Shared Spaces
Keep your kitchen circle connected.
Recipes do not live in isolation. They live with the people who cook them, change them, and bring them back again.
Shared Spaces let families, friends, tailgate crews, creators, and kitchen teams build living cookbooks together, without losing individual ownership.
A shared cookbook that does not break ownership
A Shared Space is a place where a group can bring recipes together, cook from them, talk about them, and keep them evolving.
Each person still keeps their own library. Recipes are shared into the space, not taken away from the owner.
When someone wants to change a recipe, they fork it into their own version instead of silently editing the original.
Events connect recipes to real gatherings
Events live inside Shared Spaces and represent real-world moments: holidays, tailgates, beach weeks, reunions, camp weekends, popups, or community meals.
Instead of planning in one place and cooking in another, Events keep the menu, the recipes, and the people connected.
Each event becomes part of the story — something you can return to, reuse, and build on.

Events keep the gathering, menu, tasks, and recipe versions connected.
What Shared Spaces and Events help you keep
- shared recipe shelves
- version-safe collaboration
- forks into personal libraries
- table talk and conversation
- event creation and scheduling
- attendees and RSVP
- exact recipe versions on the menu
- scaled servings for groups
- group shopping lists
- task ownership and checklists
- event-specific chat
- photos, recaps, and memories
- cloneable event history
- version-to-event connections
Not just planning. Not just sharing.
Most tools either help you plan an event or store a recipe. Ponics’ Pantry connects the two.
The recipe you cooked is tied to the gathering where it mattered, the version that worked, and the people who were there.
That means the next time the gathering comes around, you are not starting from scratch.

Table Talk keeps the conversation attached to the shared kitchen circle.
Built for groups that cook together
Families
Keep holiday meals, inherited recipes, and shared traditions connected across generations.
Tailgate crews and recurring groups
Track menus, assign tasks, and remember which versions actually worked last time.
Lake houses and beach weeks
Plan multi-day cooking, share responsibility, and keep the best meals from disappearing.
Creators and communities
Run shared cookbooks where audiences can participate, fork recipes, and keep them evolving.
Restaurants and kitchen teams
Share working recipes, coordinate service prep, and improve dishes without losing control.
Part of a larger system
Shared Spaces and Events are built on top of recipe versions, structured data, and Kitchen Mode.
That means everything stays connected — the recipe, the version, the cook, the event, and the memory.
It is not a separate tool. It is part of the same living cookbook.
Start a kitchen circle
Create a Shared Space, invite a few people, and try your first Event. It gets more valuable every time you use it.