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My husband snickered when I told him I was going to organize all of my loose recipesthose tattered clippings, torn sheets from magazines, index cards, booklets decorated with post-it notes, and so on. I thought the snicker carried a note of disbelief.
I have one large kitchen drawer, two cardboard file boxes, and several bulging folders full of loose recipes. Several of my favorite cookbooks have enough loose recipes in them to bend the bindings. Some of these recipes date back to the 1970s. I keep pulling out the same recipes near the top of the various piles but truthfully, I have no idea what lies below the top half-inch or so. Its time to do some archeology. And its January, a new year, new millennium (according to some), and high time for a fresh start.
The first step in organizing recipes is to make a trip to the nearest large office supply store and find just the right system. I know that if I let things get too complicated, I will never follow through, so Im keeping it simple: file folders (in pretty colors) and two sturdy plastic file boxes with lids (so I can stack them in a corner of the pantry, close to my shelves of cookbooks).
The next step is to make a definite date with myself and protect a block of time. I am allowing myself four hours for the first (and hopefully only) session. It will be on Wednesday morning, right after the kids leave for school.
Heres my method: go through the clippings, one at a time, and separate everything into three piles. One, recipes Ive tried and loved. Two, untried recipes that sound different or special. Three, the recipes that are either hopelessly complicated or just dont spark my interest.
Then I will throw away Pile Three. Maybe toss it into the wood stove so I cant have second thoughts.
Finally, I will make some simple subject folders (Salads, Meat-Poultry-Seafood, Desserts, and so on) and start sorting. I will end up with a lot of sorted recipes and a big pile of miscellaneous things like watermelon punch and homemade dog biscuits. Ill put the miscellaneous ones into a folder labeled "Other" and probably never look at them again.
Finally, I will think of how to use that freed-up kitchen drawer. (I have a few ideas.) You may have noticed that all of this is written in the future tense. You can call me on Thursday and ask how it went. But please dont snicker if Im not quite done.
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