The Easiest Way to Preserve Family Recipes
More Stories
The Perfect Way to End Your Holiday Meal
Some of the Best Kept Secrets in Wine Country Revealed
Should You Join a Wine Club?
The Easiest Way to Preserve Family Recipes
Don't Make the Mistake of Driving Impaired This Holiday Season
How to Win with Wine at the Holidays
When is a Cow Like a Grape?
Make Your Holiday Celebrations Extra Special This Season
Party to Holiday Lights Not Flashing Lights!
Make Sure Your Guests Haven't Partied To Hard to Drive

The Easiest Way to Preserve Family Recipes
(ARA) - Family members may look unrelated, live in different areas, even have different political views. But even the most diverse family can be united by love of their family's unique food traditions.

Until now, the tradition of the family cookbook has often been handwritten on note cards, hastily scribbled on napkins during family gatherings or jotted in lovingly preserved notebooks, yellowed with age. Like everything else it touches, the Internet is revolutionizing family-recipe gathering.

"Food is an integral part of who we are as individuals, as members of society and as members of groups within that society," says Bill Rice, founder of the Family Cookbook Project, a Web site that helps families compile their favorite recipes and self-publish their own cookbooks. "From Aunt Edna's pot roast to Grandma's special pecan pie, family recipes create common ground and wonderful shared memories."

The Family Cookbook Project uses proprietary software to help budding cookbook authors compile, edit and organize their family's recipes online. By creating an account at www.familycookbookproject.com, users can send an invitation e-mail to family members asking them to contribute favorite recipes for the book.

Family members then sign on to the "editor's" account and enter their information, eliminating the laborious process of collecting and re-keying recipes. Once all contributions are in, the editor then uses the site's software to edit and organize the cookbook. Editors can choose from a variety of personalized covers and divider pages for their spiral-bound book.

The cost of creating a family cookbook is just $19.95 for up to 10 contributors or $29.95 for an unlimited number of family contributors, plus the cost of printing. With a low minimum print quantity of just 50 books, families can avoid high printing costs and leftover books.

"Although some of our more enterprising editors sell their family cookbooks on eBay," Rice points out.

To get started compiling your family's recipes and publishing your own family cookbook, visit www.familycookbookproject.com.

Copyright © 2007, ARAnet, Inc.



Terms and Conditions  |   Privacy  |   Customer Service  |   Advertise  |   Press