The following was written by Bill Rice. Bill Rice is founder and
Co-Publisher of the Great Family Cookbook
Project, a website that helps families and individuals collect and share
food memories through customized printed cookbooks filled with treasured
recipes. His site is worth a visit.
Think about your favourite family gatherings.
Often the event was memorable because of the people there, a special location
or the wonderful bounty of food being served. Our food traditions are apart of
the fabric of our family traditions.
Traditionally
collecting of family recipes has often been on handwritten on note cards in a
recipe box, hastily scribbled on napkins during family gatherings or jotted in
lovingly preserved notebooks, yellowed with age. Like everything else it
touches, the Internet is revolutionizing family-recipe gathering.
Today,
with computers and online publishing systems, family cookbooks have emerged as
an easy sharable way to help preserve family memories and food traditions for
future generations. There is nothing like seeing a recipe from a family member
that you remember or even never met, but whose recipe is still used today.
Recently I
was looking through my grandmother’s recipe box and came across a recipe for
Scottish shortbread that was attributed to my Great-Grandmother May Ann
McDougall Peatie who was born in Scotland in 1883. This recipe was lost to our
family for many years but is now part of my family cookbook so everyone can
enjoy these traditional Scottish shortbread cookies.
Here are
some tips for creating your own family cookbook from FamilyCookbookProject.com:
· Go through your recipes collection
and pick the most meaningful recipes that make you remember a family gathering
or event that it was served. Remember quality over quantity.
· If you don’t want to do it all
yourself, invite other family members to contribute their favorite recipes and
food memories. It’s fun to see what others remember most about past family
gatherings.
· For those recipes that you never
wrote down because you made them so many times you knew it by memory, make it
again and this time write it down step by step as you make it.
· Measure the ingredients! Even if you
use a "handful" of something, take a handful and put it into a
measuring cup and write it down before throwing it into the pot.
· Remember to write personal notes
about why this recipe was important, who gave it to you or any special memories
of meals that it was served.
· Including lots of photos is also a
great way to make your special cookbook and help preserve the special memories.
· When your cookbook is complete, be
sure to share copies with all your family members. Your own cookbook makes a
great personal gift.
Remember,
behind every recipe you love is a story you want to share and a family
cookbook makes that sharing a lasting heirloom.