Here's a hint from any recipe from 1800-1960. If it's missing "something" try ash, salt, &/or brandy.
Come to find (some culinary scientists went through old family recipes and tweaked them to try and find out why they just weren't "like mom used to make:) MOST of the "not quite right" recipes were missing
- salt
- cigarette ashe
- brandy
Which just gives you this GLORIOUS mental image of a housewife of umpteen kids leaning over the stove smoking and crying into the soup while knocking back the occasional 'medicinal' brandy.
Whoops. It's a very ADHD day around here... BACK on topic:
I keep many recipes secret. They aren't mine. Mine I hand out freely. They're recipes given to me by others in trust. Many are professional recipes from chefs I've worked with, known, or eaten with AFTER they see me cook (as it's been mentioned, a tortured recipe is actually a painful thing to even KNOW about, much less witness), some are family heirlooms.
You have to realize; prior to Women's Lib very, very FEW women worked outside of the home for around 500 years. A woman's kitchen WAS her career, her professional stake. The cooking available at one farm over another would attract workers, the cooking in one townhome over another secured social standing. As (rightfully) possessive about recipes as professional chefs are, so too, were the wives or hired cooks of households. Those recipes provided one rather large leg of the position in society. Recipes were kept until DEATHBEDS, and it was a HUGE honor to recieve one, perhaps as a wedding gift, or at the birth of a child.
That attitude is largely gone, as the artistry/social standing/attracting workers as a benefit of working on one farm or service position in one house over another has fallen by the wayside.
Even so... While many recipes are just "fling the food in the general direction of the fire and serve", many others have taken YEARS to perfect.
I don't begrudge anyone for keeping recipes to themselves, but I do feel INCREDIBLY honored when someone shares one of them with me. I share all of mine, but I will never, ever, EVER share those that have been entrusted to me unless I've been given express permission to do so.
Fun Q