CRAFT Tutorials · Advanced
As you build more recipes and workflows, a little tidying keeps them easy to find and use. You can group them into your own cookbook and, any time, list, rename, edit, or remove them — all by just asking Claude.
See what you’ve got
Start by taking stock. Ask Claude for a rundown of your own recipes, cookbooks, and workflows:
✓ You’ll know it worked when Claude shows you a tidy list of everything you’ve created, with each one’s name.
Group them into your own cookbook
A cookbook is simply a labelled container for related recipes — like a folder for a theme of work. Gathering your recipes into one keeps them organized and easy for Claude to find:
Claude creates the cookbook in your project and files those recipes under it. You can make as many cookbooks as you like — one per area of work is a common way to keep things sorted.
✓ You’ll know it worked when Claude confirms the cookbook exists and lists the recipes now grouped inside it.
Rename, edit, or remove
Keeping the library current is the same easy pattern — just tell Claude what you want changed:
- Rename — “Rename my ‘tidy downloads’ recipe to ‘sort my files.'”
- Edit — “Update my ‘weekly sales summary’ to also include refunds.”
- Remove — “Delete my ‘old draft’ recipe — I don’t use it anymore.”
✓ You’ll know it worked when Claude confirms the change and a fresh list shows your library the way you wanted it.
Your library is yours alone. Managing recipes only ever touches the ones you made. Claude won’t rename, edit, or delete CRAFT’s built-in recipes — so you can tidy freely without any risk to the framework. And because your recipes live in your project, your whole organized library travels with it to GitHub and your other devices.
Troubleshooting
- You can’t remember a recipe’s exact name — list your recipes first, then refer to it by the name shown.
- You changed your mind after deleting — if your project is backed up to GitHub, an earlier version still has it; ask Claude to help you recover it from your history.
- A built-in recipe isn’t doing what you want — you can’t edit the built-in ones, but you can build your own version that does (see Turn a repeated task into your own recipe).
That’s a tidy library: grouped into cookbooks, easy to list, and simple to rename, edit, or remove — always just your own. A good next step: make CRAFT’s help feel more like yours with personalization, branding, and personas.
