There are recipes…
And then there are handwritten recipes.
You know the ones I’m talking about. They’re tucked inside an old recipe box, folded into the pages of a favorite cookbook, or carefully stored in a kitchen drawer that’s been opened thousands of times.
The paper is stained with vanilla, butter, or flour. The corners are curled. The ink has faded just enough to remind you of the years that have passed.
Yet somehow, they’re more valuable than any cookbook money could buy.
A handwritten recipe is never just about the food. I am so happy to have several of old recipe cards that were my moms...It’s about her hands that wrote it.
Maybe it’s your grandmother’s careful cursive, flowing across an old index card. Maybe it’s your mother’s hurried handwriting on a scrap of notebook paper. Maybe it’s a recipe your aunt scribbled down during a family reunion because everyone wanted to know how she made that pie.
You can almost hear their voices as you read each ingredient.
“Don’t over-mix.”
“A pinch of this.”
“Bake until it looks right.”
No timers. No exact measurements. Just experience, instinct, and love.
Some of the best recipes were never written with perfection in mind. They were written to be shared.
Long before recipes were saved on phones or pinned online, they were passed from one kitchen to another. They traveled in greeting cards, Christmas letters, bridal showers, church cookbooks, and family reunions. They carried stories along with the ingredients.
Sometimes the recipe card is even more precious than the dessert it makes.
I love it when I see familiar loops in the handwriting. I also love the little smudges where someone wiped away flour with the back of their hand. Maybe there’s a tiny grease stain from the hundredth time that recipe sat on the counter while cookies baked in the oven.
Those little imperfections tell a story.
A digital recipe can show you how to make a cake.
A handwritten recipe reminds you who made it first. ❤️
One day, someone may hold your recipe card the same way you treasure one from your mom or grandmother. They’ll smile at your handwriting, laugh at your notes in the margin, and remember that every holiday, birthday, or Sunday dinner somehow tasted like home.
Perhaps that’s why we should keep writing recipes by hand.
Not because technology is bad.
But because love looks different when it’s written in your own handwriting.
So the next time you make that family favorite, write it down. Use a real recipe card. Add a little note at the bottom. Tell where it came from. Share a memory. Include the story behind the dish.
Years from now, someone won’t just be grateful for the recipe. They’ll be grateful they still have a piece of you.
Do you have a handwritten recipe that has been passed down through your family? Is there one you’ll never part with? I am making sure that my daughters, granddaughters and granddaughters-in-love have copies of my hand written recipes.....
I would love to know the story behind it—we all know that sometimes the memories are even sweeter than the dessert.
Shug.......




My sister keeps my mother's and grandmother's recipes, and I've copied the most interesting ones into my notebook. Whenever I bake cakes, I think of my old mother and see her kneading the dough for gibanica, a walnut strudel.
ReplyDeleteI love the thoughts you have when you think of your mom. Special times and great memories.
DeleteShug, this reminds me of my step mother's Neiman Marcus cake. She made it for every holiday and thankfully my sister got the recipe when she passed away and gave it to me. I think your idea of writing out a card and adding a note is so good. Thanks for the tip.
ReplyDeleteI am making recipes for my soon to be married granddaughter...she loves to cook and I think this is a gift that is a forever gift..
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