Three tools. Zero “what's for dinner?” spirals.

My Food Fate is built around one idea: food decisions shouldn't be this hard. Here's everything in your corner — what each tool does, how it works, and how they fit together.


The tools at a glance

Use one. Use all three. They're designed to work together, but they hold up on their own.


Tool 1: The Wheel

Spin it. Eat it. Done.

No options to scroll through. No group chat to consult. Just the wheel — and whatever it lands on, that's dinner.

Add your own meal options or let the defaults do the work. Give it a spin. Fate decides. You move on with your evening.

Best for: Anyone stuck in the “I don't know, what do you want?” loop. Anyone who just needs something to pick for them.

With the Planner: Spin a few nights into existence, then let the planner fill in the rest. Structure with a little chaos built in.


Tool 2: The Planner

A whole week of meals, settled before your coffee gets cold.

Tell the planner what your week looks like and it does the rest. Set how many breakfasts, lunches, dinners, and desserts you need — up to seven of each. Set your household size. It adjusts every recipe accordingly.

From there, filter by what matters: dietary preferences, allergies, cuisine, max prep time. Toggle on leftovers and it'll repeat meals the next day so you're not cooking every night. Lock in a meal you already know you want — the planner builds around it.

The result: a full week of meals that are actually yours, before you've even thought about it.

What you can set

  • Meal types and quantities (breakfast, lunch, dinner, dessert)
  • Household servings — set once, applies across the whole plan
  • Dietary preferences: vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free, dairy-free, nut-free, low-carb, pescatarian
  • Allergies: peanuts, tree nuts, shellfish, fish, eggs, soy, dairy, gluten, sesame
  • Cuisine preferences: Italian, Mexican, Asian, Mediterranean, American, Indian, French, Middle Eastern
  • Max prep time per recipe
  • Leftovers toggle
  • Must-have meals — lock in specific dishes, the planner fills around them

Best for: Meal preppers, weekly grocery shoppers, anyone who wants to stop making dinner a daily decision.

With the Wheel: Let fate handle a few nights, then use the planner for the rest.

With Eat Well Hub + Shopping List: Every meal in your plan connects directly to its recipe. Ingredients flow straight to your shopping list — one consolidated run, nothing missing.


Tool 3: Eat Well Hub + Shopping List

Recipes worth making. The list is already done.

Eat Well Hub is the recipe side of My Food Fate — browse, find something that sounds good, and click through. Every recipe comes with a shopping list built in. Adjust the serving size and the quantities adjust with it. No math. No separate notes app. Just the list.

The shopping list lives at its own page and gets smarter as you add to it. It organizes by store and aisle, so you're moving through the grocery run efficiently instead of backtracking to produce three times. When you're done, take it with you however works: print it, download it as an image, copy the text, or share a link.

What the shopping list does

  • Pulls ingredients from any recipe automatically
  • Adjusts quantities to your serving size
  • Organizes by store and aisle
  • Exports via print, image download, copy, or shareable link

Best for: Anyone who finds a recipe and immediately loses the list. Anyone who grocery shops once and wants it to count.

With the Planner: Add a full week's meals to your plan and all the ingredients consolidate into one list. One trip. Everything accounted for.


How they work together

The full move.

Start with the planner. Lock in a few meals you already love — the rest get filled in around them. For the nights you can't commit, spin the wheel and let fate make the call. Every recipe links out to Eat Well Hub, and every ingredient flows into your shopping list, organized by aisle.

One platform. A week of meals. A single grocery run that actually makes sense.


Your food fate is waiting.