A clearer home for what is new
The biggest visible change is this blog. Shop Sorted now has a proper place for recipe updates, product news and practical notes, with article pages that show when each post was added and link back to the recipes or features being discussed. We also added likes and moderated comments, so posts can become a useful feedback loop rather than a one-way announcement.
Recipe updates feel easier to browse
June brought a steady stream of new recipes, but the more important change is how those updates are presented. New recipe posts now gather the latest additions into a single, image-led story, with breakfast, lunch and dinner sections that are easier to scan than a plain list. The aim is simple: make it quicker to spot something that fits the week you are actually planning.
Basket support is becoming more guided
We also improved the assisted basket route for beta users. The browser-extension helper now has clearer connection states, a more visible start point from basket review, pace controls, and retailer-page overlays that make it easier to see what is happening. It remains deliberately supervised: Shop Sorted supports basket creation where available, and you still review the final retailer basket before buying.
Planning details got tidier
Several smaller changes should make everyday planning feel calmer. Meal swap cards are easier to compare, plan summaries are less cluttered, printable recipe cards have been tightened so they fit better on the page, and the mobile navigation now folds away behind a menu instead of crowding smaller screens.
A fresher look without changing the job
The Market Fresh design refresh landed across the public site too. It gives Shop Sorted a warmer, more food-led feel, while keeping the service grounded in the same promise: plan meals, build one grouped shopping list, use basket support where available, and cook from clear recipe steps.
What we will keep watching
The next useful posts should stay selective. A weekly product update is only worth publishing when there is something genuinely helpful to explain, such as a clearer planning flow, a better basket-review experience, or a meaningful improvement to recipe discovery. Routine fixes can stay behind the scenes unless they change how the product feels for households using it.
