Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (2024)

I've heard many differing opinions when it comes to creating an 'original recipe'. Some say an adjustment of three (or more) ingredients to a recipe you've adapted from a blog/cookbook/magazine/etc...results in your own original recipe. Others say that you have to travel back in a time using a time machine to before a recipe was published, then put your version out first. Most people can't time travel...so...that option is out the window.

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (1)

How Do You Create An Original Recipe?

My opinion would lie somewhere in the middle, while I may not necessarily agree that adapting a recipe by swapping out a few ingredients makes it totally 'brand new', I also understand that it's hard to make a dish 100% original. If creating original recipes in your kitchen is something you're interested in, but afraid to do, the most important thing, as with anything in this great culinary world, is to START SIMPLE. I wouldn't recommend popping by your local grocery store and picking up, oh, say some pork hock, an orange, eggplant, cayenne pepper and some ranch dressing, then getting home and thinking to yourself: 'Now, what should I do with this?' That probably won't end very well...

In my opinion, there are five fundamental things that really help a chef-at-home get a great start creating original recipes.

Five Fundamental Pieces To Creating A Recipe:

1. Individuals willing to become your kitchen lab rats - Having close friends or family (even a house cat if the recipe creation really goes south!) that you can sample your dishes on. For better or for worse, I am always inviting friends over for supper to taste test different inventions. I wouldn't recommend an entire meal of experiments, but sneaking in one course as a recipe 'test run' is a great way to get some feedback. Also, it helps if your friends/family are honest!

2. Learn from your mistakes - If you've always wanted to have a signature recipe of a particular dish, but it doesn't work out the first time, or second, or third, don't give up! Don't feel obligated to eat the whole thing either, but definitely don't give up! Food is meant to be experimented with and, much like other aspects of life, with successes come failures! Believe me, I have had some disastrousdishes along the way...like this really weird root beer chicken dish I made once. Don't ask.

3. Look for inspiration everywhere - For this point, I was just going to say 'read a lot of cookbooks, blogs, and all that jazz', but culinary inspiration comes from all places. A favourite cafe with amazing apple tarts, the smell of BBQ in the (dwindling) warm summer air, a spaghetti squash just begging to be roasted at the local grocery store. This may sound kind of cheesy, but all of these things that guide are senses can guide you in the kitchen too.

4. Don't use ingredients that you don't enjoy - I'm just going to out on a limb here and assume that everyone here likes olive oil and garlic, ok? If those are dislikes for anyone, you need to get over that as soon as possible, just saying! Anyway, part of sharing original recipes through your website is knowing that something works. If you're opting to use ingredients that you don't enjoy, just to impress someone or by request, or whatever the case may be, you're much less likely to want to cook it again. Everything needs a few test runs (I say three), to really become 'perfect' and who wants to cook something they don't like multiple times?

RELATED: Blogging 101: Exploring Ethnic Cooking

5. Know the basics - This kind of goes without saying, but knowing standard base recipes (like a basic biscuit) and general basic culinary techniques (like properly roasting garlic) are essential to recipe development. It's always great to have a solid foundation of kitchen skills. Now, I'm not talking about going out to seek some culinary training. What's nice (about the internet) nowadays (man, I sound old) is the fact that you can Google pretty much anything. Even YouTube has millions of step-by-step video tutorials. Most of your cooking-related questions can be answered by a few clicks on your keyboard!

A Basic Vinaigrette Starting Point:

Sticking with my 'know the basics' mentality, why not start experimenting with vinaigrettes? Let it be known that the standard ratio for a simple vinaigrette dressing is 2 parts oil to 1 part vinegar. Consider it a blank canvas that's already pretty oily...Now, start thinking of different ingredients that you like that can be added to the mix...Orange zest? Fresh basil? Dill? Strawberries? Jalapenos? The combinations are pretty much endless, and I haven't even mentioned the different types of oil and vinegar you could use. Add-in a touch of salt and pepper, and a chopped garlic clove or two (going back to my 'you have to like olive oil and garlic or else' theory) and you have your very own one-of-a-kind vinaigrette.

See, who knew delicious could be so simple?

More Reading:

  • Cooking Exotic Food - Making Recipes Your Own
  • Using a Simple Innovation Process in Recipe Development
  • Recipe Development as a Profession
  • Recipe Development 101: Calling a Pot of Soup Your Own

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipe was written by Dan Clapson, a food writer based out of Calgary, Alberta. In addition to writing for Avenue Magazine and Food Network Canada, he blogs about his culinary adventures at www.dansgoodside.com. When he's not eating, he can be found teaching university students how to cook through his non-for-profit cooking program, Start From Scratch. He likes to eat pickles out of the jar. Twitter: @dansgoodside

14 Comments

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (8) Amy B
Reply

Nice article, Dan!
I’m so pleased to see how this site is coming along. Exciting stuff!

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (9) Cindy D
Reply

Good rules to live by!

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (10) Valerie Lugonja
Reply

Love this kind of post. Gorgeous photos of simple food and far too many people don’t know how to make a vinaigrette! Bravo, Dan!
Love your Goodside!
😉
V

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (11) Elaine Wilson
Reply

Lovely! Great tips and information –

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (12) Paula
Reply

For me, anything that starts with pork hock isn’t go to end well unless it’s in a pot of home-made baked beans! LOL Seriously though, some very tips. I expect to see a rash of Homemade Vinaigrette posts on the blogosphere come Monday 😉

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (14) Justin
Reply

Original receipes? I would agree that you would have to get into a time machine to find one. Almost every single restaurant out there today is using recipes borrowed from somewhere else. Take a recipe and tinker with it a little, make it yours. As long as its not word for word the same recipe that is already published, you have yourself your own “original”.

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (15) General Life Update…If You’re Interested… « Dan's Good Side
Reply

[…] I was humbled when the trio asked me to contribute to their site by means of a series of recipe development posts. I’ll be posting monthly, give or take,touching on everything from basic salad dressings to roasting koala…Ok, maybe not that random. Anyway, you can check out my first piece, 5 fundamentals for recipe development here… […]

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (16) Patricia
Reply

Back when I was first learning to cook, I regularly threw out pots of food because they tasted so bad! I no longer throw food out, but I still don’t really know how to choose items that will taste good together, except from past experience. I’m more cautious about going out on a limb. I also have The Flavor Bible, which lists items that taste good together and consult it frequently. But how does one know, without relying on the experts, which foods go well together? How does one know when to use the rules of balancing flavors — acid/sweet, and how much of each to use, for example? Are there other rules I don’t know about?

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (17) Louise
Reply

Personally, what I do is I take small samples of each ingredient, for this example, let’s go with dried lavender and vanilla, and eat them at the same time. I try to ignore all the parts that can be easily fixed, like Vanilla (extract)’s bitterness, or dried lavenders strong flavor, and focus on whether or not it tastes good together. Of course, there are many problems with this strategy, but it is just one of the many methods.

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (18) Edimara
Reply

Hi Dan, greetings from a brazilian living in Germany. Great article because I see my own learn process (as a hobby cooker) on it. Agree with the point all new receipts were anyhow inspired by someone, somewhere. A mix of intermulticulturality and culinary: interculinarity🙂. Excited to read more of your articles.

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (19) Supriya Kutty
Reply

Very nice knowledge and tip for to creating your own original recipes very well detailed information and explanation very useful tip to prepare our own recipes inspiring and motivating post enjoyed reading Thanks for sharing.

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (20) André F.
Reply

Interesting, but not quite what i was looking for… i want to improve recipes, way too often recipes have ingredients rounded to some nice numbers. I experiment all the time with gluten-free baking. i have some successes ( cakes such as my christmas log…), but a nice baguette, pita, wrap still are nit “pinned down”. i am looking for some systematic approach to improve recipes. Example: one gf bread i am doing these days is 1c white rice flour, 1c brown rice flour, 3/4c tapioca starch… for 2c water… Really! usually optimisation does not result in nice round numbers… then i want to “play ” with the flours… which one is better? ( rice (which kind); oat, cassava, buckwheat, millet… but NOT sorghum as the smallest amount is detected at the back of my throat, similar with quinoa flour…)… well… you get the idea of my challenge 😉

Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (21) Matrix
Reply

@Andre F. Always ask yourself 2 questions: What did I do right? and What would I change next time?
Starting from a recipe, for inspiration, I make lists of potential substitutions. Types of flour? Types of sugar? Herbs/spice mix? For baking especially, change one thing at a time. Keep notes on changes to ingredients, amounts, cooking method, time, temp, as well as appearance and taste.
An example: I’ve been trying to perfect pumpkin pie for years. The recipe on the can was just ok, so I started by bumping up the spice amounts, gradually adding in some ginger and a pinch of cayenne. Next, I tried different crusts. The plain flour crust… boring. Substitute graham cracker crust. Store-bought vs. homemade. Then I found a recipe by a chef I greatly respect. Great pie but wrong spice mix! OK, so work on custard next. His called for 2 whole eggs and an extra yolk. That yolk was what was needed to get velvet texture and custard that didn’t break up looking like cottage cheese. And it didn’t crack on top while baking! His recipe is still sweeter than I want (using sweetened condensed milk). So i need to play with ratio of sweetened condensed milk to evaporated milk or evap milk and sugar ratios. I’m keeping good notes and it’s nearly perfect.

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Recipe Development 101: 5 Fundamental Keys to Creating Your Own Original Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What are the basics of recipe development? ›

Selecting high-quality ingredients, cooking and testing recipes, writing clear instructions, and paying attention to detail are all fundamentals of recipe development. You can design dishes that are tasty, attractive, and easy to make by following the tips in this guide.

What are the 5 things a recipe will tell you? ›

  • Yield. The yield tells the number and size of servings the recipe will make.
  • List of Ingredients & Amounts.
  • Step By Step Directions for Mixing & Handling.
  • Equipment (Container Size & Type)
  • Temperature & Time.

How do you come up with an original recipe? ›

  1. Experience and experimentation.
  2. First, you make things by following the recipes. Figure out what you liked and what you didn't. Start tweaking the recipes you follow to make them taste better to you. ...
  3. Then, read a lot of recipes for the same dish. It helps if you have an idea of what the dish should taste like.
Dec 17, 2020

How to invent your own recipe? ›

Tips to keep in mind when writing recipes:
  1. List ingredients in chronological order. ...
  2. Separate ingredients for major steps in a recipe. ...
  3. List steps in order, keeping instructions short and to the point. ...
  4. Give specifics about doneness. ...
  5. Include storage suggestions. ...
  6. Offer extra methods or substitutions (when tested).
Nov 19, 2020

What are the key features of a recipe? ›

A good recipe has two parts
  1. Ingredients listed in the order of their use.
  2. Exact measurements (amounts) of each listed ingredient.
  3. Simple, step-by-step directions (steps listed in sequence)
  4. Cooking time.
  5. Cooking temperature.
  6. Size of correct cooking equipment to use.
  7. Number and size of servings the recipe makes.

What are the 7 common recipe categories? ›

Recipe Categories
  • Breakfast recipes.
  • Lunch recipes.
  • Dinner recipes.
  • Appetizer recipes.
  • Salad recipes.
  • Main-course recipes.
  • Side-dish recipes.
  • Baked-goods recipes.

What are the 5 things before you start cooking? ›

Before you start cooking, here are some simple things you can do to ensure you have a smooth and efficient cook.
  • 1) Give yourself space. ...
  • 2) Get all of your equipment ready for the recipe you're cooking. ...
  • 3) Gather all your ingredients ready on your workbench. ...
  • 5) Secure your chopping board. ...
  • 6) Keep a rubbish bowl nearby.

What is the most important part of recipe? ›

The 5 essential components of a recipe are:
  • Recipe Title.
  • Number of Servings.
  • Preparation Time, Cooking Time, Total Time.
  • Ingredient List.
  • Step-by-Step Instructions.
Mar 28, 2023

What are the 7 components or parts required of a standardized recipe? ›

Here are the main components of a standardized recipe:
  • Name of the menu item.
  • Total Yield or Portions and Portion Size created by producing the recipe.
  • List of all measured ingredients.
  • Step-by-step instructions on how to prepare, cook, and assemble the recipe.
  • Plating instructions and garnishes.

What should you always do first to your recipe? ›

Start with the ingredient list. List ingredients with exact measurements and in the order in which they will be used. Leaving out ingredients is the most common mistake in recipe writing.

What is the first thing you should do when making a recipe? ›

First step, of course, is to write down the recipe. Test your recipe multiple times (experts recommend at least twice) and make copious notes. Finally, build a clear draft that has all the information to help your readers cook it at home. Arrange your recipe in a format that readers can easily follow.

Can you legally own a recipe? ›

Recipes themselves are generally not protected by copyright. This is because they are considered to be a collection of facts and ideas, which are not copyrightable. However, the expression of the recipe can be protected by copyright. This includes the written instructions.

How to sell a homemade recipe? ›

Some recipe creators sell individual recipes on Internet marketplaces such as Etsy and Ebay. Local chefs might be interested in purchasing your recipe, and organizations that compile recipe books frequently seek new recipes. If you have several recipes, you might consider writing your own recipe book or ebook.

Can someone patent a recipe? ›

The short answer is yes – but it must be unique! Several conditions must be met for an invention to be patentable. Importantly, the recipe must be novel, involve an inventive step, and produce a useful result. It should also be non-obvious to someone with skill in the art.

How are food recipes developed? ›

At a high level, recipe development requires two distinct processes:
  1. Exploration: The process wherein a chef explores varying techniques, food genres, ingredients, and influences. ...
  2. Exploitation: The process wherein a chef hones the particular techniques, ingredients, and flavor profiles that define a final dish.
Feb 18, 2021

What are the 3 main parts of a recipe briefly explain? ›

A recipe really only needs either ingredients or directions ( the preparation method) to be considered complete. At a minimum most recipes have a title, ingredients list, and preparation method.

What is the importance of recipe development? ›

A good recipe can make a brand stand out. Food recipe development is the process of turning an idea food related into a finished product or dish done by trained food stylist or home economist. The recipe might be required for a restaurant menu, cookbook, product intended for sale or special event.

What are the principles of recipe modification? ›

➢ Most recipes can be made healthier without changing the taste or texture of the food. Techniques include reducing the amount of fat and sugar, substituting ingredient(s), deleting ingredient(s), changing the method of preparation, and changing the portion size.

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