Come together with the global Drupal community in Rotterdam, 28 Sept – 1 Oct 2026. Sessions, contribution, connection, and Early Bird savings until 8 June.
Just a heads-up, the unit types are in the recipe_unit database table. There is no user interface, but you could use phpMyAdmin and add in more unit types. Just a stop-gap mind you:)
OK John and I agree to this does not seem to be needed:
"whole" is implied by "unit". It's probably not 100% clear (documentation issue) but when you select "1" "unit" "onion", the ingredient row will print out as "1 onion". It's really the same thing.
For "to taste", that's a little subjective and not defined. A "dash" of something is a possible alternative. Besides, aren't ALL ingredient units "to taste"? :-)
Comments
Comment #1
scottprive commentedBoth good ideas, more stuff for my plate :)
Comment #2
scottprive commentedComment #3
jvandervort commentedJust a heads-up, the unit types are in the recipe_unit database table. There is no user interface, but you could use phpMyAdmin and add in more unit types. Just a stop-gap mind you:)
Comment #4
jvandervort commentedComment #5
scottprive commentedOK John and I agree to this does not seem to be needed:
"whole" is implied by "unit". It's probably not 100% clear (documentation issue) but when you select "1" "unit" "onion", the ingredient row will print out as "1 onion". It's really the same thing.
For "to taste", that's a little subjective and not defined. A "dash" of something is a possible alternative. Besides, aren't ALL ingredient units "to taste"? :-)