in-house wiki (advantages: searchable from several wireless locations including the kitchen) mailer (advantages: good place to paste stuff I found on the web) word processor (advantages: editable, a good place to transcribe clippings too) hand-written book of "family" recipes paper copies in file folders in a portfolio recipe cards stuffed into cookbooks notes in margins of particular cookbooks
I vastly prefer the wiki. The only catch is, I need to know it's very well backed up. My handwritten "housebook" is the backup, where all the holiday recipes and specialty dishes go.
I've been wishing I had them all digital, such as on a tablet. Instead, I have old school 3x5 cards including some in my grandmother's handwriting, printouts, and a bookmarked folder of online recipes. I print the online ones as I make them, then tuck them into my recipe box. In other words, my recipes are a HOT MESS.
I have them in a purple 3 ring binder sorted by type (desserts, sides, entrees, etc). But it doesn't always stay that way. It's fairly jumbled up right now...
I created a document file a number of years ago, and every time we find a new recipe we like, either Kira or I types it up and adds it to the document. I'll e-mail it to myself periodically, so that it's accessible from any computer (since I have Gmail), and that's saved it from being lost in a few hard drive crashes.
I used to keep a box of hanging folders with recipes torn out of magazines or handwritten or typed & printed, sorted by type of food ("chicken," "pork", "vegetarian," "dessert", etc.) I still have it somewhere, but most of our favorite recipes have since been transcribed into our document file, which is a lot more handy.
I also have a battered 1950's-era edition of "The Joy of Cooking", which was my grandmother's, and which I refer to for things like my apple pie recipe :D
(We have multiple shelves full of cookbooks on the world's cuisines, but that's the one I haul out most often, when I can't remember how long it takes to boil an egg -- LOL! I'm used to doing a lot of complex recipes by memory, but if it's something really simple that I haven't done for a while, I tend to forget the timing . . .)
no subject
Date: 2012-09-20 11:32 pm (UTC)in-house wiki (advantages: searchable from several wireless locations including the kitchen)
mailer (advantages: good place to paste stuff I found on the web)
word processor (advantages: editable, a good place to transcribe clippings too)
hand-written book of "family" recipes
paper copies in file folders in a portfolio
recipe cards stuffed into cookbooks
notes in margins of particular cookbooks
I vastly prefer the wiki. The only catch is, I need to know it's very well backed up. My handwritten "housebook" is the backup, where all the holiday recipes and specialty dishes go.
no subject
Date: 2012-09-21 12:02 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-09-21 12:11 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-09-21 12:13 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-09-21 12:21 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-09-21 01:06 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-10-04 12:24 am (UTC)I used to keep a box of hanging folders with recipes torn out of magazines or handwritten or typed & printed, sorted by type of food ("chicken," "pork", "vegetarian," "dessert", etc.) I still have it somewhere, but most of our favorite recipes have since been transcribed into our document file, which is a lot more handy.
I also have a battered 1950's-era edition of "The Joy of Cooking", which was my grandmother's, and which I refer to for things like my apple pie recipe :D
(We have multiple shelves full of cookbooks on the world's cuisines, but that's the one I haul out most often, when I can't remember how long it takes to boil an egg -- LOL! I'm used to doing a lot of complex recipes by memory, but if it's something really simple that I haven't done for a while, I tend to forget the timing . . .)
<3!