Nagi Maehashi, owner of popular cooking website RecipeTin Eats and author of various cookbooks, has made allegations that Brooke Bellamy, TikTok influencer and bakery owner, copied two of Maehashi’s recipes in Bellamy’s recently published cookbook Bake with Brooki.
A rough chronology of the events is set out below:
Interestingly, since Maehashi made these allegations, Sally McKenney, owner of popular baking website Sally’s Baking Addiction, has also made allegations that Bellamy also copied McKenney’s ‘Best Vanilla Cake’ recipe in Bellamy’s cookbook.
Copyright does not subsist in the idea of a dish itself. No one has copyright in a caramel slice, for example. However, in Australian copyright law and under the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth), copyright can subsist in the form of the recipe and how the author has expressed that recipe, as a literary work. For example, the form of the recipe could include the distinct order of ingredients and quantities, the expression of the preparation methods, and how the recipe is formatted and presented overall.
This means that if a cookbook author created an original expression of a dish via a recipe, then copyright can subsist in that expression and the recipe itself can therefore subject to copyright protection.
However, enforcing and protecting copyright in a recipe will be difficult, as copyright does not prevent another person from either creating a similar literary work that does not copy a substantial part of the first recipe or creating an identical work if the other person can prove that they independently created the identical work without any access or consideration of the first recipe.
Ancillary to copyright in a literary work, an author of copyright also automatically holds moral rights. These include the rights of attribution of authorship, to not to have authorship falsely attributed, and integrity of authorship.
If copyright infringement is made out, these moral rights are also likely to come into play.
Further, in the culinary industry, chefs may exchange recipes and build recipe creation and testing on established cooking knowledge, techniques, ingredients, and methodologies. There appears to be a strong emphasis on the sharing of professional expertise, provided that consent from the original author and proper attribution of original sources that influence a chef’s endeavours is provided.
As the matter between Maehashi against Bellamy and Penguin is in its infancy, it is unclear how the allegations and dispute will resolve or eventuate at all.
However, this is a timely reminder for authors to consider the following in creating and developing works that take the form of a set of instructions:
If taking inspiration from another author, seek prior written consent and provide proper attribution.
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Authored by:
Antoine Pace, Partner
Raisa Blanco, Special Counsel
Robert McIntyre, Graduate