← Kiki Gadgets
Kiki Gadgets, Vol. I
№ 01 · The Kitchen Issue
Established MMXXVI An Independent Studio Printed in code
A field guide to the family table

A weekly meal plan, without the Sunday-night dread.

Meal Lineup brings five thousand recipes, an AI-organised grocery list, and direct sync with Kroger & Walmart into a single, unhurried weekly rhythm.

9:41●●●● 5G
Week of May 18
This Week's Lineup
MON
Tomato & Lentil StewServes 4 · 35 min
TUE
Herb-Roasted ChickenServes 4 · 50 min
WED
Sheet-Pan SalmonServes 4 · 25 min
THU
Olive Pasta BowlServes 4 · 20 min
FRI
Family TacosServes 4 · 30 min

Somewhere between the second cup of coffee and the kids asking "what's for dinner?" most weeks fall apart. Meal Lineup proposes a quieter idea: spend ten minutes on Sunday, then forget about it. Five thousand recipes wait in the library; the app scales each one to your family, drafts a grocery list ordered by store aisle, and hands the whole basket off to Kroger or Walmart.

It is not a recipe book and it is not a smart speaker. It is the part of the week you keep losing — quietly returned, with nutrition coverage logged in the margins and a button labelled "send to cart" right where the panic used to live.

Inside the issue

Six chapters · Roughly forty seconds each
I.
Five thousand recipes, from Spoonacular
Search by ingredient, dietary need, or by the hour you have left. Each recipe scales to your family size, with prep notes that respect a tired Wednesday.
II.
A grocery list that knows the store
An AI sorts your week into aisles — produce first, dairy last, never doubling back. The list never asks where the cumin lives.
III.
Kroger & Walmart, side door
Send the basket straight to your store. Your list becomes a checkout — no copying, no typing, no second app.
IV.
Recipes brought from anywhere
Paste a URL; the app pulls the recipe in clean. The Tuesday-night Instagram pasta is yours by Sunday morning.
V.
Nutrition, kept in the margin
A gentle, weekly read of food-group coverage. The point isn't tracking calories — it's noticing what's missing.
VI.
A small community, optional
Share what worked. Borrow what didn't yet. Make a recipe of your own and put it in the lineup.
"The grocery list went from a Sunday chore to something I no longer think about. The app does the thinking; we do the eating."
— A note for the cover

To begin, simply
open the app store.

Free to download. The weekly rhythm starts on whichever Sunday you choose.

Available on the App Store
Get it on Google Play