22 Treasured Family Recipes That Bring Us Together (2024)

Good food is worth a thousand words—sometimes more. In My Family Recipe, writers share the stories of dishes that are meaningful to them and their loved ones.

There’s a certain comfort in the repetitiveness of my family’s Thanksgiving menu. My dad always smokes the turkey, my aunt always brings two gigantic Doberge cakes, and my mom always makes Spinach Madeline.

Spinach Madeline

As a kid, Spinach Madeline was the combination of two things I despised: spinach and spicy things. But my mom and her army of conspirators (my aunts and uncles) insisted it be on our Thanksgiving table. They had been eating it for decades—my mom remembers sprinkling bread crumbs over creamy green-filled trays as a little girl, graduating to preparing the entire dish solo by the time she was in middle school.

Over years and years of tiny bites, I learned to accept my mom’s favorite holiday dish. And now that I’m older, I appreciate how she stuck to tradition.

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Like my family's Spinach Madeline, there are some recipes close to our hearts—ones passed down for generations and shared among loved ones—that we return to regardless of how they taste. They're the dishes that commemorate life experiences or family members who have passed. They're the dishes that take on new meaning: of a dad's love, a friend's heartbreak, starting life anew after great loss.

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Top Comment:

“Our treasured Thanksgiving recipe is a simple one: my mom's mashed potatoes. She doesn't over-mash so hers are a little thicker. Also, her secret ingredient: mayonnaise. I'm not a big mayo person, but in those mashed potatoes it adds such a creaminess and slight tang that I just love.”

— Dana E.

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We're thankful for all these recipes (yes, even the Spinach Madeline) and wanted to celebrate them and the special places they have in our hearts. Below we're sharing some of the special dishes gracing our Thanksgiving tables this year, plus 8 other stories of heartfelt family recipes that have moved us over the past year.

Be sure to check them out—and if you have a recipe that's been passed down in your family, or one you want your future generations to make, let us know in the comments below.

ThanksgivingTreasures

"My Grandmother's cornbread stuffing (which I will never call dressing even though people tell me that's more correct, since it's not "stuffed" in the bird) will always be my favorite thing on the table. No recipe, because Grandmother didn't use them, but I described how to make it here.” —Kristen Miglore

Sheet-Pan Cornbread Stuffing With Sage

"My family often does a Tourtière for Thanksgiving. It is a French Canadian meat pie. A few years ago I picked one up from M. Wells in Queens and CARRIED IT ON THE PLANE. It flagged the TSA agents' attention, but after further inspection they let me bring the frozen pie to Chicago.” —Victoria Maynard

What the Food52 Staff *Really* Serves on Thanksgiving

"Growing up, my grandma (Mema) would make Chocolate Turkey Cake. It's basically an icebox cake made with real chocolate cake instead of chocolate wafers. It's then covered in whipped cream and we surrounded with turkey-shaped chocolates. My cousins still make it every year.” —Kate Lane Shaw

Classic Icebox Cake

"The best dish at our Thanksgiving every year is, improbably, something called Carrot Ring. It's a sweet-savory, bundt-shaped cake-like thing studded with tons of carrot, and it tastes like a brown sugar-butter quick bread. We serve it with the savory foods, and it always disappears first. (Sometimes I abscond with a hidden slice and break it out the next day to toast for breakfast.)" —Ella Quittner

Aunt Paula's Carrot Ring

"The one dish I NEED at every Thanksgiving is my grandmother's Angel Corn (which some readers informed me is also called scalloped corn after I wrote about it earlier this year): Corn drowned in cream and butter, mixed with crunched up Ritz crackers, seasoned with black pepper, chives, and a little brown sugar, topped with more crunched up crackers, baked until bubbling and golden brown. Guaranteed to please everyone at the table!" —Cory Baldwin

Angel Corn

Family Recipes All YearLong

After I Survived Cancer, I Celebrated With a Birthday Cake
How My Nana's Stuffed Cabbage Taught Me to Treat Myself Better
Far From Home, Dad's Egg Curry Is the One Thing I Didn't Know I'd Miss
Searching for Home in Aunt Mariah’s Recipe Box
Alzheimer’s Stole Everything From My Grandmother—but Not Her Most-Loved Dish
The Healing Powers of Antoni's Hearty Polish Soup
I’m Chinese, but It Took Me 28 Years to Buy My First Wok
The 'Cabbage Bake' That Brought Together a Community of Immigrants
When I Came Out to My Parents, Kimchi Fried Rice Held Us Together
Unlocking the Secret to My Grandmother’s Lemon Velvet Sheet Cake
The Greatest Eggplant Recipe Comes From Romania
When We Fled Peru, My Mother Took "Green Noodles" With Her
The Sunday Sauce I Watched Mom Make 900 Times, but Didn’t Learn Until She Was Gone
The Crispy, Cheesy Rice Balls That Transport Me Back to My Childhood
The Leche Flan That Helped 3 Generations of Women Find Their Way
22 Treasured Family Recipes That Bring Us Together (2024)

FAQs

Why family recipes and their stories are important? ›

Preserving your family's recipes is about more than just preserving food; it's about preserving your family's identity, history, traditions and culture. It's a way to pass down love and knowledge to future generations as a family heirloom.

Why is cooking together important as a family? ›

It offers an opportunity to spend quality time together, chat, and have fun while preparing a meal. Discussing the preparation, cooking, and sharing of meals can help strengthen family bonding and is an opportunity to spend time with your children in the present without any digital influences or noise.

Why family recipes matter? ›

By finding and sharing these meals, you aren't just eating well — you're keeping the memories of those family meals alive! In this way, we keep those who have left us alive as well, whether that's by making their personal favorite meal or by sharing the memories those meals conjure up.

Why is sharing recipes important? ›

Brings People Together

When you share a secret recipe, you are giving someone something special and unique that will make them feel like they are an essential part of your life. Sharing recipes and cooking will bring people together in a positive way that is fun for everyone involved.

Why are recipe books important? ›

A recipe cookbook can be useful for several reasons:

It can help you to improve your cooking skills and learn new techniques, as many cookbooks include tips and tricks from professional chefs. A cookbook can also be a great way to preserve family recipes and pass down traditions to future generations.

Why do people post stories with recipes? ›

Long story short, if someone posts a recipe with very little text, it's much harder to show up in search engine results. This is obviously a problem if you want anyone to read your blog.

Why are recipes important? ›

Recipes provide consistency in the production of menu items. Recipes provide food cost control. Recipes provide knowledge for front of the house staff as a sales tool and to help consumers with dietary concerns and allergies.

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