You know that moment. It's 6pm, you're hungry, and you've been staring at the ceiling for ten minutes trying to figure out what
to eat. Your partner says "I don't care, you pick." You say "no, you pick." Nobody picks. You end up eating cereal again.
BitePick fixes that specific, very real problem.
Tap "Decide Now" and you'll get three meal suggestions tailored to what you actually like — in under a minute. No scrolling
through 400 recipes. No meal-planning spreadsheets. Just three solid options and a simple choice.
HOW IT WORKS
Tell BitePick what sounds good right now. Feeling lazy or ambitious? Tight budget or treat yourself? Comfort food or something
new? Set your context in a couple taps, or skip it entirely and let the app figure it out.
You get three suggestions. Pick one, swap one out, or reject them all and try again. That's it. Decision made. Dinner sorted.
WHAT MAKES IT ACTUALLY USEFUL
BitePick remembers what you like. Had pasta three times this week? It'll suggest something else. Told it you hate cilantro?
Gone forever. Loved that Thai place last Tuesday? It'll come back around at the right time.
Every suggestion comes with a short explanation — why this meal, why now. No black-box mystery. You can see exactly why the app
thinks you'd be into chicken tikka masala tonight.
After you eat, one tap tells BitePick how it went. Loved it, thought it was fine, regretted it, found it too pricey — whatever.
That feedback makes the next round of suggestions sharper.
BUILT FOR REAL LIFE
Gentle nudges around mealtimes so you're not scrambling at the last minute. Set your own schedule or turn them off — no spam,
no guilt trips.
BitePick doesn't try to be a recipe app, a calorie counter, or a food delivery service. It does one thing: helps you decide
what to eat, fast. If you and your household burn five to fifteen minutes a day on the "what should we eat" conversation,
that's hours of low-grade stress you get back every month.
GOOD FOR
- Solo decision fatigue — stop overthinking your own meals
- Couples who go in circles every evening
- Households where "what's for dinner" is a daily negotiation
- Anyone who eats the same four things because choosing is exhausting
No account required. No subscriptions. No ads. Just open it, decide, eat.