Preserving Family Recipes (2024)

Fall 2016, Vol. 48, no. 3 | Your Family Archives

By Mary Lynn Ritzenthaler

Preserving Family Recipes (1)

Some of the most treasured items that are passed along in a family are recipes: Grandma’s apple pie or Dad’s special barbecue sauce.

They evoke wonderful memories and keep traditions alive. Nowadays, recipes are easily found online, but they are not the same as using original recipe cards and note paper—with ingredients recorded in familiar handwriting and perhaps even advice as to good companion dishes.

Handwritten or typed recipes can be very personal and often show evidence of years of use. Papers and cards may be folded and torn, and they are often embellished with spills and food stains.

Here are some tips to help you hang on to those family recipes.

Do not make additional folds in the paper, and store it flat (unfolded) whenever possible. As with all paper items, handle recipes with care. Evaluate the condition of the paper, which can include anything from backs of envelopes, stationery, lined notebook paper, or card stock specially printed for recording recipes.

If you are using your family recipes while cooking, avoid splashes of water and droplets of milk or other liquids. Make sure your hands are dry and clean. Recipes written in ink may show evidence of inks running or bleeding because water or another liquid was splashed on them—or the card was set on a damp surface.

While cooking, put recipes in clear polyester film sleeves to protect them from food spills and greasy fingerprints. Another option is to use a preservation-quality loose-leaf binder style album filled with polyester page protectors into which the recipes can be filed and easily accessed. Do not use the so-called “magnetic albums” that have self-stick pages with an overlay of plastic. Over time, these will discolor paper, making it increasingly difficult to safely remove the recipes without tearing them.

The size of your recipe collection will dictate how you store them. A sizeable collection can be stored in standard archival file folders and boxes. Weak or damaged paper also can be placed in polyester sleeves and then in folders and boxes. Recipes also can be scanned and accessed electronically while the originals are kept in safe storage.

Scanning is a good way to preserve a collection of clippings while enhancing use and sharing with other family members. There is a long tradition of clipping recipes from newspapers, and these too can become family favorites and be passed along. Given that newsprint is typically of poor quality, limited handling and storage in preservation quality sleeves will protect them during handling.

Handle cookbooks gently and do not force bindings to open flat. Beloved recipes are often found in cookbooks, which may be decorated with food spills on key pages. They may also have annotations that highlight a particular favorite or that amend the ingredients or proportions.

For additional information on preserving paper and books, see https://www.archives.gov/preservation/

Mary Lynn Ritzenthalerrecently retired as Chief of the National Archives Conservation Laboratory.

Articles published in Prologue do not necessarily represent the views of NARA or of any other agency of the United States Government.

Preserving Family Recipes (2024)

FAQs

Preserving Family Recipes? ›

While cooking, put recipes in clear polyester film sleeves to protect them from food spills and greasy fingerprints. Another option is to use a preservation-quality loose-leaf binder style album filled with polyester page protectors into which the recipes can be filed and easily accessed.

How do you preserve family recipes? ›

While cooking, put recipes in clear polyester film sleeves to protect them from food spills and greasy fingerprints. Another option is to use a preservation-quality loose-leaf binder style album filled with polyester page protectors into which the recipes can be filed and easily accessed.

Is there an app for storing family recipes? ›

Recipe Keeper is the easy to use, all-in-one recipe organizer, shopping list and meal planner available across all of your devices. Enter your recipes with as much or as little information as you like.

How to digitize family recipes? ›

Download a mobile scanning app.

With a free scanner app like Adobe Scan, all you need to do is take a photo of your recipe and the app will scan it into a PDF right from your phone.

What to do with grandma's recipes? ›

If you have larger or full-sized 8 1/2 x 11″ recipes, you can easily store them in print pages or 3-ring page protectors, which will display Grandma's beloved apple pie recipe while keeping it safe from your everyday kitchen mishaps.

How do I protect my recipes from being stolen? ›

(An unpublished recipe can be protected under trade secret law, but that means all the chefs using it would have to sign nondisclosure agreements or noncompetition agreements, which are not always enforceable). A collection of recipes, as in a cookbook, can be protected.

How do I organize my old family recipes? ›

Make a recipe box.

I made about 10 of these wooden boxes last year and gave them as Christmas gifts to my coworkers, family, and friends. While they're not ideal for full-sized pieces of paper, they're perfect for storing 3x5 recipe cards.

How much does recipe keeper cost? ›

Recipe Keeper is an app for iPhone and Android devices. There are also web apps for Chrome and Windows browsers which make it easy to save recipes on a computer. The free version is limited to saving a certain number of recipes but a premium version is just $13 with no monthly subscription.

What program to keep recipes? ›

RecipeSage is a free (donation based & open source) personal recipe keeper, meal planner, and shopping list manager for Web, IOS, and Android. Quickly capture and save recipes from any website simply by entering the website URL. Sync your recipes, meal plans, and shopping lists between all of your devices.

Can you put someone else's recipe in your cookbook? ›

Authors who use lines from another author's work have to cite, or attribute, the content to the original author's work. And cookbook recipes can also be attributed to their original or known author so that a cookbook writer can use them in their book in the same way.

How do you save recipes electronically? ›

Gather your sources to store recipes online.

Collect all these sources and ensure that you have a way to access them digitally. For hardcopy recipes, scan them using a free scanner app and create a digital PDF copy, merging multiple-page recipes if necessary. For webpages, save them as PDF copies as well.

What is a recipe organizer app? ›

Built with the at-home cook in mind, RecipeBox allows you to save your favorite recipes in one place. It's your all-inclusive kitchen assistant. With RecipeBox, you can organize recipes, plan your upcoming meals, create your grocery list, and even grocery shop in the app.

How do you store personal recipes? ›

The five best ways to organize recipes.

Buy an accordion folder and label each pocket with a different recipe category. Use sticky arrows or tabs to mark your favorite recipes inside recipe books. Buy plastic sleeve organizers for index cards and add them to an organized binder to organize older recipe cards.

How to organize old family recipes? ›

Make a recipe box.

I made about 10 of these wooden boxes last year and gave them as Christmas gifts to my coworkers, family, and friends. While they're not ideal for full-sized pieces of paper, they're perfect for storing 3x5 recipe cards.

How to collect family recipes? ›

Start by sending an email to ask family members to contribute their recipes. Another option is to post a request for recipes on a private family Facebook page. These pages make for a convenient way to request a certain recipe from family members or to report on any recipes you've prepared.

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