Conversation

I’ve tripped on a fun use of contextual backlinks in my cooking practice. After I get back from the farmer’s market each week, I plan out that week’s meals, linking to empty notes for key ingredients. Over time, each ingredient grows a useful index of preparations via backlinks.
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It’s funny—I could get the same result by just searching my cooking notes for “peas,” but this feels meaningfully different in a way I don’t understand. One factor is object permanence: because peas have a concrete “place,” I add general notes on technique to that note over time.
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Creating a node for each ingredient also increases legibility in a way that simplifies other uses -- record kitchen inventory then run a query to find recipes you have all or most of the ingredients for, without doing text matching.
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I agree. That usage may not be directly helpful for your goals. I do find it fun though, especially when using labelled links so you capture the type of reference (ingredient, contains, relieves symptom, etc).
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