Marley Spoon is famously the Martha Stewart meal kit. Though founded in Germany, Marley Spoon hit up America's high queen of home economics when it arrived on American shores a decade back. Stewart lent the meal kit brand her cooking techniques, her general style, and her good name.
Among the many meal kits I've tested, Marley Spoon became synonymous with that Martha vibe. It wasn't flashy. There were fewer pan-continental culinary experiments. But the cooking was excellent. It was a good thing.
Well, things also change. Starting in December, a rebrand and website refresh has deprioritized Stewart and removed her picture on the front page of website, though the “Martha’s Best” imprimatur remains on a number of recipes. Reached by telephone after this review was first published, Marley Spoon marketing director Carrie King confirmed the partnership with Martha Stewart was very much ongoing, and the Martha’s Best recipes will stay.
Marley Spoon's brand is the meal kit for people who love good cooking and know what it tastes like—that's sorta what Martha Stewart was meant to represent. Meals I tested last year often took longer than some other meal kits. But they also tasted better and used better cooking techniques. This bucked the recent trend toward low-prep and no-prep meals.
Over the past year or more, Marley seems to have stopped bucking and also added a new wealth of international fare, from Moroccan tagine to Korean bibimbap. The meal kit also has a number of dishes with shorter prep times I didn't see as much when first testing the kit. These 15-minute express meals cut down on both ingredients and cooking steps. The site also has a number of ready-to-heat meals, plus market add-ons like salads.
It looked to me like Marley was veering away from its historic strengths and aiming for ease. Marley Spoon rep King says that while Marley Spoon has diversified on multiple fronts over time, including international meals and variety of cook times. But she also notes that my perception of a shift in emphasis may be a happy consequence of a website redesign, which made these options more visible and accessible.
.png)





