IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Twitter cookbook keeps it short but sweet

You already get your news from Twitter.  Now you can get your recipes too.  Not just links to recipes; entire recipes in 140 characters or less.  And they have a special name: Twecipes."Tweet Pie: The World’s Shortest Recipe Book" is a compilation of 50 crowd-sourced "twecipes" collected via Twitter. The book, from British stove maker Belling, was inspired by research that found that Deli

You already get your news from Twitter.  Now you can get your recipes too.  Not just links to recipes; entire recipes in 140 characters or less.  And they have a special name: Twecipes.

"Tweet Pie: The World’s Shortest Recipe Book" is a compilation of 50 crowd-sourced "twecipes" collected via Twitter.

The book, from British stove maker Belling, was inspired by research that found that Delia Smith, whose long-winded instructions for a simple roast beef dish took 872 words, was Britain's wordiest chef. (Nigella Lawson came in second; Jamie Oliver was third).  

So Belling tapped Craig Dugas, creator of the "twecipe," to craft a succinct cookbook. For the non-Twitter-savvy, there is "a glossary of Twitter abbreviations in the back of the book to help readers decipher the characters," said Belling. 

Though a Belling rep admitted they haven't tested the recipes, they did eyeball them to ensure they roughly made sense.  What else would you expect from a cookbook that's basically one big retweet?

Get it at bit.ly/TweetPie or visit Ebay and search for Tweet Pie. All of the book sales go to the food charity FoodCycle.

Have any 140-character recipes of your own? Share them in the comments!

More:

Do you have great food photos? We want them!

The official 'Angry Birds' cookbook

Top restaurants with a view: What's your favorite?