A lot of software makes simple tasks feel like administration.
You want to save a recipe, but first you have to fill out a form. You want to write a note, but first you have to choose a template. You want to organize something small, but suddenly the app gives you tags, categories, statuses, permissions, reminders, sharing options, and settings.
There is a point where software stops helping and starts assigning work.
I think about this a lot when building apps. The job of the interface is not to expose everything the system can do. The job is to make the next useful action feel obvious.
In Kurkum, that means recipe editing should feel closer to writing than data entry. Ingredients and steps should be easy to add. The structure should help, but not get in the way. A recipe app should not feel like managing a database.
This is also why I prefer focused apps. When an app tries to handle every possible workflow, it often becomes slower, heavier, and less pleasant for the ordinary case.
Good software should reduce effort.
It should not make you feel like you are doing paperwork.