Creating a Family Recipe Book

Dear Fellow Journalers,

A family recipe book is not actually a journal in the strictest sense, although it can be argued that your thoughts about preparing a special meal or memories of holiday cookie making marathons at your home can be a journaling experience. Either way, the creating of a family recipe book, like  Marybeth’s Treasure Box  is special.

About a year ago I started to clean out my recipe book. Actually I had to! I had received a small plastic sleeved book years ago when I was first married. It had over 50 small index sized sleeves and corresponding blank index cards upon which I had copied recipes. However, I now had over 20 cookbooks in my kitchen with various hand-written recipes placed in the pages. I needed to organize and badly! My family was growing up and I knew eventually I  would need family recipes as my daughter-in-law was always asking how I made my meatballs or salad dressing that my son liked.

I purchased a 3 ring binder with plastic cover and  a box of plastic pre-drilled 3 ring sleeves. I divided my recipes by type – meat, salads, soups etc. After deciding how many  genres I had, I decided on what color paper (from my stash) I needed for each type of food. For instance, I used red for meat, green for chicken, yellow for desserts etc. I gathered all my recipes together and proceeded to hand-write each one on lined paper. That seemed to take forever! But in the end, all of the recipes were in one place, easy to find and read, and most importantly safe from spilled ingredients! One day I went to Michael’s Craft Store for paper for a project I was working on, and found to my surprise, that the store was having a special sale on paper ” Buy 10 for $1! ” Always on the lookout for additional matte cardstock I checked out the sale. Lo and behold, there was a stash of cookbook paper! It had food words on it in various fonts – Apron, spoon, High Heat, Chicken legs, Meatballs  etc. I bought it without hesitation and one of the pages now adorns the cover of my cookbook!

If you decide that you want to try this, here are some suggestions:

Purchase a blank book with lined pages. If  you can find one with a spiral-bound spine it will be able to lay flat on a counter.

Ask your family for recipes. Read and adapt if you want. Also ask your relatives for photos and memories surrounding the recipes.

Write the recipes in your own handwriting.

Compose a forward. Leave a message in the first few pages for your family members to remember you.

Don’t limit your book to recipes only. Add kitchen tips or your opinions.

When setting up your recipes write a little description of the dish. See Denise’s comments about her salad in my December 7th post.

Write the ingredients down and instructions like a recipe. Estimate how many servings. Finish with serving suggestions ie: serve with red wine.

Happy cooking and creating!

~Sallie


Dinah’s Chicken

     Years ago, my husband had a good friend named Dinah. She made this dish one night and my husband raved about it so much that she finally sent me the recipe. It is a family favorite.

Ingredients:

1 1/4# boneless, skinless chicken breasts

1/2 tsp salt

1/4 tsp pepper

2 tbl. margarine or butter, melted

1/8 tsp. garlic powder

2 tsp. dried parsley flakes

1/2 tsp. paprika

1/4 tsp. dried thyme

1 tbl. Dijon mustard- I use Grey Poupon (the one in the jar)

1 tbl. honey

Makes 2 servings. For 4-5 servings, multiply ingredients

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Place chicken in Pam-sprayed shallow baking pan. Put all spices in bowl, doubling or tripling as needed. Melt butter/margarine in small microwavable bowl and add to mixture. Without rinsing, mix honey and mustard in same bowl and then add to large bowl. Mix well. Spoon over chicken. Cover with foil and bake for 30 minutes. Take off foil and re-baste with marinade. Bake again for 30 minutes. Serve over rice.

Dining well

 

“One cannot THINK WELL, LOVE WELL, SLEEP WELL, if one has not dined well.”

Virginia Woolf

Good Food

 

“Good food is the foundation of genuine happiness.”

Auguste Escoffier

4 Reasons

Dear Fellow Journalers,

Collecting family recipes and making a family cookbook/journal are important ways to connect generations and get to know people you never knew. Eating habits, while shaped by climate and culture, are passed down and passed forward because eating is not a web “experience.”  And you know, it would be kind of cool to find out if someone else in your family liked to eat olives out of a jar or loved anchovies on their pizza. So here are 4 reasons why collecting family recipes really matter:

  1. Collecting family recipes in a family recipe book/journal means we can reminisce about our past. We can appreciate how food was prepared over an open fire or in a fireplace. We can remember how that meatloaf recipe your Mom shared with you came about. On a personal note, I found several cookbooks in my Mother-in-law’s home after she died. What was really neat, was the hand-written notes in the margins – how she used lard and made a pie. Collecting recipes is a way to remember where we came from, whether across the country or across oceans.
  2. Collecting recipes in a family recipe book means we can appreciate what our ancestors would have appreciated. When we look at the many appliances we use now – microwave ovens, refrigerators, electric mixers and blenders and instance hot water, and think of what our ancestors used ice houses, hand-mixers, washing dishes by hand – makes us think! To get an idea of the items they used, check out an antique store or the VT County Store for the utensils your ancestors used.
  3. Collecting family recipes means we can communicate over the ages through a lasting memento (our family cookbook) about our time and place in the world. We can share the use of the “modern kitchen products” and our take on the recipe (our hand-written notes).
  4. Family cookbooks commemorate our Mom and Grandmother and other family members. My husband recently asked me to make Swedish Meatballs. I’d never made them before and checked out my 20 cookbooks for a recipe. He reminisced about the ones made by a family friend Ruth. So I checked out my Mother-in-law’s cookbook and in the meat section there it was – written in her neat and precise handwriting. My husband was thrilled and the recipe has become part of our family recipe book.

Happy Cooking!

~Sallie


Asiago Cheese Puffs

Recipe found from All Recipes

1 cup grated Asiago cheese

  • 1 teaspoon pressed garlic
  • 1/3 cup mayonnaise
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • 1 teaspoon dried thyme
  • 1 teaspoon dried parsley
  • 1 pinch salt
  • 1 pinch ground black pepper
  • 1 French baguette, thinly sliced

Directions:

  1. Preheat the broiler.
  2. In a mixing bowl, combine the Asiago, garlic, mayonnaise, oregano, thyme, parsley, salt and pepper. If the mixture does not hold together well, add more mayonnaise, if desired.
  3. On a baking sheet, arrange the baguette slices in a single layer. Spread the Asiago mixture on the slices. Broil for 3 minutes, or until the cheese is melted and lightly browned. Serve immediately.

 

 

Family Recipe Journal

 

“I was 32 when I started cooking; up until then, I just ate.”

Julia Child

Dear Fellow Journalers,,

This month those of us who love to bake are checking out recipes and baking up a storm. Fortunately, there are hundreds of recipes in cookbooks and on the web. I thought it would be fitting to talk about creating a Family Recipe Journal this month.

In the following weeks we’ll look at the history of cookbooks (who knew?), answer the following questions: Why collect recipes? and What’s the best cookbook to buy? and finally how to create a recipe journal.

If you have a recipe for a salad, main dish featuring beef or chicken, and cookies please email me at uniquelyyourscraftjournal@outlook.com

Happy Baking!

~Sallie

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