Where I start questioning AI like it’s a contestant on a cooking show.
If Part 1 was about discovery, Part 2 is where I got bold.
I realized I wasn’t just using AI to hand me recipes—I was workshopping them. Like a slightly bossy (but hungry) test kitchen editor.
I had specific goals:
- Keep it gluten-free
- Use real food, not weird processed ingredients
- Adapt to what I actually had in my kitchen
- And question anything that sounded even slightly sketchy
Spoiler: There were a few moments that raised eyebrows—and a few where I had to politely say, “Nice try, but no, I’m not eating that”

Pushback Is Productive
Once I got my first version of the seed & date breakfast cookies, I had questions. Important ones. Like:
- “Isn’t this going to be too dry?”
- “Will this even stick together?”
- “Wait, how much banana again??”
Turns out, AI isn’t offended when you doubt it. In fact, it kind of thrives on feedback.
Prompt:
“This seems a little dry—should I add more banana or something else to help it hold?”
AI’s response:
“Yes! Adding another banana, or a tablespoon of maple syrup or nut butter, would help add moisture and improve the binding.”
It was like having a laid back friend who never takes things personally, and always has a Plan B. Honestly, better than some actual humans I’ve cooked with.
Customization is the Secret Sauce
Once I got over the fear of “messing up the recipe,” I realized something huge: AI recipes aren’t sacred. They’re suggestions.
So I started swapping.
Prompt:
“Can I make this without coconut? What if I want to use sunflower seeds instead of pumpkin seeds?”
Answer:
“Absolutely! Feel free to sub in any seeds or nuts you like, and leave out the coconut if you prefer. Just keep the dry-to-wet ratio balanced.”
The magic words: “Just keep the dry-to-wet ratio balanced.”
That’s when it clicked. AI wasn’t a recipe god—it was more like a formula buddy. And once I got the hang of that, I could make recipes work for me.

You Don’t Need a Fancy Kitchen
Another win: I realized I didn’t need to have a commercial kitchen setup to make this stuff work.
Prompt:
“I don’t have a food processor—can I still make this recipe?”
Answer:
“Yes! Just chop the dates finely with a knife and mix by hand or use a stand mixer if you have one.”
Translation: Stop overthinking it. Use the tools you’ve got.
You don’t need to have a Vitamix, 12 mixing bowls, or a pastry scraper named Enzo. Just a knife, a bowl, and the will to make something besides sad toast.
What I Learned
- Challenge the recipe. If something sounds off, it probably is. Ask.
- Customize for your life. Food allergies, dietary goals, picky eaters, or just ingredient availability—it’s all fair game.
- Trust your gut, then ask the bot. Or… ask the bot, then trust your gut.
And most importantly: you are smarter than a recipe card.
Pantry Prompt
“I need a recipe for healthy, gluten free cookie bars. Some ingredients to possibly incorporate might be dates, apples, blueberries, coconut, nuts & seeds, cocoa powder. I’d like them to be sweetened naturally & have some kind of protein without the use of protein powder.”
And the recipe result (after a few alterations):
Healthy Gluten-Free Date & Nut Cookie Bars
Naturally sweetened, protein-rich cookie bars with wholesome ingredients.
Gluten-free | Dairy-free | No refined sugar | No protein powder
Ingredients
- 1 cup Medjool dates, pitted and chopped
- ½ cup unsweetened applesauce (add 1 tbsp more if batter is too thick)
- 1 egg (or flax egg: 1 tbsp flaxseed meal + 2.5 tbsp water)
- ¼ cup almond butter (or any nut/seed butter)
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- ⅓ cup gluten-free all-purpose flour
- ½ cup gluten-free rolled oats
- ¼ cup unsweetened shredded coconut
- ¼ cup chopped nuts (walnuts, pecans, or almonds)
- ¼ cup mixed seeds (chia, flax, sunflower, or pumpkin)
- ¼ cup unsweetened cocoa powder
- ½ tsp cinnamon
- ½ tsp baking soda
- ¼ tsp salt
- ½ cup fresh or frozen blueberries
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C). Line an 8×8-inch baking pan with parchment paper.
- In a food processor, blend dates, applesauce, almond butter, egg (or flax egg), and vanilla until smooth.
- In a large bowl, whisk together the gluten-free flour, oats, shredded coconut, nuts, seeds, cocoa powder, cinnamon, baking soda, and salt.
- Pour the wet mixture into the dry ingredients and stir until combined.
- Gently fold in the blueberries.
- Spread batter evenly in the prepared pan.
- Bake for 20–25 minutes, or until edges are golden and a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
- Cool completely before slicing into bars. Store in the fridge for up to 5 days or freeze for longer storage.
Have a Prompt and resulting recipe to share? I’d love to hear from you!

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