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Man Brings MIL’s “Secret” Apple Pie To Potluck, Gets Accused Of Stealing

by Katy Nguyen
February 1, 2026
in Social Issues

Cooking is often a way people show love, especially in families where food plays a central role in gathering and comfort. But when a dish carries decades of meaning, even good intentions can be misread.

After a recent family scare, one man offered to help by bringing a dessert everyone knew well. What he didn’t expect was that his contribution would stir up old boundaries around tradition, ownership, and pride.

A moment meant to be comforting turned tense, leaving hurt feelings and lingering resentment behind.

Man Brings MIL’s “Secret” Apple Pie To Potluck, Gets Accused Of Stealing
Not the actual photo

'AITA For "stealing" my MIL's heirloom recipe and bringing it to a potluck?'

I (38M) have always enjoyed cooking and baking. My wife (37F), on the other hand, does not.

So I do probably 95% of the cooking in our house, and I like to think I'm pretty good at it.

My MIL (70F) is also an exceptional cook, and we've both shared recipes with each other over the years.

But there is one recipe that she refuses to share with me, her apple pie.

She says it's her great-grandmother's recipe and has been in the family for over 100 years.

It's amazing, literally the perfect pie. After years of her making it and refusing to share the recipe, I stopped asking.

But I started experimenting on my own, trying to reverse engineer it and recreate it.

I did this by taking a slice home every chance I could so that I could use it as a taste test.

It took a lot of test runs and failures, but this year is the closest I have ever gotten to recreating it.

It's not 100% there yet, but it is damn close. I know I'm still missing something, but I haven't figured out that final piece yet.

My wife's family had a potluck get-together this past weekend because MIL had a fall (she's fine, just bruised).

She was just kind of scared by the whole ordeal; she had to go to the hospital to make sure nothing was broken.

She wanted people to get together so that she could have some comfort.

Since she's not able to do too much physically, I offered to bake an apple pie and bring it.

So I made an apple pie as close to MIL's recipe as I possibly could. Again, not a 100% recreation, but really close.

When people started having desserts, a few people made comments about how amazing

it was that MIL was able to still cook her apple pie after what happened.

MIL looked confused and said that she didn't make her apple pie. I said that I made it and tried to recreate MIL's recipe.

MIL said I couldn't have made it exactly like hers because she never gives out that recipe.

I told her I didn't use her recipe; I've just been trying to recreate it the past few years.

She tried a slice and immediately accused me of stealing her recipe somehow.

I reiterated that I never got her recipe, I've just been trying to reverse engineer it, and that

I know it's close, but it's not there yet, and something is still missing.

But she was convinced that I stole her recipe somehow, and it started a fairly big argument that ended with me being asked to leave.

My wife ended up staying behind to "calm things down" before coming home. When she got back, she was pissed at me too.

She said I should have known better than to bring something like that when MIL is not in good shape.

She said I got MIL all wound up and irritated, all so that I could try and boost my ego and try to make MIL look bad.

She said I should know how much that recipe means to MIL and that it's one thing to try and

recreate it at home, but I was totally in the wrong to bring it to a potluck like that when people

are expecting MIL to make the apple pie. Mind you, my wife was 100% aware I was bringing that pie. ​

EDIT: I seriously and honestly thought this would be a nice way to honor MIL. There was no malicious intent behind my actions.

Some of you are incredibly cynical to attempt to attach desires of revenge or malice when I was

just trying to do something nice for MIL when she's feeling down.

Clearly, my execution was poor, and it was received badly. But I had ZERO intention of "showing up"

to MIL or trying to replace her recipe. I was just trying to do something nice. ​

EDIT 2: I think coming here was a mistake. Some of you are seriously mean people.

I was just trying to do something nice, and you're making me feel like a total POS.

Yes, I made a mistake in judgment, but it wasn't malicious. I think that's enough internet for today.

Family recipes are more than a list of ingredients; they are living heirlooms that carry emotional meaning, tradition, and shared history.

Culinary anthropologists and food culture scholars describe heirloom recipes as nostalgic time capsules that evoke memories of gatherings, ancestors, and significant moments in family life.

These recipes act as connective tissue between generations, preserving tradition across time and place.

In this case, the OP’s intention was to honour his mother-in-law (MIL) by recreating her iconic apple pie for a family potluck.

He didn’t actively obtain the recipe from MIL, he reverse-engineered it by tasting the pie and experimenting in his own kitchen.

Reverse engineering a recipe is a common creative process among cooks and chefs, even outside family contexts, and is generally understood as a form of culinary interpretation rather than intellectual theft.

That said, within families, recipes often carry a symbolic story of heritage and belonging that goes beyond taste alone.

When heirloom recipes are shared voluntarily, they become part of a shared family narrative that strengthens bonds between relatives.

Research into family folklore shows that traditions, including recipes, are often transmitted through multiple family members over time, and members may choose to adopt and adapt these traditions as part of their own identity and contribution to the family lore.

The emotional importance of recipes is reflected in the way families talk about them.

Not just instructions, ingredients, and measurements, but the story attached to a family dish, who first made it, when it was made, and what it meant to those gathered around the table, often forms part of the cherished family narrative.

When someone outside that tradition recreates a highly treasured dish, even with good intentions, it can unsettle deeply held perceptions of ownership and meaning.

In neutral terms, three major elements help explain why the OP’s actions backfired:

1. The emotional value of family heirloom recipes: Family recipes are tied to identity, memory, and belonging.

Making or sharing them communicates inclusion in that lineage of tradition, and when someone recreates a treasured version without being part of the shared heritage narrative, it can feel like a breach of that emotional bond.

2. Perceived ownership and consent: While the OP didn’t have the actual written recipe, the MIL likely felt a sense of ownership over the experience of her pie.

Heirloom recipes are often taught and passed down intentionally, not simply decoded by taste.

Because she did not voluntarily share the specifics, the MIL interpreted the recreation, especially in a social context where she wasn’t present or expected to represent it, as taking something that belonged to her.

3. Context and timing: The potluck occurred because the MIL was physically vulnerable after her fall.

Social events like this often centre around shared expectations, in this case, that she would contribute the dish most associated with her skill.

Bringing a near-replica in her absence may have unintentionally shifted focus away from her role in family tradition to the OP’s interpretation of it.

Experts in family traditions would suggest that intention alone isn’t always enough to prevent hurt; understanding and respecting the symbolic meaning of heirlooms within a family matters just as much.

In situations like this, alternatives that might honour tradition while minimising conflict include:

Asking permission before preparing a dish intimately associated with someone else’s legacy, explaining the intention to honour rather than replace them.

Framing any recreated dish as a tribute, perhaps presenting it alongside a personal anecdote about why the OP admires the original recipe.

Creating a space for collaboration where the MIL’s dish and the OP’s version coexist, allowing family members to celebrate continuity and innovation together.

Viewed through this lens, the OP’s underlying intent, to give comfort through food during a difficult time for the MIL, was understandable.

But the emotional weight of unshared family traditions and the symbolic significance of heirloom recipes means that sharing intentions as well as outcomes matters deeply in family settings.

In other words, this wasn’t just about apple pie. It was about the shared meaning of that pie within a family narrative, and the unspoken rules around how and when traditions are passed versus interpreted.

The hurt reaction reflects not malice, but the emotional importance families place on heirloom recipes as markers of continuity, identity, and belonging.

 

These are the responses from Reddit users:

This group leaned YTA/ESH, not because OP recreated the recipe, but because he publicly showcased it in front of the very person who guarded it.

UnusuallyScented − Soft YTA/ESH. You knew it was a point of pride for her, hence her strange refusal to share the recipe.

You should have easily made the next mental leap, that bringing 'her pie' to a family event would not be well received.

You basically said: "f\\k you, I'm getting the recipe anyway!!"

She is definitely the weird one here, but you really should have known not to poke that particular bear.

ETA: I don't blame you for reverse engineering the pie. I'm a fair cook and consider anything I taste/see to be fair game for me to try.

You should have just kept it (pie) away from MIL.

chelsea8794 − I'm going with YTA, not because you recreated the recipe, but because you took the pie

to the potluck, knowing how much this elderly lady valued and took pride in preparing this recipe for the family.

It sounds like this was her one thing. From working with elderly people, I've seen many who feel like

their life is over, they have nothing to contribute, and feel left out/alone. This was something that made her

happy; it was something that made her feel like she was still special, and you had to go take that from her.

[Reddit User] − YTA, not for recreating the recipe but for taking it to a potluck with your MIL's family.

That's not cool. You know that pie is her thing. If you want to make it, make it for your own

family and friends who won't think MIL was the one who made it.

definitelynotjava − YTA, did you really think a woman who has been keeping the pie recipe secret

for years would be happy you kept sequestering pie pieces away till you figured it out?

Did you think she would be impressed that when she, someone who clearly loves cooking,

couldn't make a favorite dish, you whipped out your newly acquired knowledge?

Great job on bonding with your MIL over cooking. Even better job burning that relationship to the ground in one go.

BeeYehWoo − Diplomatically, I think you are a fool for instigating this argument with your MiL

about something she holds very near and dear to her heart.

Yes its a silly recipe and her stranglehold on it, but it's important to her.

You could have accomplished the same thing by just making your pie and not saying you were trying to copy her recipe.

People could have asked, and all you had to do was be mum about it while claiming you baked it.

I think you deliberately poked the bear and earned an earful. I think your MiL's argument was stupid,

and her accusation was baseless. I also like to cook and have reverse-engineered recipes, too.

The problem is, I think you knew your MiL would get a rise out of this and wanted to show off a bit.

I think you could have handled this so much better without rubbing in your MiL's face and still would have had people appreciating your pie.

What was more important to you? The accuracy and closeness of your pie recipe and the subsequent appreciation of your MiL's reaction?

I think you failed to know and predict your audience. I'm voting for ESH.

[Reddit User] − YTA. If you had made and taken this pie to anything else that didn't involve your in-laws, you'd be fine.

But you know exactly what you did by doing this.

This group firmly landed on NTA, dismissing the idea of a “sacred” recipe altogether.

spectre893 − Bruh NTA. I find the very concept of "heirloom recipe" to be ridiculous. Do they have a legal patent on it?

How can anyone blame you for making the best possible apple pie you could possibly think of?

What were you supposed to do, bring an inferior apple pie on purpose? If anything, MIL should be flattered.

Also, shame on the wife for turning 180^(o) after being in the know about the pie the entire time.

If "you should know how much that recipe meant to MIL," then as her daughter, she should've

known doubly as much and said something about it.

EDIT: misc kinda unrelated questions. I know this is out of the scope of the thread, but I can't help myself, sorry.

-How does the heirloom part work exactly?

-Since you're also part of the family, aren't you allowed to have it? Or is it restricted to blood family only?

-Will it only be passed on to your wife and your children, and you will remain excluded forever?

-Does your wife not know the recipe?

-Would your MIL not give the wife the recipe?

-If your wife receives the recipe, will she be expected to keep it hidden from you?

-Is only one person at a time allowed to make The Apple Pie™?

Like, when/if your wife receives the recipe, will your MIL stop making it?

Or is she planning to guard it with her life, only relinquishing it in her will or something? Man, so many questions.

Cowaii_Bitties − NTA. Now post the recipe so Reddit can determine whether it's the perfect apple pie or not.

Obi-Juan_Valdez − NTA, it’s a f__king pie recipe, not nuclear weapons plans.

joppaloppagus − I'll never understand the whole "secret recipe" thing. ..

[Reddit User] − NTA. It’s pie, Jesus.

Several commenters redirected blame toward OP’s wife.

uwe0x123 − Obvious NTA. Your wife, though, is acting like an AH for not having your back and getting angry at you.

She knew you were bringing the pie. If it was such a bad thing to bring the pie, why didn't she warn you?

Just curious, has MIL shared the recipe with anyone else?

Or does she want the 100-year-old recipe to die with her? Also, would you share your recipe with me? :)

I'll share the apple pie recipe that I use (it gets lots of compliments, but I love baking and am always interested in learning & experimenting.)

A smaller group wasn’t interested in judgment as much as motivation.

pnutbuttercups56 − INFO: Why did you want to recreate the pie? She doesn't want you to have the recipe.

I'm curious because this comes up a lot on this sub, and I want to know why people do it.

Someone is proud of the recipe. It's like a family thing, or they just pride themselves on cooking and don't want to share the recipe.

What is the motivation to keep trying to make it and to bring it to an event where other people are willing comment on it?

Some commenters accepted that MIL’s behavior was unreasonable and that OP lacked diplomacy.

[Reddit User] − NTA. It's a f__king pie.

SweatyFLMan1130 − It's. A. F__king. Recipe. Idk why so many people are getting all n__ty at OP about it.

Food and cultural influences of food are meant to be shared.

The petty ass jealousy around old school baking contests and sewing bees need to be left back in the mid 20th century, where they belong.

MIL isn't making a profit off this, and there's nothing she's losing out on.

In fact, she's gained a child through marriage who's willing to go through hell and high water to

make the best g__damn pie they can while her actual daughter is not interested in that matriarchal inheritance.

Sorry, but if this is enough to set off the MIL, she's got some really screwed-up priorities. As for OP, I absolutely say you're NTA.

But tbh if they're gonna be this petty, and you want to just smooth things over, do the mea culpa

to the family and leave it at that until MIL finally drops. Who knows, maybe she'll leave y'all the recipe when she dies 😆.

The Redditor didn’t steal anything, but intention doesn’t always soften impact, especially when someone is already shaken and vulnerable.

Was bringing the pie a genuine tribute that went sideways, or an avoidable misstep that should’ve been obvious in hindsight?

Where do you draw the line between admiration and overstepping? Curious to hear how you’d handle it.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Katy Nguyen

Katy Nguyen

Hey there! I’m Katy Nguyễn, a writer at Dailyhighlight.com. I’m a woman in my 30s with a passion for storytelling and a degree in Journalism. My goal is to craft engaging, heartfelt articles that resonate with our readers, whether I’m diving into the latest lifestyle trends, exploring travel adventures, or sharing tips on personal growth. I’ve written about everything from cozy coffee shop vibes to navigating career changes with confidence. When I’m not typing away, you’ll likely find me sipping a matcha latte, strolling through local markets, or curled up with a good book under fairy lights. I love sunrises, yoga, and chasing moments of inspiration.

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