Handing down the family secrets – one dish at a time

We can trace the course of our lives through the recipes we collect along the way, passed through generations or shared between friends

There are two types of cooks in this world: those who keep their recipes secret, and those who share with joyful abandon. As someone who falls strongly into the latter camp, I am fascinated by the people who manage to maintain an air of mystery around their culinary creations. They breeze into a potluck supper with their signature dish, the one that everyone eagerly anticipates because nobody else knows how to make it. When a guest asks how the sauce is so wonderfully light, they simply answer with a smile.

I wonder what motivates some to divulge their recipes while others prefer not to. Perhaps it’s a difference in the idea of “ownership” – do recipes belong to anyone, can they be plagiarised, stolen even? Or are we merely stewards, just one stop in a recipe’s long trajectory? For those with closely guarded family recipes, they are more than just a set of instructions: they are inherited fragments of family history. Being part of a select club who know the key ingredient for Grandpa’s lasagne, or the exact proportions for Aunty’s biryani can even strengthen familial bonds. Recipes become an edible continuation of heritage.

Continue reading…

Breaking news from the Washington Post

Man drives into pedestrians inside German airport garage

Breaking news from the Times of India

Bilkis Bano case: SC constitutes new bench to hear plea

Breaking news from the Guardian

‘We are refugees now, even our cat’: a Kherson mother’s UK diary

Breaking news from South China Morning Post

Cost to US military of shooting down 3 mystery flying objects after Chinese ‘spy balloon’ row could top US$2 million

Breaking news from the Washington Post

Man drives into pedestrians inside German airport garage

Breaking news from the Times of India

Bilkis Bano case: SC constitutes new bench to hear plea

Breaking news from the Guardian

‘We are refugees now, even our cat’: a Kherson mother’s UK diary

Breaking news from South China Morning Post

Cost to US military of shooting down 3 mystery flying objects after Chinese ‘spy balloon’ row could top US$2 million

Breaking news from the Telegraph

Slow-braised chicken with herby cream recipe

HXJHH2CKWZLJVBAXVXPIJCGBQY

Deutsche Bank and UBS shares hammered as banking fears keep tight grip

Breaking news from New York Times

Trump, Turning Up Heat, Raises Specter of Violence if He Is Charged