Graduation Dinner
Lesson 10 of First Kitchen — no recipe this time. You choose the dish, plan it with your agent, build it with save points, ship it to a real URL, and serve it to a real person. Everything from nine lessons on one plate: yours.
Lesson 10 of First Kitchen — no recipe this time. You choose the dish, plan it with your agent, build it with save points, ship it to a real URL, and serve it to a real person. Everything from nine lessons on one plate: yours.
Lesson 9 of First Kitchen: give your agent a new capability with MCP — a real browser it can drive itself. It will open your live site, inspect it like a visitor, and find things you can't see from inside the kitchen. Plus the one rule that keeps MCP useful: don't collect appliances.
Lesson 8 of First Kitchen: your first automation — a script that tidies your Downloads folder, then runs every morning whether you're there or not. The dish that cooks itself, plus the off switch you should always know.
Lesson 7 of First Kitchen: point your agent at your own real data — a bank export, a spreadsheet, any CSV — and turn it into a report that answers questions you actually have. Includes the privacy rules that keep this safe.
Lesson 6 of First Kitchen — the big one. Your page leaves the laptop and gets a real URL on the real internet, for free, in about fifteen minutes. Then you open it on your phone, send it to one person, and stop being hypothetical.
Lesson 5 of First Kitchen: install save points (yes, it's git — no, you don't need to learn git). Save, break your site on purpose, restore it in one sentence. After today, fear of ruining your project is officially irrational.
Lesson 4 of First Kitchen: stop repeating yourself. CLAUDE.md is a plain-text notebook your agent reads at the start of every session — your taste, your rules, your project's law. Write four lines once, and every future session starts already knowing you.
Lesson 3 of First Kitchen: the confidence lesson. Five deliberate changes to your page — including one deliberate disaster and its rescue — to train the loop that is the actual skill of vibe coding: look, say what's off, ask again.