The goal of Tastyble is to provide cooking advice its readers can count on. For half a decade, American home cooks have relied on us for easy-to-follow recipes, highly practical how-to guides, and independently researched product recommendations made in our readers’ interest.
We know that trust is earned slowly and lost quickly, and we value our readers’ trust above all. Everything else is secondary. This Editorial Standards & Ethics statement describes how we, the Tastyble editorial team, maintain journalistic integrity — that is, our commitment to ourselves and to our readers.
Masthead
Dim Nikov is the Editor in Chief of Tastyble. You can reach him via the Contact page. You can also learn more about our website and publisher on the About page.
Fact-Checking and Verification
We take all reasonable measures to check facts and verify claims in our stories so that, to the best of our knowledge, they are true and accurate at the time of publishing.
Sometimes, this means reaching out to professional chefs, culinary educators, or food experts of various kinds for an on-the-record quote. Other times, it may mean referring to public sources such as the websites of and materials produced by government agencies (for example, the CDC, FDA, or USDA) or academic institutions (for example, universities).
In either case, we take extra care to clearly cite our sources so that our readers can do their own due diligence if that’s what they wish to do. We take pride in being a source of dependable, trustworthy information.
Corrections
Factual errors are a reality of reporting. Eventually, we’re bound to make mistakes. In doing so, we thank readers who reach out to us to correct them.
When readers contact us to suggest corrections, we review their requests and decide whether or not to act on them promptly. This is a key step in our editorial review process that safeguards the integrity of our stories by allowing us to evaluate correction requests based upon their merits.
We will only correct facts if we can confirm, with a reasonable degree of certainty, that our original reporting was incorrect or incomplete. In such a case, we will add a note at the end of the corrected story that informs readers of the correction and the date on which it was made.