Organizing Your Recipes into
a Family Collection
by
Mary Emma Allen
Instead of
recipes tossed into a cardboard box as my mother did, even though
it brought back many memories when I found the container years
later, there are other more efficient ways to organize yours. One
method involves cataloguing your recipes along with the family
memories associated with them.
Get a loose leaf notebook and make dividers to separate the
sections. Start by collecting your recipes, then those from other
family members.
You can hand write them on sturdy paper or print them on your
computer. With the computer you can experiment with various types
of script and fonts. But keep it readable.
On that page, or if there isn't space, use another page, write
down something about the recipe, family memories, occasions when
it's used, where you obtained it, etc.
You may want to use some pictures...photos of family dining and/or
cooking, your own sketches, or clip art from your computer...to
add interest to your family recipe collection.
This method of organizing your recipes can be as simple or as
decorative as you like. Try colored paper for the dividers, or
even the recipe pages. Some of the scrapbooking techniques used
for photo albums also can be applied to this project.
By using a three-ring binder with loose leaf pages, you can add to
the collection whenever you want. You also can duplicate these
recipe books so that you have a collection for other family
members who enjoy memorabilia. These recipe/memory books make
lovely gifts for relatives.
What Recipes Do You Include?
The recipes you include depend on you. Do you want them simply
from your immediate family...current and/or recipes of the past.
Do you want to include extended family members or even friends?
Will this project encompass merely recipes or the stories that go
along with them and/or perhaps other family tidbits? Personally I
find recipes more interesting when I learn the stories
accompanying them.
Families Contributing
If other family members to contribute, one person can type them
into a computer or recipe program so that the resulting book is
standardized. My daughter did this after I collected the recipes
for the Allen/McCracken Family Cookbook.
Or someone with very nice handwriting could write or print them in
script. However, this is very time consuming and tedious. Many
computer programs have nice script fonts which one can use if you
want this effect. However, make sure you don't get so fancy that
it’s illegible and people aren't sure about the ingredients and
amounts.
A Family Recipe
BAKED TACO SALAD - Brown and drain 2 pounds ground beef. Add 1
chopped onion, 2 eight-ounce cans tomato sauce, 1 tablespoon chili
powder (leave out if you want chili less salad or decrease the
amount if you don't want it so hot).
Break 12 hard taco cells apart and spread 6 of the shells on
bottom of 9 x 13-inch baking pan. Spread meat mixture on top and
add remaining 6 shells.
Combine 1 can cream of chicken soup and 1 soup can milk; pour over
shells. Top with shredded cheese, about 1/2 cup. Bake covered, 30
minutes at 350 degrees F.