
Decades ago, my former husband and I bought a fixer-upper home that had been built around 1900 in a small town of Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. The house needed tons of work, and we basically lived upstairs while we began remodeling the first floor. When I say “we,” I mean mainly that he did the carpentry, and I cleaned up during and after the work was completed.
Since the kitchen was on the first floor and needed to be functional as soon as possible, that room was one of the priorities. While taking out the drawers in the kitchen for painting and new hardware, a small notebook was found jammed into the deep, dark depths of a cabinet. The booklet’s pages were somewhat discolored, and the brown, waxed cover bore the words “Memorandum Book.”
Within those lined pages, I discovered a delightful collection of handwritten recipes and helpful household hints. Some of them were even affixed with what must have been the names of the owner’s friends who had shared, as I recognized several of the last names of families living in that and the neighboring town. The penmanship style was similar to that of my mother or aunts who reliably sent letters to keep up on family news. I felt like I had struck gold.
Many of the recipes were desserts, although some were of casseroles or various types of vegetable and meat dishes. Two different versions of the Cornish meat pie regional specialty called the “pasty” were offered. Household hints ranged from a mixture that could be used to soften a hardened paintbrush to a home remedy for cough syrup.
When we said “goodbye” to that house some years later, the notebook found a new home in my paternal grandmother’s wooden recipe box and left with me.
I was recently encouraged to see that an online author acquaintance, Karen Musser Nortman, had put out a call for camping and/or Upper Peninsula recipes to accompany her current Frannie Shoemaker Campground Mystery, which is set in the area. I’m happy to say that the directions I submitted for pasties, “cry baby” cookies, and pasta sauce, all copied from that old notebook, now appear in the fiction book, Real Actors, Not People. What a fun way to recycle a few of those rescued recipes!
~Becky~
What a fantastic find. Did many Cornish folk emigrate to that area and bring their recipes with them? Pasties evolved as the perfect packed lunch for miners.
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Yes, along with many from Finland, Italy, Germany, Ireland, etc., all to work in the copper mines. You’re right, about pasties being handy to take almost like a sandwich in a lunch!
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What a wonderful find. How lovely they ended up continuing to be shared in a regional mystery recipe book.
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Yes, I was pleased!
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Such a cool story! Congratulations on helping those recipes find a new home!
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Thank you, Tracy!
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Hi Becky, what a lovely post. How wonderful to find such a treasure, I love it when houses give you a gift like that. I will definitely have to check out “cry baby” cookies – I’m so intrigued by their name.
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Thanks so much, Julie! Yes, houses can be almost like living beings in that way. Hope that you like the cookies. I found some references on the internet that say they’re called by that name because “kids will cry for more.”
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My grandfather was Cornish and loved his meat pies… How cool that these recipes live on!
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I’m glad that you enjoyed reading about this!
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Enjoyed this post as have done the house rehab thing and also collected cookbooks for many years – what a great find that was!
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Glad that you liked reading about this. I’m sure that you have many stories to tell related to house rehabs AND collecting cookbooks!
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What a nicely written post…. and what a find in that drawer!
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Nice of you to say so, Paul. Yes, it was quite exciting, and I will always treasure it!
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I love that you used the wallpaper as a background for the photo and what a lovely book to find.
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I appreciate your positive comments! If I close my eyes and smell the wallpaper, it still conjures up memories of the house.
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What a great story! So glad the recipes kept.
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Thank you, Irene!
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This is such a wonderful story! What a treasure you found. Love the old homes up there. 💗🌞
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Kind of you to say, that, Lisa! Yes, there are many great homes in that area.
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What a lovely find and also that you could share them I have never heard of crybaby cookies but will look them up:)
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Yes, I thought those were interesting, too! I found some related info on the Internet.
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What a wonderful story, Becky! It brings to mind the old adage, “Truth is stranger than fiction. “How fitting that those recipes live on in real life and in fiction. 🙂
–Michael
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Thank you, Michael, for your kind words and interesting observation!
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A wonderful find Becky… we have bought a couple of older homes and in the last one I found a large box full of needlework samplers in a box on top of a built in shelving unit in a bedroom.. Lots of silks and patterns too.. I passed it on to a friend who was a keen needlewoman and I know she treasures it.. Lovely post thank you Sally
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Yours was a wonderful find, as well. And how great that you gave them to someone who you knew could appreciate them!
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It has reminded me to make sure that my tapistries which hang the walls should be labelled for when I do go… so that they get passed on…
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I think about that sometimes, too, with a few of my collectibles, especially those that originate in the family. I haven’t gotten too far with the list for my daughters, however:)
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How very interesting, Becky. I have an old cookery book from my Father’s Grandmother. It is packed with interesting recipes and home remedies.
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That does sound great, and especially important since it comes from your own family!
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Nice blog post. Love the blog name 🙂
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Thanks so much!
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I love this story! I live in a house that was built around 1900 as well. Though I never found a recipe box, I can feel there are stories looming in the walls.
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Yes, I’m sure that there are!
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Yum, those recipes are making my hungry 😊
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