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How to Preserve Family Recipes Through The Years

No matter where you’re from, you likely have family recipes that have stood the test of time. Sadly though, as aunts and grandparents grow older, sometimes these recipes get lost or long forgotten. For Food Network Star, Kardea Brown, family recipes are everything. Brown was born and raised in Charleston, South Carolina. Growing up in her grandmother’s kitchen, she learned to make traditional Gullah-Geechee meals as her ancestors did. Gullah-Geechie describes the African-Americans of West African descent who have largely been able to preserve family recipes, cuisine, culture, and language through the years.

The “Delicious Miss Brown,” star has been able to preserve family recipes and share them with the world in ways many of us only dream of. So, for the rest of us, how do we ensure our traditional family recipes aren’t forgotten? How do we pass them on to our kids? Here are four ways to preserve family recipes through the years to ensure they stand the test of time.

Create a family cookbook

One of the best ways to preserve family recipes is to create a family cookbook. This can be done as formally or as casually as you like. Either with an e-book form or with a tangible, printed cookbook. An e-book version of your family cookbook may be the easiest, most economical, and fastest way to make a family cookbook. Google Docs is easy enough to use and there are cookbook templates available for free on Canva. For someone with a little bit of computer knowledge, creating a family cookbook shouldn’t be too difficult. It can come together fairly easily with these free online tools. If you want more in-depth, there are several ways to go about creating a family cookbook, this list from the Family Tree website can help get you started.

Document family recipes on video

One popular way to preserve family recipes is by creating YouTube videos. Many families over the years have recognized that once matriarch from the family passes, those secret family recipes go with them. Combat this unfortunate issue by encouraging your grandma’s and great-grandma’s to share their recipe secrets with the world. Everyone on YouTube loves a grandma so chances are, someone is looking for your exact recipe, and more than likely the channel will be popular, with several comments and subscribers.

An example of one such YouTube channel is Cooking with Clara, a sweet Italian grandmother who has since passed. She’s shared several of her recipes, including some of the meals she and her family would make during The Great Depression. Clara has a strong following, even years after her death, and her recipes and memory live on through the years. A family recipe YouTube channel is not only a great way to preserve family recipes, but it also serves as a way to keep the memories of loved ones alive, for years to come.

Start a blog highlighting popular family dishes

If you and your family prefer to be a little less front and center on video, consider taking your family recipes to a blog. With a recipe blog, you can easily preserve family recipes through the years. The added bonus is that you’ll be able to capture the stories behind the recipes. Include the entire family in creating the blog posts. They can add their thoughts and opinions on the recipes posted. Family members can share when they first had the recipe and what they like about it. They can even share recipe variations they’ve made for their own families, to appeal to a wider audience.

A family recipe blog is a good way to keep those passed down recipes alive in the family and simultaneously share them with the world. An added bonus is that if you have a tech-savvy family member, they can help build the site up. There are a few ways to monetize a blog including affiliate marketing, sponsored posts, or joining with an ad network. Of course, this is all optional, but definitely, an added bonus of starting a family recipe blog.

Involve kids in the cooking process at a young age

Foster a love of food and cooking from the start by involving the young children of the family in helping create family meals. Especially during the holidays when everyone is together, get grandma and the grandkids in the kitchen cooking, laughing, and sharing stories. (This also works well if you’re making YouTube recipe videos with the family.) Involving kids in the cooking process fosters that love of food and the memories of sharing these moments with the family will stick with them through the years.

Long gone are the days of Sunday dinners with the family. We’re just too busy or spread out across the country these days. However, one good thing that this global pandemic has done, is helped us find alternate ways of getting together. If you’re unable to have family meals together, consider a standing monthly Zoom family dinner where everyone gets online while in the kitchen, to create the same recipe together. This standing date could be done in conjunction with a family cookbook that’s distributed to everyone in e-book form. As the world changes and families grow older, finding new ways of connecting will be key, especially when we are looking to preserve family recipes through the years, so far apart from one another.

How to Preserve Family Recipes Through The Years

18 Comments

  • Kelli A
    March 19, 2021 at 6:39 pm

    We have been been discussing doing a family cookbook and after reading this post I really want to get them beyond the discussion and actually get one done!

    Reply
  • Tara Pittman
    March 19, 2021 at 7:23 pm

    I need to do this with my moms recipes. So many of them need to be preserved for my kids to have.

    Reply
  • Amber Myers
    March 19, 2021 at 7:40 pm

    These are some great ideas. My family isn’t known for cooking, so we don’t have a lot of recipes to even pass down. We’re very much a heat up frozen meals kind of group.

    Reply
  • Nikki Wayne
    March 19, 2021 at 10:30 pm

    My mom has a secret recipe. So sad she doesn’t want to share it with me either. Lolz. Hahaha

    Reply
  • Monica Simpson
    March 20, 2021 at 2:48 am

    The best recipes are the ones my mom has from years ago, the paper has yellowed, the handwriting is my grandmother’s beautiful script.

    Reply
  • Kathy
    March 20, 2021 at 2:11 pm

    I really love this. I think a cookbook is a great idea. I love all the old family recipes.

    Reply
  • Lynndee
    March 20, 2021 at 2:17 pm

    These are all great ideas. My husband has preserved his Mom’s recipes. She passed years ago but we still have her recipes.

    Reply
  • Everything Enchanting
    March 20, 2021 at 10:17 pm

    These are such wonderful tips! I have a diary which features all my granny’s recipes 🙂 Videos are a great option too👌🏻

    Reply
  • Catalina
    March 21, 2021 at 12:14 pm

    I was thinking of making a family cookbook. I think family recipes are a little family treasure!

    Reply
  • Ice Cream n Sticky Fingers
    March 22, 2021 at 7:00 pm

    I lost my cookbooks when I moved one year. It made me a bit sad because it had some of my moms and grandmas favorite recipes.

    Then my dad got rid of all my moms stuff. I wish I knew that he was throwing it away or I would have taken some of them.

    Reply
  • Shannon Graham
    March 23, 2021 at 4:03 am

    Our family has done cookbooks in the past and I absolutely love the idea!

    Reply
  • Ryan Escat
    March 23, 2021 at 6:12 am

    Making a video of it requires a little effort but will definitely be fun. I’ll go for cooking with kids at their teenage age, kids have great memory at that stage.

    Reply
  • Lyanna Soria
    March 23, 2021 at 10:56 am

    I would love for us to have a family recipe to pass down to the next generation. I will have to try those tips out and I like the idea of doing activities with the kids.

    Reply
  • Stefani Tolson
    March 23, 2021 at 12:52 pm

    My kids know that they can find some of my recipes on my blogs.

    Reply
  • Janeane M Davis
    March 23, 2021 at 8:40 pm

    My favorite tip is the one about involving the kids. Cooking and food are great ways to seal memories and make family life better. Sharing the recipes with the kids is a big win.

    Reply
  • Brown Sugar Chewies - It's Really Kita
    June 4, 2021 at 6:00 am

    […] the pecans. If you don’t feel like making it you can always buy some. My mom didn’t give me the recipe for it before she died I had to beg some folks because this recipe is a staple in Charleston and […]

    Reply
  • Crystal Holliday
    February 19, 2022 at 1:23 pm

    This has been on my mind a lot lately. I do try to give the story (on my blog) behind any recipe that is from a family member. However I’ve really been wanting to make a Family cookbook, for both sides of my family. I just feel like so many good cooking tips for when someone dies too. I did record one of my Dad’s recipes last year to help remember ingredients. But I’d love to have a pretty cookbook printed with all of his recipes and maybe with a few twists of my own. We live 8 hours away from each other so organizing it all just seems daunting. Thanks for all these great tips!

    Reply
    • Kita
      February 24, 2022 at 9:30 pm

      I want a pretty cookbook also I have been writing them down and I need to start taking pics

      Reply

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