I have a PC and the new iPad. I am with Mary, I love it. I use Living Cookbook for my recipes (it lets me store my own, scan and thus save facsimiles of the originals (e.g., my mom's old cookbook pages with her notes in the margin), import directly from most websites via RecipeFox and copy and paste including images from the rest. I can add notes, rate and review (and those of others as well), track nutrition and costs per recipe and per ingredient and of course create shopping lists and inventories. For now, I export recipes via iTunes to HandyCookbook. which allows you to edit both in the iPad and PC. However, LC will have an iPad app. by the end of the year. I am looking forward to beta testing in the fall.
I cooked from my iPad when I was in Boston. It was so cool, no problems with greasy fingers, but if in doubt elbows work fine. The iPad screen is big enough that I can usually see both ingredients and procedure at once.
I am excited to get Siri in the fall, because that will allow audible reminders (e.g., time to turn the meat in the marinade) when prepping several items as well as setting multiple timers by voice.
I was at Safeway the other day, pork shoulder was on sale, and I remembered
this wonderful recipe from Noble Pig. I was able to quickly find it so I could figure out how much I needed and what else I might need to make the dish. (Since I started with HandyCookbook on my iPhone, to save space, I didn't put in to try recipes.)
I have not gotten CI magazine for it though. I can easily access it with my web subscription and think the price is outrageous on top of the website price. However, I do download BA and Food and Wine because the iPad version is free with the print subscription.
I always used to carry a paperback book in my purse. Now I have the iPad in its place with books, music, my grandkids photos and videos, my meds and medical history, etc. and of course really visible GPS with audible commands as good as the best Magellan for as $1.99. And I can watch Game of Thrones on it as well.
One final thought, I had given an electronic copy of
Flour to my daughter for Mother's Day last year. She loaned it to me and I was able to read it and copy several of the recipes to my LC. So you can borrow electronic cookbooks from the library and some from friends.