Eat This Much auto-generates meals for individuals. Member Kitchens delivers your curated recipes and plans to paying members. Transition when your product is your expertise, not generic algorithms.
You choose the path and the pace — hybrid, phased, or full transition. Last reviewed June 2, 2026.
Most creators use one of these approaches — or combine them over time. None require a fixed deadline.
Phased
Phase over time
Launch Member Kitchens for new members or a new tier first. Move existing Eat This Much members when renewals, communication, or your capacity allow.
Best when:
You have an active membership and want to avoid a disruptive all-at-once change.
You are still building your recipe library and prefer to expand content after go-live.
Billing cycles or annual plans make gradual migration the practical choice.
Full transition
Full transition
Move member-facing food content and access to Member Kitchens. Import recipes, configure offers, and communicate the new home for your membership kitchen.
Best when:
Eat This Much no longer fits how members cook from your content every week.
You want one branded app for recipes, meal plans, monetization, and member experience.
You are early enough that migration scope is manageable on your timeline.
What stays vs what moves
What typically stays on Eat This Much vs moves to Member Kitchens
Item
Often stays
Moves to Member Kitchens
Content files
Eat This Much until imported
Structured recipes and plans on MK
Member access
Current delivery method during transition
Branded app login on your domain
Payments
External or manual until cutover
Stripe offers on MK
Announcements
Email or social during hybrid
In-app + optional ESP sync
Typical phases (your pace)
These phases describe common order — not fixed dates. Skip or repeat steps as your situation requires.
1 Explore and import content
Tasks:
Start a trial and explore sample content to see how recipes, meal plans, and member views work.
Import flagship recipes from PDF, Word, CSV, WPRM JSON, or URL — review before publishing.
Decide which content must be live on day one versus what can follow in later batches.
What affects pacing:
A small library you have already structured moves faster than hundreds of PDFs needing review.
Higher editorial standards before publish extend this phase — that is normal and under your control.
2 Brand, access levels, and payments
Tasks:
Apply your theme, logo, and domain so members see your brand — not a generic template.
Set up access levels and offers that match how you sell today (or how you want to sell tomorrow).
Connect Stripe on Member Kitchens or map external checkout via integrations when you stay hybrid.
What affects pacing:
Stripe Connect and DNS for a custom domain add steps — plan for that if they are new to you.
Webhook product-to-access-level mapping takes longer when you have many SKUs or legacy offers.
3 Pilot with a trusted member group (optional)
Tasks:
Invite a small cohort — often 5–20 members — to use the app before a broad announcement.
Collect feedback on navigation, meal plans, and shopping lists while you still refine content.
Skip this phase if you prefer a soft launch to all members at once — many creators do.
What affects pacing:
Pilot length depends on how much feedback you want before scaling communication.
Busy seasons or launch windows may shorten or skip a pilot — your call.
4 Communicate and expand
Tasks:
Tell members what is changing, what stays the same, and where to log in.
Roll out remaining content in batches if you did not import everything upfront.
For phased migrations, move tiers or renewals to Member Kitchens on the schedule you set.
What affects pacing:
Phased rollouts follow your billing cycles and communication rhythm — not a platform deadline.
Large lists or multiple segments need more messaging prep; solo operators often move faster.
Factors that affect your timeline
Every creator moves at a different pace. These factors affect how long each phase takes more than any fixed schedule we could suggest.
Recipe and content library size
A dozen flagship recipes can be imported and reviewed quickly; hundreds of PDFs or legacy posts benefit from batch import and staged publishing.
How polished content must be before launch
Some creators launch with core recipes and expand weekly; others want every ingredient matched to nutrition data first.
Hybrid, phased, or full transition
Keeping checkout elsewhere and adding Member Kitchens for the member app is often the fastest first step; full cutover adds payment and member migration planning.
Access and payment complexity
Simple Stripe offers on Member Kitchens are straightforward; many external products mapped to access levels take more configuration and testing.
Pilot vs broad member rollout
A small pilot adds a feedback loop but delays a full announcement; big-bang launches compress calendar time but need clearer member messaging.
Your bandwidth and team help
Solo operators often move in focused sprints; teams with VAs or ops help can parallelize import and setup.
Getting started on Member Kitchens
Start a free trial on Discover and explore with sample content.
Import your first recipes while you still use Eat This Much — no need to pause your current workflow.
Customize theme and pages so the app feels like your brand.
Connect payments or provisioning (Stripe, webhooks, or SSO) when you are ready — not before.
Read the full comparison if you are still evaluating fit.
Support while you transition
Transitions look different for every creator. Our team helps you map content import, access setup, and member communication to the pace that fits your business — not an arbitrary launch date.