Copyright Your Recipe
By: Joanne | June 23, 2009 | Category: Home and Family
What’s your secret recipe? There’s that one dish that you make better than anyone else. Is it your chili, or your barbecue, or your amazing pie?
I really enjoy cooking, but I’m not very creative in the kitchen – I’m just good at picking out good recipes and following them. Sometimes I like to make healthy dishes with fresh vegetables, I also like regional dishes and sometimes just a yummy dessert like Mamie Eisenhower’s chocolate fudge. I don’t mind that I don’t create the recipe; I just like to serve and eat tasty food.
If you’re a creative chef, you can protect your recipes and share your masterpieces with the rest of us. Did you know that you can copyright a recipe? It’s true. Better yet, maybe you’ve got enough recipes to fill a whole cookbook. Let me know when it’s published, I’m always looking for a great, new recipe.
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This should be good =]
For recipes on sites like:
http://www.ichef.com/
can you not just copy a recipe and change it slightly? or is that against copyright laws..
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"Rice Salad" could not be protected. "Aunt Jane's All American Supreme Rice Delight" could probably get some sort of protection. It's all in how it's presented.
In addition, the instructions you give for making a dish could be protected if they are not just generic directions. "Preheat oven to 350*" would not be protected if all similar dishes require the preheating. To further extend the protection, you could do things such offer tips to make the creation of the dish easier or spice up the presentation of the dish. Many recipe writers add/change two or more ingredients to a standard dish and call it their own.
And any photographs you take of your creation can be copyrighted.
But remember, even if you have a copyright, it may not be any good. If you apply for a copyright from a recipe you found in Aunt Jane's attic after she died, it could be that she got it out of a publication that had been copyrighted. And the publication of the recipe may have been so long ago , it is now in the public domain. Either way, you lose.
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Kind of corny, but a definite HOME RUN in my book
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