Two weeks ago, a popular cooking channel dropped a 12-minute video of a chef making Italian-American spaghetti and meatballs — roasted-garlic meatballs, San Marzano sauce, the works. Gorgeous to watch. Also useless at the stove, because you can't cook with one hand while scrubbing back through a video with the other to catch how much salt actually went in.
So here's the move: drop that exact YouTube link into Google Gemini, ask for a recipe card, and about 30 seconds later you've got a clean, printable one-pager — ingredients with amounts, numbered steps, zero chatter. Stick it on the fridge. The video just became a document.
TLDR: Gemini reads a YouTube link directly and rebuilds it into whatever document you actually need — recipe card, study guide, repair checklist, webinar action plan. The prompt below interviews you first, so the page it hands back matches how you'll really use it.
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Video is a terrible format for doing things
Video is great for watching and lousy for doing. Every instruction you need is locked inside a timeline you have to scrub, pause, and rewind. Recipes, software tutorials, lectures, conference talks — the value is right there, but it's trapped in playback. So you half-watch with a notepad, which is exactly the kind of busywork AI is good at erasing.
About 60% of cooking videos have no written recipe anywhere — no link in the description, no Patreon post, nothing. For the ones that do, the link usually leads to a site buried under six ad pop-ups. You end up watching the same 18-minute video three times and still writing "a little bit of butter" on a Post-it.
Where AI quietly got very good
Google Gemini now ingests a YouTube URL natively — paste the link and it reads the video's captions, transcript, and on-screen text, then reasons across all of it. It works off YouTube's auto-generated captions and currently supports English, Japanese, and Korean videos.
The unlock isn't a vague summary. It's re-formatting. Same source video, completely different deliverable depending on what you ask for. A recipe card and a study guide are not the same document — they're organized differently, use different levels of detail, and serve you in completely different situations. Gemini builds for what you actually need.
How to do it — about 60 seconds
In Gemini, make sure the YouTube extension is turned on. Copy the video link. Paste it with the prompt below — and let it interview you before it builds anything.
The interview is the whole trick. The prompt asks what kind of document you need before it writes a single line. Recipe card for the fridge? Step-by-step repair checklist? Study guide with a self-quiz? Webinar action plan? It builds for the use case, not for the general summary.
The recipe card is just the demo
The real unlock: every talk, tutorial, and webinar you've ever bookmarked "to watch later" is now a one-page document you can skim in the time it takes to find the remote.
Home repair: extract a numbered checklist from a plumbing tutorial — hands-free on the floor in front of a leaking pipe.
Study prep: turn a 90-minute lecture into a structured study guide with key terms, concepts, and a self-quiz built from the actual content.
Work: take a conference keynote or webinar recording and pull a tight action plan — with next steps, not with speaker-bio filler.
This is what "paste one YouTube link and walk away with something you can hold" actually means. The video doesn't change. The document you need comes out the other side.
The Prompt — The Video-to-Document Converter
Paste any YouTube link into Google Gemini. It figures out what kind of video it is, interviews you on what document you need, then hands back a clean, printable page — recipe card, checklist, study guide, or action plan.
Works best in Google Gemini (YouTube extension on) · takes 60 seconds
You've watched that video three times already. Next time, you'll paste the link instead.
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