November 28th, 2012
10:30 AM ET
Everything tasted better when my grandma was around. Growing up, we didn't get to see my dad's side of the family all that often, but I noticed at some point that all the food we ate in Grandma Kinsman's presence was exponentially more delicious. Later on, I came to realize that it wasn't due to some special grandmotherly mojo, but rather that she used real butter rather than margarine, and my family shopped accordingly when she was in town. No matter the ingredients, I was predisposed to enjoy her cooking. I loved her and she loved me, her weird, short-haired, misfit granddaughter, even if the rest of the world wasn't inclined to. Seldom did I feel that love so strongly as when her yearly shipment of holiday cookies arrived. This was a massive undertaking. Aided by my Aunt Myrna, my grandmother would craft hundreds, or sometimes thousands of unfailingly scrumptious sugar-dusted, nut-crusted, frosting-slathered, jam dotted cookies, each nestled into a small sleeve of wax paper. Unwrapping them (after we'd all squabbled and honed in on each family member's favorites) was a small, but momentous event - a visit, a hug, a memory to treasure. And memories are all I have. Both Grandma and Aunt Myrna have passed on, and for a million small, silly, selfish and short-sighted reasons, I never made the time to get into the kitchen with them and learn at their experienced hands. Even if I had the recipes (which I do not, and other than Swedish Gems, I don't even know names with which to research), I'd be lacking the infinitesimal details: the precise piping of the jam into a sugar-dusted fold, the point at which to press the walnut half so it stays lodged in the bottom of the cookie, the consistency of the chocolate frosting so it enrobes but doesn't drip or crack. Excellent baking is equal parts science, experience and love and I unwittingly cheated myself out of several of those key ingredients. Please, if you still have the chance, ensure a lifetime of sweet holiday memories for yourself and your family and get into the kitchen with your older loved ones NOW. Scan It Share It If you've got a slightly bigger budget, consider a print-on-demand publishing service like Lulu or Cafepress or a recipe-specific site like Tastebook and loved ones to order a copy, or surprise them with a holiday gift that will last a lifetime. Record It Is grandma camera-shy? See if she'll go for just a voice recording, and maybe some shots of her hands and the steps of the dish. You can get creative in the editing process later; what counts right now is that you're spending some time together. Cook It While your future renditions of the dish may or may not taste exactly like your loved one's, I guarantee you this: you will never, ever eat it alone. Family recipes are so much more than scraps of paper; they're a pact to keep the past alive and share it with generations to come. Scan or photograph a handwritten, heirloom family recipe (the more stained and well-loved-looking, the better) and upload it via iReport, along with a story about the person who brought it into your life and a memory of enjoying it with relatives or friends. We'll showcase our favorites on Eatocracy, and you'll bask in the warm, happy glow of the knowledge that you made your Grandma (or great uncle, or second cousin in your mother's side) a superstar and preserved their kitchen legacy. This was originally posted in 2011. We just liked it. |
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I really ADORE the holidays. I love spending time with my family. I love the smells that come from the hard work my dad is putting forth in the kitchen. I love sitting down to dinner and seeing my family members faces, all hungry and ready to dig in. I love passing out gifts by the fire and laughing when the dogs cause a rukus. I love playing board games and laughing when my father passes out at the table from both eating too much and perhaps, drinking too much? These memories I relish in their entirety and always look forward to them when the holidays come around again!
I regret never spending time cooking with my great grandmother, but I was a bit too young. My mom and aunt wrote out some of her 'recipes' if you can call them that. Chicken and Dumplings = "Cook a big fat chicken", etc. LOL She used to raise and kill her own chickens, never had a job, and never even rode in an automobile until she was around 80 year old. I have mastered her breakfast gravy though! Thanksgiving always has her green beans (with black eyed peas and bacon of course). Ah, the memories.
I made a cookbook for my mom when I was in high school and her mother and aunt were still alive. When I showed my mom the present, she loved it - and she also said they had made up the recipes! Neither of them actually cooked from recipes but it was fun to read their guesses about how they cooked their best dishes.
Great article KAT and very solid advice. Reminds me of my father who passed away this year. While we have his recipes on hand for the cooking structure, there really is no way to replicate his essence of love that he put into food he made at our restaurant.
My mom made the most incredible Thanksgiving stuffing and gravy. I used to help her out with it every year, but never really knew the details. One year, I asked her for more specific directions, and wrote them down. THANK GOODNESS. That ended up being her last Thanksgiving. (I've mastered the stuffing, but my gravy has never been quite as good.)
I've always envied these types of memories. I was raised by a single father WAY up North far from any extended family. I think it's why enjoy Christmas movies. The massive family gatherings kind of fascinate me. This Thanksgiving was sort of tough. NGF and I are no longer an item. I spent it alone watching football and made my first turkey! And it was fabulous.
I'm so sorry about NGF. Hope you're taking fabulous care of yourself.
I'm sure a lot of you have done this before, but when we have a bridal shower for anybody, we do a bring your favorite recipes on cards. The soon to be married person then has many family recipes for their own, written by hand by that person. Something very simple, but meaningful for the recipient. My grandma wasn't much of baker, but she made the best potato salad that you have ever had. I miss her!
Thank you for a heartfelt and sensitive essay. Perfect picture to accompany as well.
Lovely story. Life is short and we should learn what we can from family.
recipes seem to pop up during family get togethers
I'm still having trouble letting go of the fact that one of my sisters ended up with my mom's handwritten little notebook of recipes and then due to her lifestyle "can't find it" and doesn't even really remember that she has it. And I really have a problem with our grandmother's rolling pin, carved from a single piece of maple that she doesn't know what happened to it either. Just because she was the "gourment cook" in another one of her lives. So much for being the sentimental one.
I won't tell you not to be upset by that because my mother carefully wrote down a list of what I wanted (she INSISTED I tell her), then gave it all away. The only things (1 childhood toy and an antique ring) that she knew I wanted that weren't disposed of were things she'd liked too well herself to get rid of. SO: I set about buying old things that I liked and made my own memories by enjoying the hunt. Buy old cookbooks or check them out of the library or even go online and make a collection of recipes. I feel for you but I've gotten over (most) of my own pain and hope you can too.
One year I couldn't find the recipe card with my grandmother's Bourbon Ball recipe. I started scouring the internet for a recipe that was similar. Come to find out my grandmother's secret recipe was from Reader's Digest in 1965. It was a "back of the box" recipe, not her own secret one! So, as Meli said, check those old standard cookbooks... BH&G Big Red Checked Cookbook, Betty Crocker, etc are still good solid sources.
Hmm, I bet those are the same Bourbon Balls my mom made!
Don't wait too long to ask older relatives for their cooking secrets because memory problems may interfer long before anyone realizes a problem. I didn't realize the extent of my great-aunt's memory problems until the day we tried to make raviloi together. She ended up in tears over the frustration.
The poor woman, that is so sad,
My Grandmother's recipe for Homemade Beef Vegetable Soup went to the grave with her - each time someone asked for the recipe she would say - oh, just come on over and I'll make it for you!. I have since decided that if someone wants one of my recipes I gladly give it to them!
When most of the "kids" were in college, my grandma wrote out recipes for all 10 of us – her favorites and ours, by hand. It is one of the best gifts I've ever received. After she died, I asked my grandpa if I could borrow her recipes so I could use a cookbook program to publish them. Everyone in the family received a cookbook and a few of us were smart enough to buy a few extra copies so we could pass them down to any kids we had.
My sister did a "friends and family" cookbook a couple of years ago, and it's wonderful. I've never understood the whole "secret family recipe" thing - unless you're planning to sell the food commercially, why not share the recipe with everyone and spread the yumminess around? Chances are the people you give it to will add their own touches and make it slightly different anyhow. I have an incredible eggnog cookie recipe that I've given out more times than I can count, and everyone still wants me to make them because "mine aren't as good as yours". And it's a good thing I give it out, because a few years back my original copy of the recipe (in one of the annual Christmas cookie magazines) disappeared somehow, and I had to get a copy back from my daughter!
If you have to recreate a recipe from your family history, either because someone won't share or because they've passed on, don't overlook the old standard cookbooks as source material. My grandmother passed when I was a little girl, and my most vivid memories of her are food based. One day, I decided I wanted to recreate her biscuit recipe. I started out with the Better Homes and Gardens big red cookbook. I burst into tears on the first bite, because those were her biscuits exactly. I didn't have to tinker at all. And it's likely that at least one "secret family" recipe in your family's history came from a common source as well – remember, our ancestors didn't have Food Network or allrecipes.com to look to, they had Betty Crocker and BH&G.
I recently acquired my dad's ever famous Spaghetti Sauce recipe (something he said he'd never tell any of us kids). It's extremely sacred to me. No, I don't plan to share it with my siblings. When my older sister asked me for it, I simply told her to ask our Dad herself (something I know she'll never do because she doesn't bother to check in with my dad or attempt to talk to him). He doesn't have much time left (so he says.. He just had his 3rd heart attack July '11 and it's a miracle my mom was driving their big truck instead of him), so any bits of information/advice, stories, recipes, and time spent together with my daughter and me are some of the things that are most important to me. I worry everyday about how he's feeling, what kind of shape he's in, and whether he'll make it to see another holiday together or not and thank God to have him with us each day.
Wouldn't want to be your sibling..why not share?
Why? Because my siblings never bother to call my parents. My brother only calls and visits when he wants money and my sister just flat-out won't bother trying to talk to my dad. She knows both of my parents hate texting, but she does it anyway. When my dad had his 3rd heart attack, she called one time to check on him. She didn't call them again for 6 months to tell them Happy Thanksgiving/Anniversary. It's not my place to share my father's recipe. It's his. It may sound harsh, but if they'd take the time to be decent human beings towards my parents (and me and each other), things would be different.
It doesn't sound harsh, it's tough love. More power to ya!
@ HAPPY : Thanks! lol
It is an essential tradition in our family that the making of traditional Norwegian delicacies as lefse and krumkake are passed down. Also, we have taken turns making kransekage (wedding cake) for the various weddings. Unfortunately, my grandmother and great-grandmother have passed on, but we we get together to make these treats, they are with us.
Upload them to CuisienLinks dot com, and keep them private. You can set privacy settings, to share these recipes with only your family members, or select friends on the site. That way, you will not lose these recipes, and they will remain private.
My step-mother tossed my mom's cookbooks, and my dad never measured anything. So I'm making new culinary traditions for my children, since mine are lost to me.
A good idea to start your own family recipes and traditions. Be careful though with what you try as children may decide that is the tradition and you are stuck with it. One lady told me about when she was so busy one Christmas Eve and just did not have time to make a special meal, so she quickly made grilled cheese sandwiches and tomato soup. The children insisted on that menu the rest of the time they spent at home!
A few years ago my daughter took it upon herself to do a family cook book that had everyones favorites, it was a labour of love. We all use it and hope it will be passed down through many generations.
The only things my Grandma could make were creamed chipped beef and roast beef gravy (not at the same time) but my Grandfather...now THERE was a cook! His chicken was to die for.
Thank You Kat,Sadly I too did not do this with my mothers cooking,yet I do have her old cookbooks. They still make me smile.