Alimenta

beta

Your body journal.

Type what happened. See what's actually going on.

Join the beta

You can't improve what you don't see.

And most tools make you quit — or take over — before you see it.

Carnivore. Keto. Intermittent fasting. Cold plunges. Macros to the gram. I tried all of it. Some of it I genuinely liked. Carnivore worked. Keto worked. For a season.

The frameworks weren't the problem. What I lost was sovereignty. Every food decision got delegated to a protocol, a coach, or a spreadsheet — and I started doubting every meal.

MyFitnessPal had a one-year sub I barely used. When I tried to cut weight, I did the math by hand and ate the same five things every day. It worked. Then I burned out. No balance, no flexibility, no room to actually live.

The patterns that change everything — what you eat, how you sleep, how you train, how you feel — were sitting right there the whole time. I just needed a way to see them without handing the steering wheel to someone else.

You decide.
The app doesn't.

No coach. No red/green scores. No streak guilt. No notifications telling you what to eat.

Most tracking apps don't trust you to do the thinking — they want to be the coach forever. Alimenta wants to be the mirror.

Keto, carnivore, intermittent fasting, "just eat real food" — none of it is universal. Some of it might work great for you, for a season, for a reason. What is universal is what's actually happening inside your own body. The job of the tool is to show you that clearly enough that you can run your own experiments — and know whether the framework is actually working on you.

Type what happened. That's the whole app.

Two modes, one journal.

"4 burritos de huevo con jamón. 1.5 rebanadas de pizza. 2 hrs futbol."

15 seconds. No barcodes, no forms, no wearable.

Some weeks you want precision — macros, structured data, the works. Other weeks you just want to type "comí mal, dormí 5h, día pesado" and move on. Alimenta works either way. The journal stays the same. You choose the depth.

Alimenta quick-add screen with a plain-text journal entry
Three days of journal entries showing repeated junk food meals

The mirror does the work.

You log. A few days pass. You scroll back.

The pattern is right there in your own words — the late dinners, the skipped breakfasts, the week you slept four hours and wondered why your knees hurt.

Nobody had to grade you. You just saw it.

Three real days from my journal. I capped my junk food budget and started cooking eggs for breakfast again.

What Alimenta is not.

In the build

The journal you already keep, getting smarter.

Today, Alimenta is the capture layer. Type freely, see your own patterns, build the habit.

Alimenta Intelligence is in active development. The same logs you've already been writing become structured on their own — macros inferred from "4 burritos de huevo con jamón," micros estimated from what's repeating, correlations across food, sleep, training, and mood.

"Your best deep-work mornings follow 7+ hours of sleep and protein at breakfast."

"Low on potassium for three weeks. The leg cramps line up — the monkey never cramps."

No new habit to build. No second app. The intelligence reads what you've already written — and like the journal itself, it suggests, it doesn't prescribe. You run the experiments. Alimenta shows you the results.

Early access.

Free during beta. When paid features ship, early testers get first access.

Join the beta