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sally_grower

LOOKING for: What does everyone use?

sally_grower
15 years ago

I have been here for a couple of years now and I have copied hundreds of wonderful recipes to Word. I would love to be able to organize and catagorize them like a cookbook. Does anyone have a good suggestion. Thanks so much in advance for any help. Sally

Comments (4)

  • gardenguru1950
    15 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Take a look at this Recipe Exchange thread, which ran just a few weeks ago:

    http://ths.gardenweb.com/forums/load/recipex/msg0216120617906.html?21

    Joe

    Here is a link that might be useful: Making a Cookbook

  • october17
    15 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    I use little 3-ring binders. I had a whole pile of colored paper at work that we were not going to use so I cut it up to fit the smaller size binders.

    You can change them anyway you like. In summer I put the garden recipes in the front. In winter the crockpot recipes are in front. You can add or delete any section or recipe easily. I use homemade dividers between the sections.

    Plus, I have one of those little thingys that hold up a recipe straight up for you, I put it on the back of the stove. It's easy to take pages out and put them back in.

  • ilene_in_neok
    15 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    I really like having my own cookbook. I have a cookbook collection but often I can't remember which one has the recipe I I want to use. I use Word and I do it very similar to one of the contributors of the thread that's linked to the post a few post up from this one.

    I use a separate document for each category and I've run into a few snags. Some dishes can fit into more than one category so it's a judgment call as to where to put them. Do you, for instance, put a pasta salad in "Salads" or in "Pasta Dishes"? Do you put Chicken and Noodles in "Pasta Dishes" or in "Poultry" or in "Casseroles"?. On my computer, I created a main folder called "Cookbook", in which I keep each category as a separate document. I also have a document entitled "Recipes to Try". This is where I copy and paste recipes that sound good but must be tested before they can be included in my cookbook.

    Any recipe on the Internet can be copied into a Word document. You just highlight the recipe, choose "copy", then go to your Word document and after you have chosen "paste", take the option that is called "Unformatted Text". You may have to delete several junk lines, but it's better than filling your document with HTML text, text boxes, and whatever special formatting that was on the Internet page you copied.

    Each document is formatted to have two columns on each page. The pages are numbered and each document has a cover page. Each recipe, after the title, in bold, has a comments section directly below it, it small italics. This is used to tell a story about Aunt Evelyn and how meticulous she was with her Denver Biscuits, or maybe just to note how many it serves. If I got the recipe from here or from Allrecipes.com or wherever, I note that and then if I or a reviewer has modified it in a way that has made it better, I note that there, as well. Then the recipe. Some things, like Yeast Breads or Pie and Pastry, have a page after the title page with tips and tricks about how to make the product better, tools that help, etc.

    I do have some trouble keeping things grouped within each document. I like recipes for waffles, pancakes, french toast, doughnuts, and coffee cake to be grouped together, because they're all breakfast recipes. I also like a new recipe to start at the start of every column. So that's a challenge when I find a great new recipe.

    I have found that Word has some limitations where pictures are concerned. If you don't resize your pictures prior to inserting them into the document, and then you try to print the document, sometimes the pictures in the document won't all print because the document's too darned big. There's just a blank place where the pic should be. Inserting a picture directly from your camera without reducing the size makes the document huge. I use my Photoshop to resize. Also when you insert a picture into Word, if you click on it so that the squares appear at each corner of the picture, you can then format it to "tight" so that you can move it anywhere in the document and it will stay, and the printing will arrange itself around the picture. In some versions of Word, there is a way to specify that any picture imported is automatically formatted in any way you pick, the same way each time.

    Also, if you don't have Word, you can download Open Office for free and it is compatible with Word. It doesn't have all the bells and whistles Word has but it will do in a pinch.

    There's also a free download called PDF Redirect that you can use to make an Adobe Acrobat document from your typed document. This is nice because once you convert your document to a .pdf format, if you save it to CD, no one can go in there and modify it or accidentally delete a recipe unless they have Adobe Acrobat software. The software is so terribly expensive that most people don't buy it. You, on the other hand, still have the document in Word format, so you can modify it when needed and then convert it to a .pdf document again when you want to share it. That also has the advantage of being compatible with whatever people have on their computers because the Adobe Acrobat reader is also a free download.

    When the recipe pages are printed, I 3-hole punch them and keep them in a binder. There's a page divider for each category. I do prefer recipe cards, but they are hard to print on my printer. Avery and others make the recipe cards that are several to an 8x11 sheet and are perforated but they are expensive. I suppose I could buy 8x11 card stock and cut the cards with my paper cutter, but many times I can't get a recipe on just one card without printing so small I can barely read it. So it just gets more complicated from there. I've played with trying to print a card front-and-back, and with making folded cards. Recipe cards have the benefit of being right at your fingertips, easy to carry to the kitchen and clip on the refrigerator, then they can go right back into the box when I'm finished. If you get a new recipe, there's no juggling of the others on the page around it. When I had recipe cards I bought some of that clear contac paper and covered them with that. But it makes them thicker and fewer will fit in the box.

    Ink jet printer ink will run if it gets wet. If you have a laser printer, however, a little moisture doesn't hurt it. But most laser printers will only print in black so if you have pictures they'd have to be in black and white, too.

    I like the idea of giving people a CD with the recipes on it so they can print one page of recipes or the whole collection. What with the cost of paper, printer ink and postage, a cookbook can get quite expensive even if you print it yourself.

  • sally_grower
    Original Author
    15 years ago
    last modified: 9 years ago

    Thanks everyone for the advice. I looked at the link and it is the kind of program I'm looking for. I knew I had seen it but when I tried to find it...couldn't! I like the idea of the CD of recipes for people, I'll have to do that for my daughter.
    Is there a way to take a Jump/Flash drive to an Office Max and have them print off what's on it for a cookbook?
    Thanks again everyone for the help.
    Sally

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