Read the whole list in Seven in this Sunday's Sunday Telegraph
1. Epicurious (epicurious.com) has a vast range of recipes, primers on baking bread and making pies, and an iPhone app to create shopping lists from recipes.
2. Supercook (supercook.com) is a recipe site with a clever twist: you enter the ingredients you have at home and the search engine finds recipes from food sites to use what you’ve got.
3. Jamie Oliver, Delia Smith and Nigella Lawson are all generous with recipes on their sites (jamieoliver.com, deliaonline.com, nigella.com); Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall puts the emphasis on seasonal produce on his (rivercottage.net).
4. Riverford organic vegetables (riverford.co.uk) offers home delivery of boxes of seasonal veg, fruit and meat to many places in Britain from as little as £8.95 a week.
5. Eat the Seasons (eattheseasons.co.uk) is updated every week with a list of the foods currently in season, as straightforward as they come.
6. Martha Stewart (marthastewart.com/food), the ex-con queen of US lifestyle, has an extensive archive of recipes and dozens of ‘cooking 101’ classes for learner cooks.
7. Taste Spotting (tastespotting.com) is food p 0 r n of the highest order: it offers photographs of glorious dishes, which you can click on to find a recipe for.
8. The Good Food Channel’s website (uktv.co.uk/food) has recipes from famous chefs and an interactive map to help you search for the best producers local to you.
9. For cocktail recipes, Dutch vodka brand Bol has the best site (bolscocktails.com). Tell it what you’ve got in your drinks cabinet/fridge and it’ll come up with a cocktail.