How a few honest place notes become a taste profile
You don’t need a spreadsheet of preferences—just consistent, quick entries. Over time, patterns emerge that help you choose and discover.
A taste profile doesn't have to be a quiz or a manifesto. For most people, it's the sum of small, honest entries about places they've actually been.
Start with what you already do
After a meal, a hike, or a hotel stay, jot where, when, and one line about whether you'd go back. That's enough for future you to remember why it mattered.
Patterns show up on their own
Over weeks and months, you'll notice repeats: late-night comfort food, quiet cafés, kid-friendly but not chaotic, trails with shade, neighborhoods you keep choosing. You don't have to name the pattern early—just keep notes you can skim.
Why this helps discovery
When you want something new, you're not guessing from the whole world—you have a personal baseline. “Like that place, but different” is a much easier problem than “what's good here?” from zero.
Skouter in one sentence
Skouter.ai is a private, map-backed journal for those notes—ratings, tags, and short text—so your taste profile lives in one place. If you use the Agent, it can reason over your history to suggest directions that fit you, not a generic list.