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She Got MIL’s Signature Dessert Recipe, Then SIL Started Calling It ‘Mine’

by Sunny Nguyen
November 15, 2025
in Social Issues

Grief brings out memories, casseroles, and sometimes a full-blown dessert war.

In this story, a woman loses her beloved mother-in-law, then inherits something priceless that does not fit in a will envelope. Her MIL’s handwritten recipes. One of them is a legendary family dessert, the dish everyone waits for at gatherings.

The MIL refused to share that recipe for years, then finally passed it to OP shortly before she died, along with copies for two grandkids. That dessert took center stage at the repast after the funeral, and again at a later family event hosted by OP’s sister-in-law.

Now the SIL calls it “my dessert”, demands the recipe every time, and acts like she already owns it. OP feels that insults her MIL’s memory, especially because MIL never chose to share it with this particular daughter-in-law while she was alive.

Now, read the full story:

She Got MIL’s Signature Dessert Recipe, Then SIL Started Calling It ‘Mine’
Not the actual photoAITA for refusing to share a recipe with my SIL?

My beloved MIL passed away recently. She had a few signature recipes that she always brought to family gatherings. One of them is a very unique dessert.

I asked for the recipe for years and she would never share it.

She finally passed the recipes down to me not long before she passed away, and I made all of them to share with friends and family at the repast meal...

I also made the dessert one other time to bring to a family gathering SIL was hosting. My SIL loves the dessert.

She keeps calling it “her dessert” and demanding I share the recipe with her every time we see each other.

I feel like if MIL wanted her to have it she would have shared it with her, and the fact that she’s already claiming the dessert

as her own instead of calling it the name MIL assigned to it is disrespectful to her memory.

MIL did not specifically mention whether or not she was ok with me sharing said recipes. She did also share the recipes with my stepdaughter (15) and one other grandchild...

Both agree that I should not share the recipes with SIL.

My husband thinks I’m being a little petty and it’s not something I should start a family feud over. This is his brother’s wife and his mother’s recipes so I...

Edit: I do feel the need to add a little context here.

This is NOT my MIL’s daughter.
It’s her daughter in law.

I wasn’t bringing my stepdaughter and niece into it as support for my argument, but as proof the recipes has already been handed down to the next generation by MIL...

My sister in law was not at all close with my MIL because she treated her horribly, which is most likely the reason she didn’t give her the recipes.

I did get one reply here that was actually constructive and I may change my mind about sharing the recipe eventually. I do realize it’s not MY recipe. I feel...

Typically I’m not a recipe gatekeeper. I have shared my own late mother’s recipes far and wide, including with the SIL in question.

I just didn’t like the way she demanded to have it and claimed it as her own instead of putting due respect on my late MIL’s name.

Final edit: I’m going to answer a few questions and try my best to set a few things straight, then I’m gonna turn notifications off. First of all thank you...

Also, thank you to the people who understood the sentimental value of these recipes.

Some of you gave me some good ideas for how and when I want to share the recipes, and yes, I do plan on sharing them.

First of all, yes, my niece (19) is SIL’s stepdaughter. BIL, SIL and 19 are on a timeout right now. I will not go any further into that, than to...

SIL is well aware of the name of the dessert, and who all the recipes were shared with.

I have not clearly communicated how offend I am over her claiming the dessert as her own, but I do plan on having the conversation privately.

That said, my SIL is not a terrible person. I actually do love her too, and have shared many many recipes with her and she with me.

Water under the bridge between her and MIL had nothing to do with me.

My husband is reading this thread also and wanted me to make it clear that we don’t hate each other!

We honestly believes she was given a difficult choice to make, but she did the right thing, even thought it was hurtful to MIL.

She wound up where she was supposed to be! He also would like for it to be known that his mother was sometimes intentionally difficult. (In case that wasn’t obvious!...

He says that he believes she ultimately left the decision up to me because she trusted me to do the right thing.

I believe sharing the recipes the right way could be a wholesome way of healing some generational trauma, and may be the best way to honor her legacy of love.

My gut reaction: this is not really about sugar, flour, and eggs.

You lost someone you loved. Her recipes feel like the last physical thread that ties you to her kitchen, her laugh, her way of loving people through food.

Then someone who treated her badly starts staking a claim and calling that dessert “mine”. Of course your hackles went up.

I like that by the end, you already shifted from guarding to planning “the right way” to share. That detail says a lot. You want to protect your MIL’s memory without turning her legacy into a control tool.

That balance sits right at the heart of this story.

Now let’s talk about why this dessert hits so deep.

Family recipes live at a strange intersection of love, nostalgia and control.

Psychologists describe how early food memories shape our emotional lives far into adulthood. Susan Krauss Whitbourne wrote in Psychology Today that childhood food memories influence you “in ways you never realized”, because those meals carry the emotions of the people who served them.

So when your MIL finally handed you that dessert recipe, she did not just pass along a set of instructions. She passed a symbol of trust.

Other researchers look at nostalgic food and find that it can lift mood and ease low states when people feel sad or disconnected. A 2024 paper on nostalgia and food noted that family recipes often help people “satisfy nostalgic feelings” and improve quality of life. Cooking those dishes for the repast after her funeral probably felt like a way to hold her in the room.

Food psychologists also talk about how physical taste and smell unlock memories quickly. Paul Rozin, a psychology professor who studies food, says that food can trigger memories of past meals and that food feels “special” because it is so intimate and social. Your MIL’s dessert now functions almost like a photo album that you eat.

The attachment side of this gets real too. An analysis on family recipes and wellbeing notes that recipes can act like “transitional objects” that connect people to lost loved ones and support emotional security. So when your SIL insists on calling it “her dessert”, you do not just hear a label. You hear someone yanking at your last secure thread to this woman.

Now, zoom out. This is not a niche quirk. One recent survey of 5,000 Americans found that 55 percent have a treasured family recipe passed down through generations, and many say those dishes carry heritage and identity. Your family sits right inside that majority. The dessert is part of the family story.

So do you have to share it?

Etiquette experts actually acknowledge both sides of the “secret recipe” debate. A Delish article on recipe sharing quoted an etiquette coach who said that, in some families, sharing a recipe feels like a serious tradition break and that keeping a special ingredient secret is “perfectly fine”. You can hold a boundary, especially just after a loss.

At the same time, other writers frame sharing recipes as a way to extend a loved one’s legacy. One piece on passing down recipes describes them as “precious” because they hold memories of the person who made them, and says that sharing them lets those memories live on in new kitchens.

You actually land in the middle. You already share your own late mother’s recipes widely. You love food as love. Your hesitation here comes from context.

Your SIL had a bad relationship with your MIL. She now demands a recipe, calls the dessert hers, and ignores the name your MIL chose. That behavior feels like a rewrite of history. It also brushes past your grief. You are not just worried she will bake the dessert. You worry she will erase the credit and talk as if she invented it.

So what can you do that honors your MIL and still avoids a fifteen year cold war over a pie plate?

You already hinted at a solid path. Talk to your SIL privately. Tell her how it lands when she calls it “her dessert”. Tell her this recipe feels like a last gift from your MIL, and that you want anyone who uses it to name your MIL when they serve it. That condition matches what some experts suggest. They frame recipe sharing as an act of trust, best paired with a clear agreement about honoring the original cook.

You can then choose a moment that feels healing instead of pressured. Maybe you gather the whole family one day, print the recipe with your MIL’s name at the top, tell a few stories about her, and hand copies to everyone, including your SIL.

That turns the recipe from a prize into a shared ritual. It also closes the power gap. Your SIL stops chasing the “secret”, and your MIL becomes the obvious star of the story.

If your gut still screams “not yet”, you can say that. Grief moves slowly. Houston Therapy writes that cooking through grief often helps people cope, and that comfort food in that season carries unique emotional weight. That means you deserve time to hold the recipe close while you still adjust to life without your MIL.

So no, you are not a monster for hesitating. What matters now is transparency. Say what you feel, name your boundary and decide, with your husband, how this dessert will carry his mom’s legacy forward.

Check out how the community responded:

Team “respect MIL’s choice” felt you had every right to say no.

WolfGoddess77 - NTA. You made the argument: if MIL wanted your SIL to have the recipe, she would have given it to her. That alone is reason enough.

Emotional_Bonus_934 - NTA. MIL shared the recipes with three people. She was not one of them, and that says something about MIL’s wishes.

RealbadtheBandit - NTA. SIL is being pushy, do not reward her aggression. MIL gave it to three people and nobody else, so that looks intentional.

Others saw recipe gatekeeping and called you out as petty.

Caffeinated-Princess - YTA. Gatekeeping family recipes is petty and childish. Does it make you feel important somehow? They saw a power trip, not protection.

squirrelsareevil2479 - YTA. What changes in your life if SIL knows the recipe? No recipe is a total secret, and sharing food is sharing love.

ttppii - YTA. They asked why “secret” recipes matter so much when a good cook can often recreate or even improve them anyway.

[Reddit User] - YTA, this is incredibly petty. This is food, not money or real estate. They argued that sharing spreads your MIL’s memory further and wider.

A few people pushed for a middle path: share, but keep the credit clear.

Rudy_Nowhere - Your MIL already gave you her greatest recipe, her son. They advised you to listen to your husband and maybe share, but insist SIL always honor MIL by...

bambamboozlebop - They suggested sharing it with everyone at once. Send a big group email with the recipe titled as “beloved MIL’s dessert” so SIL cannot claim it as hers.

This whole situation proves that the most explosive inheritance sometimes comes on an index card, not in a lawyer’s office.

You loved your MIL. She trusted you with recipes she guarded for years. Your SIL arrives late to that story, with a tense history and a habit of calling things “hers” that never came from her hands. Of course your chest tightens a bit when she demands the recipe like a prize.

You already moved in a hopeful direction though. You see that the recipe belongs to the wider family, and you want to share it in a way that heals old wounds instead of ripping them open. That approach feels like something your MIL would probably appreciate more than an eternal standoff over a mixing bowl.

So maybe the legacy here is not just a dessert. Maybe it is learning how to protect what matters while still letting people in.

What about you, reader? Would you hold that recipe tight a little longer, or hand it over with strings attached, like “always say her name when you serve it”? And in your family, are secret recipes a symbol of love, or just fuel for the next round of drama?

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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