No other cocktail app has this. No other cocktail app could. The vintage corpus is in the public domain. The modern set is hand-curated. Both ship on day one.
brimm is a kitchen-first Android app that tracks what's in your pantry, fridge, and home bar. Then serves up what to cook tonight, ranked by what's about to expire. The catalog ships with 23,745 food recipes plus 4,253 drinks (3,925 cocktails and 178 mocktails). Every recipe is ranked on real cook performance, and every recipe shows your pantry-match percentage so you cook with what you already have.
Three differences. First, brimm scans your shelves with a photo. Competitors require typing each ingredient. Second, brimm includes nearly 4,000 cocktail recipes alongside meal recipes.no other pantry app spans both food and the bar. Third, every recipe is ranked on real cook count, save rate, and ratings. The ones that fall short go to The Great Archive to be reviewed, tested, improved, and republished only when they earn their way back.
Yes. The Mixology section ships with nearly 4,000 cocktails on day one. BOOTLEGGER mode shows vintage recipes verbatim from public-domain sources (Casino Royale 1953, Savoy Cocktail Book 1930) on a sepia parchment card. MIXOLOGIST mode shows modern builds with photographed glassware and "pan it" partner credits to the bar that invented them.
BOOTLEGGER is brimm's vintage cocktail experience.each recipe is styled as a Prohibition-era recipe card: aged parchment, scorched edges, original spelling and measures preserved, sourced from public-domain cocktail books going back a century. The toggle alongside, MIXOLOGIST, flips to the modern speakeasy style with photography and contemporary measures.
Yes. brimm Free is $0 forever.10 swipes per day, 1 fridge scan per day, 5 barcode lookups, the full pantry and shopping list, and basic cook mode. brimm Pro is $4.99/month or $39/year and unlocks 40 swipes per day, 20 scans per day, family sharing, voice cook mode, the meal planner, the waste-dollar dashboard, recipe URL import, and zero ads.
Anti-doom-scroll by design. Most recipe apps drown users in endless feeds. brimm shows you ten recipes ranked specifically for tonight, ordered by what's about to expire. Finite attention forces real decisions and dramatically reduces food waste. It is the central product position, not a limitation.
Public launch is May 10, 2026. The full app drops that day at play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=app.brimm. Until then, brimm is in closed Internal Testing.
Yes. Android launches May 10, 2026. iOS follows roughly 60 days after, in late summer 2026.
The average US household throws out roughly $1,500 of food per year and 119 pounds per person. brimm's expiring-first ranking is built specifically to surface what's about to die before it does. The waste-dollar dashboard tracks dollars saved week over week, pulled from your actual receipts rather than estimated averages.
Where a recipe came from matters less than how it performs. Every recipe in brimm is ranked on cook count, save rate, and ratings. A great human recipe and a great AI-assisted recipe are both welcome. A bad one (wrong proportions, wrong times, dry chicken) earns its way to The Great Archive. The Archive is where weak recipes get reviewed, tested, improved, and only republished when they pass the bar. The catalog you cook from is the result of that filter.
Every recipe earns its place. Cook count, save rate, ratings. The ones that fall short go to The Great Archive.reviewed, tested, improved, and only republished when they pass the bar.
brimm Free is $0 forever. brimm Pro is $4.99 a month. The full pantry, plus 23,745 food recipes and 4,253 drinks, in your pocket.