A few years ago, I had an idea about how to make publishing recipes on the internet more accessible and profitable. As a front-end engineer-turned-product manager, I could write code as long as it involved JavaScript. But I needed someone who could handle the whole stack, especially the back end—you can’t build a platform with frontend tools only. So I searched for a technical co-founder, poked around online forums and talked to friends. Eventually, I found a candidate (let’s call him Tom) who seemed like a good fit. He’d built a recipe app in the past and was comfortable with both the front and the back end. It seemed great. We struck a deal and dove in.
Tom started building the API and database while I made prototypes with a no-code builder called Bubble. I loved using Bubble. Without writing any code, I could build things fast and see what I was creating. Eventually, though, there were too many limitations with the no-code approach, including the lack of a Git repository for version control and history. So we decided to switch to full code with React Native mobile apps.
A few years prior, I’d switched career paths and became a product manager, but it had been a while since I had dug deep into writing code. And although I had a background in React, I felt insecure about building the frontend of a whole web platform on my own. But alas, you do all sorts of scary and undesirable things when you’re a startup founder!
After jumping into it, though, I quickly remembered that I really enjoyed coding. I picked up React Native pretty quickly and started building screens. Tom took care of the data while I took care of the UI. All was good.
Well, all was good until it wasn’t. We were a few weeks away from launch day and were finishing up. We even had a few early-access bloggers lined up to launch with us. And then, surprise! Tom decided to take a job as the CTO of another startup. His parting words were, “You’re technical enough; seems like you can handle it.”
I was floored. Aside from the front end, I had no idea how anything worked. We had cloud functions running on Pulumi hosted in Google Cloud, and I had no idea how they worked. I didn’t know how to train the machine learning AI models we used for ingredient recognition. The most I knew about SQL was that you used it to get stuff from a database. And to top it all off, our recipe scraping API was written in Python, a language I had no experience with, running a version that did not work on my M1 Mac. What in the heck was I supposed to do?
Well, I guess I did what any engineer would do. I figured it out step by step. When the Postgres database ran out of rows on the free Heroku plan, I figured out how to migrate it. When the recipe scraper API needed updating, I learned how to code in Python and deployed it with Docker. It was an incredibly stressful time. I was up against a looming launch deadline with a codebase teetering on collapse at any moment—mostly because I didn’t know how to hold it up.
The silver lining was the GraphQL API platform, Hasura. It was by far the easiest part of the stack for me to grasp. Understanding how our data was laid out was easy enough—I could simply explore it like a spreadsheet. I wasn’t sure how to build GraphQL queries, but the tutorials on the Hasura website helped me learn the basics and the query builder in the console did the rest. It’s no-code, but better—a no-code console makes it super easy to add new tables and modify permissions, and a Git repository keeps everything in check and easy to reference.
Once I understood how Hasura and the rest of the stack worked, I was able to finish the screens that I needed for launch.
Today, the company has grown significantly. We have a new co-founder, but she’s nontechnical. After figuring out how to run the entire stack, I decided I was technical enough to be the primary engineer. I’ve learned how to use all sorts of Hasura functionality that makes our lives so much easier—listening for events, firing off actions in our API to run business logic, and much more. Through all this, I now consider myself a full-stack engineer.