Get Clean Recipes from BBC Good Food
The UK's most popular recipe website, offering triple-tested recipes from the BBC Good Food test kitchen. Covers everything from quick weeknight meals to holiday centerpieces with a distinctly British sensibility. Strip the ads, life stories, and clutter — get just the ingredients and cooking instructions.
Try it now — paste a BBC Good Food recipe URL
Original Source: BBC Good Food
RecipeStripper creates a clean cooking view after you paste a public URL. Use the original BBC Good Food page for the publisher's photos, notes, comments, updates, and full article.
How RecipeStripper Works with BBC Good Food
Paste the URL
Copy a public recipe URL from bbcgoodfood.com and paste it above.
We extract the recipe
Our parser chain strips ads, stories, and clutter in seconds.
Cook with clarity
Get clean instructions with ingredient quantities embedded in each step.
What You Get
- ✓Inline ingredient quantities — amounts appear right in the cooking steps, so you never scroll back up
- ✓Servings scaler — adjust portions up or down and all quantities update automatically
- ✓Cook mode — keeps your screen awake while you cook, no more tapping to unlock
- ✓Zero signup — just paste a URL and cook. No account, no app, no extension
- ✓Works on any device — phone, tablet, laptop. Optimized for wet hands on a kitchen counter
Frequently Asked Questions
Does RecipeStripper work with BBC Good Food?
Yes. RecipeStripper usually works with public BBC Good Food recipe pages that expose accessible recipe data. Paste a bbcgoodfood.com recipe URL to get clean ingredients and instructions.
How do I get BBC Good Food recipes without ads?
Paste a public bbcgoodfood.com recipe URL into RecipeStripper and you get a clean version with no banner ads, no autoplay video players, no sticky video that follows you down the page, no pop-up newsletter modals, and no cookie consent banners. RecipeStripper reads accessible recipe data server-side and renders a minimal page with just the title, ingredients, and instructions.
Why does BBC Good Food have so many ads?
BBC Good Food runs ads to fund recipe development, hosting, and editorial costs. Most recipe sites — especially major ones — use display advertising networks like Mediavine or AdThrive that pay CPM rates (cost per thousand impressions). That creates a financial incentive to maximize page views and ad placements per page. The 1,400-word "life story" above the recipe card isn't padding — it's revenue, because Google's ranking algorithm historically favored longer pages and longer dwell times. RecipeStripper strips the recipe from the page so you can cook without the ad infrastructure.
Can I read BBC Good Food recipes on mobile without ads?
Yes. BBC Good Food mobile pages can include display ads, video players, and tracking scripts. RecipeStripper's extracted version removes that clutter and shows a focused recipe view with no ads, no videos, no pop-ups, and no autoplay when extraction succeeds. Cook Mode uses the Screen Wake Lock API to keep your phone screen on while you cook.
Is it free to use RecipeStripper with BBC Good Food?
Yes, RecipeStripper is completely free. No account, no signup, no credit card. Just paste a BBC Good Food recipe URL and get the clean recipe.
Can I save BBC Good Food recipes?
Yes. Create a free RecipeStripper account to save extracted BBC Good Food recipes for later. Access your saved recipes from any device. Without an account, each successfully stripped recipe gets a shareable link (recipestripper.com/r/abc123) you can bookmark or text to yourself.
Can I print BBC Good Food recipes without the ads?
Yes. Strip the BBC Good Food recipe in RecipeStripper, then print from the clean view. The result is a focused printout of the title, ingredients, and instructions instead of the ads, video player thumbnails, related content, and newsletter callouts from the original page.
What does RecipeStripper remove from BBC Good Food recipes?
RecipeStripper strips ads, pop-ups, life stories, newsletter prompts, autoplay video players, cookie consent banners, app install prompts, sponsored content widgets, and other clutter — leaving you with just the ingredients and step-by-step cooking instructions. Ingredient quantities are embedded directly into each step (so "add the flour" displays as "add 2 cups all-purpose flour") so you never scroll back up.