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Inside the food fight that captivated the country
Inside the food fight that captivated the country

Perth Now

time04-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Perth Now

Inside the food fight that captivated the country

Google 'caramel slice recipe' and thousands of results will appear. Dozens of them claim to have the 'best' or the 'easiest' recipe, most list varying quantities of flour, butter, sugar, condensed milk and desiccated coconut and some ingredient lists, somewhat controversially, feature golden syrup. The popular slice, found on sale at hundreds of election day fundraising cake stalls on Saturday, was at the centre of an ugly food fight between two high profile cooks over allegations of plagiarism and breach of copyright. In one corner, is the wildly popular Nagi Maehashi. The darling of the home cooking scene's Recipetin Eats website has spawned best-selling books and a social media following in excess of five million. Brooke Bellamy denies she has plagiarised recipes in her Bake with Brooki best-seller. Credit: Instagram In the other is Brisbane baker Brooke Bellamy, whose Bake With Brooki cookbook became a bestseller after it was published by Penguin in October last year. Ms Bellamy became a global sensation after sharing 'day in the life' videos on TikTok, which receive millions of views each day. She is best known for her cookies and has opened pop-up stores in Abu Dhabi and Dubai. Ms Maehashi ignited a furore on Tuesday when she posted a series of slides to her Instagram account, accusing Bellamy of plagiarising two of her recipes, a caramel slice and a baklava, in Bake With Brooki. The author claims she first raised concerns with Penguin in December. 'I put a huge amount of effort into my recipes. And I share them on my website for anyone to use for free,' she said. 'To see them plagiarised (in my view) and used in a book for profit, without credit, doesn't just feel unfair. It feels like a blatant exploitation of my work. 'To me, the similarities between the recipes in question are so specific and detailed that calling these a coincidence feels disingenuous. Ms Maehashi said profiting from plagiarised recipes was unethical and a 'slap in the face for every author who puts in the hard work to create original content rather than cutting corners.' Hours after the allegations, Sally McKenney, author and blogger behind Sally's Baking Addiction, levelled similar claims about her vanilla cake recipe. Then on Thursday, Ms Maehashi said Ms Bellamy may have copied 'virtually word for word' the late Bill Granger's recipe for Portugese tart from his 2006 cookbook. 'It is so blatant to me that the wording in the method part of the recipe is copied almost exactly. To me, it is the biggest and strongest example of plagiarism that I have seen by this author,' Maehashi told east coast media. Ms Bellamy, who owns the popular Brooki Bakehouse in Brisbane, denied the accusations, saying she had been making and selling her recipes before Ms Maehashi's were published. Nagi Maehashi, whose RecipeTin Eats website is one of Australia's most beloved recipe sites. Credit: Instagram 'I did not plagiarise any recipes in my book which consists of 100 recipes I have created over many years,' she said. 'In 2016, I opened my first bakery. I have been creating my recipes and selling them commercially since October 2016.' Ms Bellamy posted an image showing her caramel slice, which dated back to December 2016. 'On March 2020, RecipeTin Eats published a recipe for caramel slice. It uses the same ingredients as my recipe, which I have been making and selling since four years prior,' she said. The Brisbane baker said she 'immediately offered' to remove both recipes from future reprints to prevent further aggravation'. As debate erupted across the Australian culinary scene, the two continued to trade barbs via social media statements. On Wednesday, Ms Bellamy said she was deeply distressed by the allegations and had been attacked online. 'I do not copy other people's recipes. Like many bakers, I draw inspiration from the classics, but the creations you see at Brooki Bakehouse reflect my own experience, taste, and passion for baking, born of countless hours of my childhood spent in my home kitchen with Mum,' she said. Nagi Maehashi, with her beloved dog Dozer, is releasing her first cookbook, Dinner. Credit: Rob Palmer / TheWest Ms Maehashi released another statement on her Instagram page on Thursday, alongside an image of a direct comparison of the directions for caramel slice recipe that shows only small differences. 'I tried for almost 6 months, going back and forth with Penguin/Brooki. I hired lawyers,' she wrote. 'I also did it knowing it would open the doors floodgates to haters, and no control over what the press will say. 'I have nothing to gain out of speaking up except that I believe it's the right thing to do. 'I do not want their money. I didn't even ask for reimbursement of legal fees.' By Thursday evening, the nature of the ensuing debate on social media prompted Ms Maehashi to post a video imploring people to stop attacking Ms Bellamy online. 'Now, I know I've made serious allegations, but this does not justify the personal attacks that I've seen online against Brooke Bellamy. I do not support it, and I'm asking you to stop,' she said. Ms Bellamy also lost a role as an ambassador for the Federally-funded Academy for Enterprising Girls. Throughout the week other high profile Australian culinary personalities weighed in, with cookbook author Adam Liaw — who has a background in intellectual property law — saying no recipes in the world would reach the standards necessary to obtain patent protection. Brooke Bellamy says she has been attacked online amid claims of stolen recipes. Credit: Jono Searle / AAP 'It used to happen to me a lot when I did YouTube,' he told the Sydney Morning Herald. 'I'd make something I'd been cooking since I was a child and suddenly there would be 10 other YouTubers making the exact recipe with the exact ingredients. I wouldn't get too worried about it: if someone wants to take a specific number of grams from a recipe I wrote, then fine, be my guest.' Each day brought more fallout. Ms Bellamy found herself dropped as an ambassador as federal initiative Academy for Enterprising Girls, while Ms Maehashi then found herself facing criticism when celebrity chef Luke Mangan told The Courier Mail she failed to credit him properly for a recipe in one of her cookbooks. 'She has credited my recipe, but I would have preferred a bigger mention and at least linking people to our website,' he said. The accusations have prompted discussion around whether a recipe can ever be owned, and the line between imitation and inspiration. According to the Australian Copyright Council, copyright does not protect ideas, information (such as ingredients and quantities) or styles, methods or techniques. A famous Australian cookbook author has publicly accused an influencer of 'plagiarising' her recipes. Credit: Unkown The council said a recipe can only be protected by copyright if it is original, or if it is put into material form. 'Therefore, if you write your own description of how to make a soufflé, this 'literary work' is protected by copyright, even though you did not invent the combination and proportion of ingredients and the method is not new,' the council said. Specialist intellectual property lawyer Dave Stewart, from Perth law and litigation firm Bennett, said copyright was not a good mechanism for protecting recipes. 'There is an absence of novelty that occurs in respect of most recipes. You'd have to have something quite extraordinary that is captured in material form,' he said. Mr Stewart said the question was more around ethics, as opposed to legality. 'To take recipes from someone and replicate them seems iffy, even if it's not an issue from a legal perspective or copyright perspective, it just doesn't smell right,' he said. 'I'm not sure at all what Nagi could do in respect of any sort of legal avenue to stop Brooke Bellamy from copying the recipes, but it seems to me she's doing a pretty good job of embarrassing Brooke Bellamy.' The issue is expected to come back into the spotlight next week with Maehashi's RecipeTin Eats book and Baking with Brooki both shortlisted in the same category at the Australian book industry awards in Melbourne.

Recipe for disaster as Australian cooks in plagiarism debate due to come face to face next week
Recipe for disaster as Australian cooks in plagiarism debate due to come face to face next week

7NEWS

time04-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • 7NEWS

Recipe for disaster as Australian cooks in plagiarism debate due to come face to face next week

Google 'caramel slice recipe' and thousands of results will appear. Dozens of them claim to have the 'best' or the 'easiest' recipe, most list varying quantities of flour, butter, sugar, condensed milk and desiccated coconut and some ingredient lists, somewhat controversially, feature golden syrup. The popular slice, found on sale at hundreds of election day fundraising cake stalls on Saturday, was at the centre of an ugly food fight between two high profile cooks over allegations of plagiarism and breach of copyright. In one corner, is the wildly popular Nagi Maehashi. The darling of the home cooking scene's Recipetin Eats website has spawned best-selling books and a social media following in excess of five million. In the other is Brisbane baker Brooke Bellamy, whose Bake With Brooki cookbook became a bestseller after it was published by Penguin in October last year. Ms Bellamy became a global sensation after sharing 'day in the life' videos on TikTok, which receive millions of views each day. She is best known for her cookies and has opened pop-up stores in Abu Dhabi and Dubai. Ms Maehashi ignited a furore on Tuesday when she posted a series of slides to her Instagram account, accusing Bellamy of plagiarising two of her recipes, a caramel slice and a baklava, in Bake With Brooki. The author claims she first raised concerns with Penguin in December. 'I put a huge amount of effort into my recipes. And I share them on my website for anyone to use for free,' she said. 'To see them plagiarised (in my view) and used in a book for profit, without credit, doesn't just feel unfair. It feels like a blatant exploitation of my work. 'To me, the similarities between the recipes in question are so specific and detailed that calling these a coincidence feels disingenuous. Ms Maehashi said profiting from plagiarised recipes was unethical and a 'slap in the face for every author who puts in the hard work to create original content rather than cutting corners.' Hours after the allegations, Sally McKenney, author and blogger behind Sally's Baking Addiction, levelled similar claims about her vanilla cake recipe. Then on Thursday, Ms Maehashi said Ms Bellamy may have copied 'virtually word for word' the late Bill Granger's recipe for Portugese tart from his 2006 cookbook. 'It is so blatant to me that the wording in the method part of the recipe is copied almost exactly. To me, it is the biggest and strongest example of plagiarism that I have seen by this author,' Maehashi told east coast media. Ms Bellamy, who owns the popular Brooki Bakehouse in Brisbane, denied the accusations, saying she had been making and selling her recipes before Ms Maehashi's were published. 'I did not plagiarise any recipes in my book which consists of 100 recipes I have created over many years,' she said. 'In 2016, I opened my first bakery. I have been creating my recipes and selling them commercially since October 2016.' Ms Bellamy posted an image showing her caramel slice, which dated back to December 2016. 'On March 2020, RecipeTin Eats published a recipe for caramel slice. It uses the same ingredients as my recipe, which I have been making and selling since four years prior,' she said. The Brisbane baker said she 'immediately offered' to remove both recipes from future reprints to prevent further aggravation'. As debate erupted across the Australian culinary scene, the two continued to trade barbs via social media statements. On Wednesday, Ms Bellamy said she was deeply distressed by the allegations and had been attacked online. 'I do not copy other people's recipes. Like many bakers, I draw inspiration from the classics, but the creations you see at Brooki Bakehouse reflect my own experience, taste, and passion for baking, born of countless hours of my childhood spent in my home kitchen with Mum,' she said. Ms Maehashi released another statement on her Instagram page on Thursday, alongside an image of a direct comparison of the directions for caramel slice recipe that shows only small differences. 'I tried for almost 6 months, going back and forth with Penguin/Brooki. I hired lawyers,' she wrote. 'I also did it knowing it would open the doors floodgates to haters, and no control over what the press will say. 'I have nothing to gain out of speaking up except that I believe it's the right thing to do. 'I do not want their money. I didn't even ask for reimbursement of legal fees.' By Thursday evening, the nature of the ensuing debate on social media prompted Ms Maehashi to post a video imploring people to stop attacking Ms Bellamy online. 'Now, I know I've made serious allegations, but this does not justify the personal attacks that I've seen online against Brooke Bellamy. I do not support it, and I'm asking you to stop,' she said. Ms Bellamy also lost a role as an ambassador for the Federally-funded Academy for Enterprising Girls. Throughout the week other high profile Australian culinary personalities weighed in, with cookbook author Adam Liaw — who has a background in intellectual property law — saying no recipes in the world would reach the standards necessary to obtain patent protection. 'It used to happen to me a lot when I did YouTube,' he told the Sydney Morning Herald. 'I'd make something I'd been cooking since I was a child and suddenly there would be 10 other YouTubers making the exact recipe with the exact ingredients. I wouldn't get too worried about it: if someone wants to take a specific number of grams from a recipe I wrote, then fine, be my guest.' Each day brought more fallout. Ms Bellamy found herself dropped as an ambassador as federal initiative Academy for Enterprising Girls, while Ms Maehashi then found herself facing criticism when celebrity chef Luke Mangan told The Courier Mail she failed to credit him properly for a recipe in one of her cookbooks. 'She has credited my recipe, but I would have preferred a bigger mention and at least linking people to our website,' he said. The accusations have prompted discussion around whether a recipe can ever be owned, and the line between imitation and inspiration. According to the Australian Copyright Council, copyright does not protect ideas, information (such as ingredients and quantities) or styles, methods or techniques. The council said a recipe can only be protected by copyright if it is original, or if it is put into material form. 'Therefore, if you write your own description of how to make a soufflé, this 'literary work' is protected by copyright, even though you did not invent the combination and proportion of ingredients and the method is not new,' the council said. Specialist intellectual property lawyer Dave Stewart, from Perth law and litigation firm Bennett, said copyright was not a good mechanism for protecting recipes. 'There is an absence of novelty that occurs in respect of most recipes. You'd have to have something quite extraordinary that is captured in material form,' he said. Mr Stewart said the question was more around ethics, as opposed to legality. 'To take recipes from someone and replicate them seems iffy, even if it's not an issue from a legal perspective or copyright perspective, it just doesn't smell right,' he said. 'I'm not sure at all what Nagi could do in respect of any sort of legal avenue to stop Brooke Bellamy from copying the recipes, but it seems to me she's doing a pretty good job of embarrassing Brooke Bellamy.' The issue is expected to come back into the spotlight next week with Maehashi's RecipeTin Eats book and Baking with Brooki both shortlisted in the same category at the Australian book industry awards in Melbourne.

Nagi Maehashi: RecipeTin Eats creator accuses Brooke Bellamy of ‘plagiarising' in new book Bake with Brooki
Nagi Maehashi: RecipeTin Eats creator accuses Brooke Bellamy of ‘plagiarising' in new book Bake with Brooki

West Australian

time29-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • West Australian

Nagi Maehashi: RecipeTin Eats creator accuses Brooke Bellamy of ‘plagiarising' in new book Bake with Brooki

A famous Australian cookbook author has publicly accused an influencer of 'plagiarising' her recipes. Nagi Maehashi took to Instagram on Tuesday, alleging two of her recipes had been plagiarised in Brooke Bellamy's new cookbook Bake with Brooki. 'I have made allegations against Penguin Australia that the bestseller 'Bake With Brooki' by Brooke Bellamy contains plagiarised recipes, including two of mine (Caramel Slice & Baklava), As well as recipes by other authors,' she said in a post. Ms Maehashi is a well-known cookbook author and creator of RecipeTin Eats, and she said she was 'speaking up because staying silent protects this kind of behaviour'. 'Profiting from plagiarised recipes is unethical, even if not a copyright breach, and it's a slap in the face to every author who puts in their hard work to create original content rather than cutting corners,' she said. Ms Maehashi said she had spent many sleepless nights considering posting her claims but ultimately felt it was the best way forward. 'I know there's risk that legal action may be brought against me for speaking out, and it's daunting to take on a major publisher and an influencer with a huge TikTok following,' she said in a published statement on her website . Ms Bellamy is the owner and creator of Brooki Bake House, and she has risen to stardom on TikTok and Instagram, where she boasts millions of followers. The Brooki Bake House has responded to the allegations via a social media post. 'In light of the recent allegations made against me by Recipetin Eats for plagiarising two of her recipes in my cookbook Bake With Brooki (caramel slice and baklava), I would like to provide the below statement,' she said. 'I did not plagiarise any recipes in my book which consists of 100 recipes I have created over many years, since falling in love with baking as a child and growing up baking with my mum in our home kitchen. Ms Bellamy said she has been creating and selling her recipes commercially since 2016, when she opened her first bakery, including her caramel slice. 'On March 2020, Recipetin Eats published a recipe for caramel slice. It uses the same ingredients as my recipe, which I have been making and selling since four years prior,' she said. The social media influencer, who has one million followers on Instagram , added she offered to remove both recipes from future reprints to prevent 'further aggravation' . 'I have great respect for Nagi and what she has done in recent years for cooks, content creators and cookbooks in Australia - especially as a fellow female entrepreneur,' Ms Bellamy wrote. 'I stand by my love for baking, my recipes, and the joy this book has brought so many home bakers around the world eager to try recreating my recipes from inside their homes.' Nagi Maehashi, Brooke Bellamy, and Penguin Australia have been contacted for comment.

Famous cookbook author slams influencer for ‘plagiarism'
Famous cookbook author slams influencer for ‘plagiarism'

Perth Now

time29-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Perth Now

Famous cookbook author slams influencer for ‘plagiarism'

A famous Australian cookbook author has publicly accused an influencer of 'plagiarising' her recipes. Nagi Maehashi took to Instagram on Tuesday, alleging two of her recipes had been plagiarised in Brooke Bellamy's new cookbook Bake with Brooki. 'I have made allegations against Penguin Australia that the bestseller 'Bake With Brooki' by Brooke Bellamy contains plagiarised recipes, including two of mine (Caramel Slice & Baklava), As well as recipes by other authors,' she said in a post. Ms Maehashi is a well-known cookbook author and creator of RecipeTin Eats, and she said she was 'speaking up because staying silent protects this kind of behaviour'. 'Profiting from plagiarised recipes is unethical, even if not a copyright breach, and it's a slap in the face to every author who puts in their hard work to create original content rather than cutting corners,' she said. If you'd like to view this content, please adjust your . To find out more about how we use cookies, please see our Cookie Guide. Ms Maehashi said she had spent many sleepless nights considering posting her claims but ultimately felt it was the best way forward. 'I know there's risk that legal action may be brought against me for speaking out, and it's daunting to take on a major publisher and an influencer with a huge TikTok following,' she said in a published statement on her website. Ms Bellamy is the owner and creator of Brooki Bake House, and she has risen to stardom on TikTok and Instagram, where she boasts millions of followers. The Brooki Bake House has responded to the allegations via a social media post. Brooke Bellamy's response to the allegations. Credit: Unkown 'In light of the recent allegations made against me by Recipetin Eats for plagiarising two of her recipes in my cookbook Bake With Brooki (caramel slice and baklava), I would like to provide the below statement,' she said. 'I did not plagiarise any recipes in my book which consists of 100 recipes I have created over many years, since falling in love with baking as a child and growing up baking with my mum in our home kitchen. Ms Bellamy said she has been creating and selling her recipes commercially since 2016, when she opened her first bakery, including her caramel slice. 'On March 2020, Recipetin Eats published a recipe for caramel slice. It uses the same ingredients as my recipe, which I have been making and selling since four years prior,' she said. The social media influencer, who has one million followers on Instagram, added she offered to remove both recipes from future reprints to prevent 'further aggravation' . 'I have great respect for Nagi and what she has done in recent years for cooks, content creators and cookbooks in Australia - especially as a fellow female entrepreneur,' Ms Bellamy wrote. 'I stand by my love for baking, my recipes, and the joy this book has brought so many home bakers around the world eager to try recreating my recipes from inside their homes.' Nagi Maehashi, Brooke Bellamy, and Penguin Australia have been contacted for comment.

RecipeTin Eats founder accuses Brooki Bakehouse of plagiarising recipes in popular cookbook
RecipeTin Eats founder accuses Brooki Bakehouse of plagiarising recipes in popular cookbook

The Guardian

time29-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • The Guardian

RecipeTin Eats founder accuses Brooki Bakehouse of plagiarising recipes in popular cookbook

The founder of food website RecipeTin Eats has accused an influencer of plagiarising her recipes in a bestselling Australian cookbook. On Tuesday Nagi Maehashi, who started RecipeTin Eats in 2014, accused Brooke Bellamy – also known as Brooki Bakehouse – of plagiarising two of her recipes in Bellamy's popular cookbook, Bake with Brooki. In a post on Instagram on Tuesday night, Bellamy denied that she had taken a recipes. 'I'm no stranger to seeing my recipes copied online,' Maehashi wrote in a blog post on her website. 'But seeing what appeared to me to be one of my recipes printed in a book launched with a huge publicity campaign from one of Australia's biggest publishers was shocking.' Sign up for the fun stuff with our rundown of must-reads, pop culture and tips for the weekend, every Saturday morning Bellamy runs a bakehouse with three locations across Queensland, and has a large social media platform, with two million TikTok followers. Posting the recipes side-by-side for readers to compare, Maehashi said two of her recipes, for caramel slice and baklava, were copied in Bellamy's book. She said she realised after she was contacted by a reader last year who noticed 'remarkable similarities' with one of the recipes. There had been a lengthy legal discussion with lawyers for Penguin Random House, who published Bake with Brooki in October 2024, Maehashi said. 'To see them plagiarised (in my view) and used in a book for profit, without permission, and without credit, doesn't just feel unfair. It feels like a blatant exploitation of my work,' she said. 'And because the income from my website helps fund my food bank, RecipeTin Meals, this isn't just legally questionable – I find it ethically indefensible.' Bellamy responded on social media on Tuesday night, writing on Instagram: 'I did not plagiarise any recipes in my book, which consists of 100 recipes I have created over many years, since falling in love with baking and growing up baking with my mum in our home kitchen. 'In 2016 I opened my first bakery. I have been creating my recipes and selling them commercially since October 2016.' Sign up to Saved for Later Catch up on the fun stuff with Guardian Australia's culture and lifestyle rundown of pop culture, trends and tips after newsletter promotion Responding to the specific claim about copying the recipe for caramel slice, Bellamy wrote that the March 2020 Recipetin Eats recipe for the slice 'uses the same ingredients as my recipe' which she said she had been making since 2016. However, she said she had offered to remove the recipes for the slice and the baklava from 'future reprints to prevent further aggravation', and that she had 'great respect' for Maehashi. 'Recipe development in today's world is enveloped in inspiration from other cooks, cookbook authors, food bloggers and content creators. This willingness to share recipes and build on what has come before is what I love so much about baking and sharing recipes.' Guardian Australia contacted Penguin Random House and Maehashi for comment. In her blog post Maehashi said lawyers for the publishing house had denied the allegations, writing to her that 'Our client respectfully rejects your clients' allegations and confirms that the recipes in the BWB Book were written by Brooke Bellamy.' 'Brooke – It didn't have to be like this. If you had asked for permission, I would have given it and, knowing me, proudly promoted your book on launch. It costs nothing to credit,' she said. 'Do better. Because the authors who pour their time, skill, and originality into their work – the ones you claim to champion – deserve it,' she said. Last year, Maehashi's cookbook RecipeTin Eats: Tonight topped the 2024 Australian Christmas bestsellers list, followed in second place by Bake with Brooki.

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