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Get StartedGoogle has officially ended its “Recipe Quick View” pilot, a test feature that allowed users to view full recipes including ingredients, steps and photos — right within Google Search results, without ever visiting the original blog or website.
For years now, we know Google has been inclining toward becoming more than just a search engine and it wants to be the destination.
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But what happens when the world’s largest search platform starts pulling content directly from creators and serving it up without ever sending users to the source?
That is not just a design change. That is a fundamental shift in how the internet works.
The outcome ? No clicks, no visits, no ad revenue for bloggers and no credit, except a tiny mention at the top.
It was supposed to be a limited experiment. But what it tested was not just user convenience but how much content Google can extract and display before publishers push back.
What Was “Recipe Quick View”?
The feature first surfaced in early October 2024, spotted by some users searching for recipes like “chocolate chip cookies”.
If one of the top results was from a participating blog like Preppy Kitchen, a “Quick View” button appeared below the link.
You can easily tap and zoom it and within seconds you were looking at a fully rendered recipe, complete with ingredients, step-by-step photos and instructions.
It is all inside Google, with zero need to click through to the blogger’s website.
Google said this was part of a limited experiment. According to spokesperson Brianna Duff, “We’re always experimenting with different ways to connect our users with high-quality and helpful information… We have partnered with a limited number of creators to explore new recipe experiences on Search.”
Let’s stop right here. Ask yourself — who does this really help?
On the surface, this looks convenient for users. No more scrolling past long, anecdote-filled intros to get to the actual recipe. But that intro? That is often the only way recipe bloggers can optimize for SEO and monetize their content.
Why Google Quick View Triggered a Strong Backlash
At first, this might seem like a minor UX tweak. But underneath the surface, it hit several nerves in the tech and content ecosystem:
- Google’s Growing “Stay on Google” Ecosystem
We need to understand that this is not about recipes. This is part of a bigger pattern.
From AI Overviews to Google Flights to Maps previews, the company has steadily pulled more content from the open web and displayed it within its own platform limiting the need to visit third-party sites.
The result? Less traffic to independent publishers and more time spent inside Google’s walled garden.
- Why Recipe Bloggers Were Particularly Affected
Blogs like Preppy Kitchen, Sally’s Baking Addiction or Minimalist Baker are not just hobby sites, they are businesses.
Many of these bloggers rely on ad revenue, affiliate links and sponsored content, which only work when people actually visit their website.
By letting users access the entire recipe on Google, the Quick View pilot effectively cut creators off from their audience which is a move that has been compared to “scraping with consent.”
Even if Google claimed it had partnerships and agreements, there was a strong sense of platform overreach.
Why Google Discontinued the Recipe Quick View Feature
Interestingly, Google did not formally “announce” the end of the pilot.
But recent reports and interface changes confirm that the Quick View button is no longer appearing for users. The experiment has been shelved at least for now.
So… why the quiet retreat?
While Google has not given a public reason, the backlash was significant:
- Bloggers and recipe creators voiced concerns on social media and forums like Reddit, calling the feature “exploitative.”
- SEO experts warned it could set a dangerous precedent for how content is surfaced and monetized.
- Users, too, were divided. While some loved the convenience, others admitted they missed the personal stories and detailed variations offered by original sites.
It is likely that Google, already under fire from regulators over antitrust behavior, wanted to avoid another round of scrutiny for cannibalizing web content.
A Glimpse Into the Future of Search?
Here is the thing that this test is not yet over. Recipe Quick View may be gone but the direction is clear.
Google’s AI Overviews are now appearing in a growing number of searches which often paraphrasing or outright summarizing content from multiple sites again, without driving traffic.
And with the rise of generative AI, the value of original human-created content is being squeezed even harder.
We may be heading toward a world where Google becomes both the search engine and the destination. Overall, it is slowly erasing the open web it was built on.
Protecting the Open Web in an AI-First World
It is time for a serious conversation around ownership, credit and sustainability in the age of AI-powered platforms.
We need:
- Clearer guidelines on how search engines use third-party content.
- Better revenue-sharing models for creators whose work is featured.
- And perhaps most importantly, greater transparency from companies like Google when they run experiments that affect millions.
So yes, Google’s Quick View recipe pilot is done for now. As we move forward into a more AI-curated internet, we will need to fight harder to preserve the value of human-made content and the people behind it.
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