Woman Gatekeeps the 'Secret Family Recipe', Refusing to Share With Her Sister-in-Law to Secure Her Cake's Superiority at Thanksgiving

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    Cheezburger Image 10413581824
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    AITA for refusing to share my secret family recipe with my sister-in-law, even though she's hosting Thanksgiving?
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    I (28F) have a secret family recipe for a cheesecake that's been passed down for generations. My grandmother taught it to me when I was a kid, and I've always been the one to make it for special family occasions, especially Thanksgiving. It's become kind of a tradition.
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    This year, my sister-in-law (32F) is hosting Thanksgiving for the first time. She's excited and has been planning everything in detail. A few weeks ago, she asked if I could share the recipe so she could make the cheesecake herself this year. I
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    told her I'm happy to bring the dessert as usual, but I don't want to share the recipe. It's something special to me, and I only plan on passing it down to my kids one day. She was upset and said I was
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    being selfish, that it's "just a cheesecake," and that I should be willing to contribute by sharing the recipe since she's hosting. My brother (her husband) called me later, saying I was being difficult and that it wouldn't hurt to let her make it this year.
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    I still feel like this recipe is part of my family's tradition, and I'm not comfortable sharing it yet. But now I'm wondering if I'm being too possessive or making too big a deal out of it. AITA?
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    Snarkylguana • 7h ago • If she's going to insist that it's "JUST" cheesecake, she can find her own recipe online. That response alone would be enough for me to not give it to her.
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    Had she expressed that she understands how special it is to you and expressed her desire to be involved in a family tradition, maybe it could've been a conversation. NTA
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    00 SkullCrusherRI • 6h ago My grandmother made a special show of it every time one of her grandsons would get married. She would take all of our favorite recipes, put them in a cookbook and give it
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    to our significant other AFTER we were married. If she married in, she's in the family, why not allow your brother to enjoy the cheesecake that is also a part of HIS family.
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    YTA imo. It's not like this is just a girlfriend. This is your brothers wife, she is family now and hoarding a recipe for no reason whatsoever other than it's special to you is childish at best imo.
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    vtretiree23 8h ago NTA Since it's "only a cheesecake, give her a cheesecake recipe." It's okay to honor family traditions.
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    Ducatirules 6h ago You're not obliged to give the recipe but I've always thought secret family recipes were stupid unless it's your business
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    flexisexymaxi • 7h ago • Technically NTA because you can do whatever you want with your recipe. But I think in general hoarding recipes is a thing to do. I always share mine. What's the point in keeping them to yourself? Is the only thing that makes you special the cheesecake?
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    OkHedgewitch • 6h ago • I still feel like this recipe is part of my family's tradition So your brother's wife isn't part of the family? Do they know that?
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    • Mrs Jingles0729 4h ago • YTA I'm sure you're making Grandma really proud by keeping a recipe away from your brother and making his family feel bad. Hope the power trip is worth more than having a positive relationship with them.
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    • bigfoot509 4h ago YTA it's a recipe, not gold bars Other people making that recipe doesn't cheapen the recipe at all In reality that exact recipe is made by millions of other people already
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    Really it just shows you don't consider you SIL as actual family Are the recipes worth damaging your relationship with your brother?
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    Rattimus 5h ago • • You're certainly not obligated to share this recipe, but I think not doing so would be a pretty crappy thing to do. You are making it very clear to your SIL that she isn't family, and I'd
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    guess that this is more about you not liking her for whatever reason than anything else. I get it, it's a family recipe that you feel good about knowing. Do you really think your grandma hoarded that knowledge and
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    outright refused to share it with anyone? Maybe that's the case, but I'd guess your grandma's recipe is likely known by many, she probably shared it with friends you aren't even aware of.
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    I'd take this as a bonding moment with your SIL. Offer to have her come over and show her how to make it. I personally think you don't want that, though, and hey, maybe she and doesn't deserve it, but, she is married to your
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    brother and presumably she'll be around for the rest of your life. Is it really worth alienating her and making her feel like she's not part of the family over a recipe???? NTA, but, it's borderline in my mind.
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    Bearjew 16 • 6h ago YTA, what do you gain by not sharing a recipe? It's a FAMILY recipe and she is family. You're treating it like it's your recipe, not the family's
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    anonadvicewanted 5h ago • ESH. She for not accepting your no, and not valuing the tradition and your feelings about the recipe by calling it "just a cheesecake." You for essentially telling SIL you don't consider her family enough to allow her to share the tradition.

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