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Upcycled Recipe Card Boxes by Karen Malcolm

Recipe card boxes may seem like a quaint idea in the Internet age, but these Joseph Cornell-inspired upcycled boxes by Karen Malcolm make me start to rethink my recipe (non) organization system.

 
 

My go-to recipe for all holiday entertaining (a buzz-inducing no-cook whiskey cookie, YUM) was handwritten by my grandmother on an index card that I constantly misplace amidst piles of recipes printed from the web and pages torn from magazines. With a wide range of software available for organizing recipes and printing customized index cards, a cool box actually seems like just the thing I need.

Rhode Island artist Karen Malcolm custom crafts these artful boxes from found objects and ephemera, working with customers to create a one-of-a-kind pieces. Her found object artwork is also wonderfully strange and unique. See more of her recipe boxes and artwork at Malcolm Studio Shop.

RECIPE ORGANIZATION AND CARD RESOURCES FROM THE KITCHN:
Good Question: What Recipe Storing Software Would You Recommend?
Help Me Find: Clean and Modern Recipe Card Templates
Good Idea: Printable Recipe Card Templates

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organizing, green ideas, holiday, entertaining, recipe card

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Comments (15)

I had a recipe box for years. I hated looking for recipes. I finally typed all my collected recipes, put the pages in sheet protectors in a 3-ring binder complete with index. If I need to add new recipes, I simply type them, print the page(s), encase in sheet protectors and add to my binder. If I need to give a recipe to someone else, I don't have to write it up, I simply call up my cookbook on the computer and print a copy of the desired recipe. The year I transferred all my handwritten cards and clippings, I also made copies of my cookbook for family and friends as Christmas gifts.

posted by williamsweyr on November 3rd 2009 at 9:06pm
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Great tip, williamsweyr! Thanks!

posted by magstermash on November 4th 2009 at 2:20am
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The recipe boxes show no sign of any inspiration from Joseph Cornell. The object in the last photo does, but it is not a recipe box.

posted by mirandabee on November 4th 2009 at 7:15am
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I love these. In this day and age, when so much of what we do is virtual, I am drawn to objects that are reminiscent of the days of handwritten letters and slow cooked foods. One of these boxes would be a perfect addition to my kitchen.

posted by tannerglass on November 4th 2009 at 7:45am
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I do have a couple of recipe boxes in addition to regular cookbooks and binders with printouts in plastic sleeves. I usually remember which recipes are in the boxes and which are elsewhere.

posted by Joan A. on November 4th 2009 at 9:42am
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Oh, and the boxes in the post are cool.

posted by Joan A. on November 4th 2009 at 9:43am
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I've been lucky to see Karen's art up close and it's wonderful. As great as technology is, it's never a permanent thing, and I can't think of a neater place to keep my handwritten recipe cards.

posted by ElysianFields on November 4th 2009 at 11:29am
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The misuse of the term "upcycled" bugs the crap out of me (probably because I spend too much time surfing Etsy).

These recipe boxes are not "upcycled". They are "decorated". They may be vintage or used recipe boxes which have had new decoration added to them, but they still are not "upcycled". An upcycled recipe box would be, for example, one built from salvaged wood. Or a tea tin repurposed as a recipe box. Something like that.

Oh, and to not be a negative nelly, I'll say that I'd really love a recipe box - my fridge is crusted with recipe printouts in ugly fonts or cluttered with website logos. It would be nice to have something a little more aesthetically pleasing and user friendly.

posted by the opoponax on November 4th 2009 at 11:43am
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Why do I think of Grey Gardens when I see a recipe box?

posted by spinsLPs on November 4th 2009 at 12:48pm
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these recipe boxes are really cool... i bet if i had one of them i would be better organized and also a better cook... this is far better than keeping my recipes in my computer because i always get cookie dough stuck in the keyboard... but it smells really good whenever i boot up... great boxes!

posted by markaplan on November 4th 2009 at 3:26pm
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Wow! Those boxes are too cool! I love all of the recycled elements! The one with the flattened spoons is my favorite! What a creative idea. I want to learn how to cook so that I can get an awesome recipe box from her! haha!

posted by PhriendlyK8 on November 4th 2009 at 3:29pm
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I love those boxes! I've been looking to get a recipe box for a while...seems like just the ticket ;)

Please. please. please. post your recipe for the whiskey cookies. They sound awesome (and especially fitting for my whiskey-loving family)!

posted by SarahBerneche on November 5th 2009 at 10:15am
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I would use the boxes for tea bags and utilize the binder method which is great for existing recipes and magazine tear-outs. For on-line recipes and articles, I LOVE (and cannot rave enough about) Evernote. (evernote.com)

It's a free service that let's you clip and store content found online. Create folders for recipes, design ideas, crafty thoughts. Accessible on your phone too, just look up the info and you'll never forget another ingredient while at the store.

posted by ksmile on November 5th 2009 at 11:26am
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I *definitely* needed a recipe box: I had internet print-outs and post-its all over my kitchen making the recipe I needed unnecessarily difficult to find. I re-purposed my bf's business cards and write out the recipes in shorthand. I think I'll move them to an old tea box I have.

posted by heartmignardise on November 5th 2009 at 1:29pm
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I've tried all methods of printouts, binders, etc over the years and all were inconvenient in some way.

My current scheme is that the binder and books are for the recipes to try. If the final product is good enough that I'd actually want to make it again and again only then do I put it on a recipe card and store it in the box. My recipe box itself is pretty plain and simple, it doesn't even have a lid, but I buy pretty recipe cards from etsy.

I'm pretty happy with this system so far as it makes it much easier to separate the recipes I'd pass on, recommend or make for events and occasions from those that I am waiting to try or have with only so so or poor results.

posted by bonjourmiette on November 5th 2009 at 2:36pm
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