Although recipe data are very easy to come by nowadays, it is really hard to find a complete recipe dataset - with a list of ingredients, nutrient values per ingredient, and per recipe, allergens, etc. Recipe datasets are usually collected from social media websites where users post and publish recipes. Usually written with little to no structure, using both standardized and non-standardized units of measurement. We collect six different recipe datasets, publicly available, in different formats, and some including data in different languages. Bringing all of these datasets to the needed format for applying a machine learning (ML) pipeline for nutrient prediction [1], [2], includes data normalization using dictionary-based named entity recognition (NER), rule-based NER, as well as conversions using external domain-specific resources. From the list of ingredients, domain-specific embeddings are created using the same embedding space for all recipes - one ingredient dataset is generated. The result from this normalization process is two corpora - one with predefined ingredient embeddings and one with predefined recipe embeddings. On all six recipe datasets, the ML pipeline is evaluated. The results from this use case also confirm that the embeddings merged using the domain heuristic yield better results than the baselines.