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Preserving
Your Treasured Family Recipes
by Rachel Paxton
Recipes are part of a family's heritage. Every family has
favorite recipes that have been passed from generation to
generation. Some are handwritten on recipe cards, and others
are tucked away in old, worn cookbooks that are slowly
falling apart. These treasures won't last ever, and they
should be preserved for future generations. One way to make
sure these recipes live on is to put together a collection
of your own family's recipes.
Computers
have made it very easy for people to accomplish this
task--and the work isn't all that hard. Your cookbook could
be as simple as 8 1/2" x 11" pages hole-punched and tied
together with yarn. There is some kind of appeal in the look
and feel of a handmade cookbook. Recipes lovingly compiled
by a close friend or relative make a very special gift.
Choose a Format
- Spiral-bound. You can set up your computer
word processing program to subdivide your pages into two
columns, essentially allowing you to view two 4 1/4" x 5
1/2" pages at a time. (You also need to set your page
orientation to "landscape.") When you print out the pages,
you can cut them in half with a paper cutter and have the
pages bound together with a plastic comb binder. Office
supply stores like Office Depot will do this for you for a
very reasonable price. I have done many of these cookbooks
and usually use colored card stock for the cover. One 8 1/2"
x 11" page of card stock cut in half creates the front and
back covers. To protect the covers, you can have them
laminated, or I have also applied clear contact paper to the
card stock before cutting it in half. This works great!
- Booklets. You can also create recipe "booklets" by
subdividing your pages in your word processing program, and
then instead of cutting them in half, lay the pages on top
of the full sheet of card stock and then fold the pages in
half, creating a booklet. You can buy fairly inexpensive
staplers that will reach far enough to staple the center of
the booklet, or you can pay someone else do it for you.
- Three-Ring Binder. Your cookbook could be as simple as
handwriting or typing your recipes on regular 8 1/2 x 11
sheets of paper and punching holes in them to slip into a
three-ring binder. A variation of this idea is to use an
inexpensive report cover to protect your pages. I've used
report covers with a clear plastic front to show off the
artwork on the title page of the cookbook. If you have
access to a
color printer, you can make a beautiful full-color title
page or cover for your cookbook. If you can't use a color
printer, black and white can look very nice also.
- Recipe Card Box. If you want to spend a little more time
and really personalize your recipes for a special person,
you might consider putting together a box of recipe cards.
You can buy pre- decorated recipe cards, all ready for you
to add your favorite recipes, or you can always use plain
index cards. Whether you take the time to decorate them or
not is completely up to you. You can spend as little or as
much money as you wish on a recipe box for your finished
cards. My favorite recipe box is made of oak and is very
simple looking and sturdy. You might also consider buying or
creating your own inexpensive dividers to separate different
recipe categories.
Your cookbook
of favorite family recipes is only limited to your
imagination. I have seen cookbooks of all shapes and sizes,
many with hand-drawn pictures in them. The more you
personalize them the better. Make sure to include who you
got the recipes from. I have always loved my aunt's
wonderful collection of jello salads--especially the ones
with lots of fruit, cottage cheese, and whipped cream! I
love looking through my recipe cards and going back to those
jello salad recipes time and time again, especially the
recipe cards on which she wrote the recipes by hand.
I once saw a cookbook that had copies of handwritten letters
and recipe cards photocopied onto the back cover of the
cookbook--it was very original and definitely a nice touch.
One cookbook I did for my family also had a dedication page
in it that listed all of the people whose recipes were
included in the cookbook. It was especially neat because it
included my family as well as my husband's.
Family
cookbooks make great presents for friends and family
members. Because you can photocopy them as you need them,
they are also very inexpensive. They can be given for all
different occasions, including Mother's Day, weddings,
graduations, birthdays, and Christmas, just to name a few.
Your family will treasure them. When children grow up and
move away from home, many times their favorite recipes don't
leave home with them. What a precious gift, to put together
your family's time-tested recipes for them to take with them
as they begin their new lives and have families of their own
to cook for.
If your family doesn't have a collection of favorite
recipes, it's not too late to start your own collection!
When I was first married I struggled to find recipes our
family enjoyed. When I did find recipes we prepared time and
time again, I had no way to organize my growing collection.
That's when I remembered my mother's own large collection
that was tucked away in a drawer in her
kitchen.
They hadn't been touched in years! And my husband's
grandmother also finally shared all of her favorite family
recipes with me. That's when I realized I had to start a new
tradition in our family and start our own family's recipe
collection. Combining my family's recipes with my husband's,
we now have a very comprehensive collection of treasured
family recipes to share with future generations. It's never
too late to start your own!
Rachel Paxton may be contacted at
http://www.creativehomemaking.com
rachel@creativehomemaking.com
Rachel Paxton is a freelance writer and mom who is the
author of the "What's for Dinner?" cookbook, a cookbook
containing more than 250 quick easy dinner ideas. For
recipes, tips to organize
your home,
home decorating, crafts, and frugal living, visit Creative
Homemaking at
http://www.creativehomemaking.com
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