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Home Serious things

When you see your recipes in a $4 million book

By Nagi Maehashi
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Published29 Apr '25 Updated29 Apr '25
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This is a story about a multi-million dollar cookbook by a social media influencer, published by a blue-chip publisher, featuring numerous recipes that, in my opinion, are plagiarised, given the detailed and extensive word-for-word similarities to mine and those of other authors.

**UPDATE: I’ve had to turn off further comments because there is additional risk of legal action being brought against me by Penguin and Brooki by what you say. But thank you, for the support you have shown. I was so nervous and worried.**

Penguin Brooki Bellamy allegation statement cover image
Images: Penguin Random House Australia

penguin LEGAL DISPUTE summary

I have made copyright infringement allegations against Penguin Random House Australia, claiming there are plagiarised recipes in the bestselling book Bake with Brooki, including two from my website and other authors, including cookbooks.

To me, the similarities between the recipes in question are far too specific and detailed to be dismissed as coincidence.

Penguin has denied the allegations. I have received no response from Brooke Bellamy, the author.

I’m speaking up because staying silent protects this kind of behaviour. Profiting from plagiarised recipes is unethical – even if it is not copyright infringement – and undermines the integrity of the entire book.

And it’s a slap in the face to every author who puts in the hard work to create original content rather than cutting corners.

The only photo of me on my website without an apron, food or a smile.

Personal note: This isn’t a post I’m publishing lightly. I’ve spent many sleepless nights fretting over it, and many hours writing it. The easiest and safest path would be to stay silent. 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.

But I’m going ahead because, in my heart, I know it’s the right thing to do. If my words feel a little clunky, forgive me, it’s because of legal constraints. ~ Nagi

It all began with a reader email

In November 2024, a reader emailed to say that she noticed “remarkable similarities” between my Caramel Slice recipe and the version in the newly released Bake With Brooki, a cookbook by Brooke Bellamy, an Australian social media influencer with almost 4 million followers who has a cookie shop in Queensland. 

This email went on to say that “even to my novice eye, I noticed that her recipe seemed to replicate Nagi’s almost exactly albeit a few changes in wording”.

Bake with Brooki was published in October 2024 by Penguin Random House, one of the largest publishers in Australia.

I’m no stranger to seeing my recipes being copied online. 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 – it has sold over $4.6 million worth of sales in under six months (92,849 copies sold as of 23 April 2025, according to Nielsen BookScan, RRP $49.99).

Brooke Bellamy plagiarism allegations BAKE WITH BROOKI - Nagi Maehashi of RecipeTin Eats
Brooke Bellamy, author of Bake with Brooki, a social media influencer & cookie shop owner who “blew up on social media” in just 3 years, with over 3 million followers. (Image source: TikTok)

The first recipe – Caramel slice comparison

Here’s a comparison of extracts of the Caramel Slice recipe on my website published in 2020 with the version in Bake with Brooki (2024). Click here for a photo of the page from Bake With Brooki to compare the recipes as a whole.

While recipes can resemble one another, because there are only so many ways some recipes can be made, the precision and detail in the similarities in this case are, in my opinion, far too strong to be a co-incidence.

Caramel Slice recipe plagiarism by Brooke Bellamy of Brooki Bakehouse (Penguin books)

My Caramel Slice recipe is special because it is made using caramel as the base (I mean, the name..!) rather than golden syrup which is the typical recipe (gives it a metallic flavour, I swear!). I can tell you the exact moment in my life that triggered the creation of this recipe – how and why it came to be, and what I tried before deciding that I had figured out The One.

Stack of Caramel Slice on a plate
I’m really proud of my Caramel Slice recipe which took me many attempts to get right.

Lawyers and letters

I wrote to Penguin immediately, with my first letter sent on 4 December 2024. Disappointingly, instead of engaging in civil discussions with me, Penguin brought in lawyers and resorted to what felt to me legal intimidation – letters in stern, aggressive tones packed with pages of legal jargon that I struggled to make sense of.

I engaged my own lawyers to represent me – Simpsons, a law firm specialising in intellectual property, to help me understand my rights, assess my legal position, and handle correspondence from Penguin’s lawyers. This is my lawyer, Adam Simpson, a partner at the firm:

Adam Simpson, lawyer partner at Simpsons
My lawyer – Adam Simpson, a partner at Simpsons law firm. Photo: Simpsons

More plagiarised recipes surfaced

In the months we’ve been going back and forth with Penguin’s lawyers, more recipes that looks to me to have been plagiarised have surfaced, including another recipe from my website (Baklava) and recipes from other authors.

I invite you to form your own opinion by reviewing the side by side comparisons of extracts I’ve provided of my recipes – Caramel Slice (above), and Baklava (below), as well as comparing those recipes as a whole.

One particular recipe by a very well known, beloved cookbook author bears similarities so detailed, extensive, and specific that, in my view, dismissing it as a coincidence would be absurd. Due to legal constraints, and out of respect for and at the request of the publisher, I am unable to share further details at this time.

Similarly, for other authors I’ve been in contact with, out of respect for and at the request of them, I cannot share further details at this time.

Recipe 2: Baklava

Baklava is a recipe I published in 2018 that I sourced from and credited to Natasha’s Kitchen. I completely rewrote the recipe in my own words after testing it quite extensively, the way I make it, with my tips to make it foolproof. Click here for a comparison so you can see the writing difference.

And here is a side-by-side look at extracts of the Baklava recipe I published to the one featured in Bake with Brooki. Click here for a photo from the book to compare the recipes as a whole. To me, the similarities speak for themselves.


Feels like exploitation

I put a huge amount of time and effort into testing recipes, whether it’s an original creation or one adapted from another source. It is what I am known for – the press have called me “obsessive” about testing on more than one occasion.

And I share them freely on my website for anyone to enjoy.

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.

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.

RecipeTin Meals
My foodbank, RecipeTin Meals, makes and donates 600 meals a day, funded entirely by me through my website and cookbook sales.

Plagiarism is not excusable

In my opinion, plagiarism is never excusable, no matter how small. Every recipe represents hours of work. Taking even one recipe without credit is a breach of trust that undermines the integrity of the entire book. I have not examined the book thoroughly. I do not have the means or skills to do so. how many more would I find if I did?

Regardless, it’s not about the number – it’s about the principle. Rewarding shortcuts devalues the hard work of every original creator who does things the right way.

And let’s not forget – this is not a small book gathering dust in the dark corner of bookshops. This has been a blockbuster launched with a big marketing campaign. $4.6 million worth of sales in Australia alone, in less than 6 months. Both the author and publisher made a huge splash about it on launch.


Why I am speaking up

I’m speaking up today because staying silent only protects their behaviour which, even if not a technical breach of copyright, I think is unacceptable and unethical.

And to me, this isn’t just about plagiarism. I’ve written two cookbooks. I know what it takes. Every sentence, every photo, every recipe, the sleepless nights, putting your heart and soul into every page.

So when someone comes along and puts out a book, cutting corners?

That’s not just disrespectful. It’s a kick in the guts of every author who actually puts in the hard yards to create original work.

I think it’s disgraceful that a blue chip publisher like Penguin continued selling the book after I brought this to their attention way back on 4 December 2024.

Nagi proof reading torture - cookbook udpate
Pouring everything I’ve got into my cookbook. I gave it my all.

Plagiarism and the responsibility of publishers

Book publishers absolutely should check for plagiarism. It’s a basic part of protecting the integrity of the publishing industry and the rights of original creators.

My publisher, Pan Macmillan, ran my cookbooks through plagiarism detection software without me even knowing about it! For any reputable publisher, I would think that using plagiarism software would be a basic step in quality control.

In addition, I would expect that publishers employ editors experienced and skilled enough to spot when writing doesn’t match an author’s voice, there are gaps in a story, or when recipe blurbs don’t quite add up. It’s not hard to spot when something doesn’t look right – if you’re actually looking.


What I asked for: accountability

I asked Penguin to withdraw the book containing the plagiarised recipes from sale, either attribute or remove my recipes from future reprints of the book, and to make a substantial donation to a charity in lieu of financial compensation. Not for RecipeTin Meals – I don’t want their money. I did not even ask for reimbursement of legal fees I have incurred, which has now run into the tens of thousands.

I also personally wrote a letter to Penguin’s directors and sent two letters to Brooke Bellamy. I didn’t receive a response to any of them.

Allegations denied. What happens now?

Penguin have denied my allegations, stating in a letter from their lawyers that “Our client respectfully rejects your clients’ allegations and confirms that the recipes in the BWB Book were written by Brooke Bellamy.”

I ceased further correspondence with Penguin via their lawyers last month as there was no point continuing. They would not admit wrong doing and would not agree to take steps to remedy the situation to my satisfaction. How I wish I could tell you what they offered to do – but I can’t.

In recent weeks, I understand that a new edition of the book has been quietly released into the market which has a different Caramel Slice recipe (typical golden syrup version). Eventually, this will replace stock in all retailers, though I’m sure the original version remains.

The other recipes that have been plagiarised, in my view, that I brought to Penguin’s attention at a later date have not (yet) been changed.


But, more than anything, I am just disappointed

If there’s one word that summarises how I feel about this whole situation, it’s not anger or resentment or bitterness.

It’s disappointment.

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.

Penguin – You are a top tier publisher that is supposed to value and protect original content, and uphold the integrity of the publishing industry. But to me, the way you have handled this matter has shown a disregard for the very principles you claim to stand for.

I expected better from a publisher of your standing.

Do better. Because the authors who pour their time, skill, and originality into their work – the ones you claim to champion – deserve it.

– Nagi Maehashi
RecipeTin Eats
29 April 2025

.

PS Penguin and Brooke Bellamy – here is the policy for use of my recipes on my website which has been there since 2015.

FAQ

Brooke Bellamy, who wrote Bake With Brooki, runs a cookie shop in Brisbane, Australia, called Brooki Bakehouse. She is a social media influencer with almost 4 million followers across various social media platforms who grew her following extremely quickly in 3 short years.

The growth of her popularity on social media in turn lead to the popularity of her cookie shop.

Until 2022, she was a travel blogger for a decade, sharing stories of her travels around the world on a personal blog.

Penguin Random House Australia published her first book Bake With Brooki in October 2024.

92,849 copies of Bake With Brooki have been sold in Australia as at 23 April 2025 since the book was published in October 2024, according to Neilson BookScan.

Neilson BookScan is a data tracking service that reports actual sales of books to retailers and is used by publishers, industry professionals etc. in Australia.

This statistic includes sales of the second edition (in which the Caramel Slice recipe has been replaced) which I believe was only released a few weeks ago so would only account for a few thousand copies, at most. Penguin didn’t make an announcement when the new edition was released.

The Baklava and other recipes I flagged to Penguin have not been replaced in this second edition. I alerted them to these findings at a later date.

For the ones with extensive similarities, yes I did. I have not mentioned them by name at their request, and/or out of respect for their privacy. Whether they are considering action, have already taken steps or decided not to do anything, it is not my place to speak for them. I am deliberately handling my matter independently.

Plagiarism is using someone else’s work or ideas without proper credit and presenting them as your own. It happens everywhere – from high school essays to political speeches delivered to tens of thousands of people, to recipes in cookbooks.

It’s considered dishonest and unethical because it takes advantage of someone else’s effort and originality while misleading others into thinking the work is original.

In the book publishing world, plagiarism is unethical but plagiarism alone isn’t a crime and isn’t illegal.

If the plagiarised content is substantial enough and the original creator has copyright protection over it, then using it without permission or credit can be a copyright infringement, which is not allowed.

If there is a copyright infringement, the copyright owner can sue both the author and the publisher (if the publisher has made copies or authorised copies to be made). This can result in damages, injunctions, and public recalls of books.

Unfortunately, it is not a clear cut answer.

Copyright law protects creative expression, not facts or functional instructions. So while you can’t copyright the idea of “a caramel slice made without golden syrup in the filling” copyright can protect the way a recipe is written.

In practical terms, this means if someone copies enough of your words, they may be infringing your copyright. But if they just use the same ingredients and basic steps written in their own words, it’s usually not an infringement of copyright – even if it’s unethical because you have not been given credit.

This is why recipe plagiarism can feel so blatant and be unethical yet still be difficult to challenge legally.

That is the whole basis of this legal dispute – I have made allegations against Penguin that they have infringed my copyright.

Penguin have denied the allegations.

For legal reasons, unfortunately I can’t go into details here, as much as I want to lay it all out!

At this time, I have not commenced legal proceedings against either of them.

I can’t comment further on this topic, sorry.

The 3 recipes referenced in this post are not the only recipes I raised in correspondence with Penguin via our respective lawyers.

I don’t think it would be wise for me to comment further on this matter, sorry. I did warn you from the outset, I have to be careful what I do and do not say. It’s hard! Holding back does not come naturally to me, I like providing complete sets of information. 😭


Life of Dozer

I don’t want to put Dozer’s adorable furry face in a post dealing with such an unpleasant matter.

I’ll share extra photos of him in the next post to make up for it when I get back to sharing delicious recipes!

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Reader Interactions

693 Comments

  1. Msmoo says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:29 pm

    Stay strong, you have a huge loyal fan base behind you, and yes both publisher and so called author, should be held accountable!

  2. Alexandra Lloyd says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:29 pm

    Completely agree with all your comments. We love your books and share your disappointment. How immensely frustrating for you and your whole team. Thank you for making us aware of this.

  3. Lisa says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:29 pm

    This makes me absolutely livid. After all the work and testing you put in to your recipes for someone to blatantly claim one as their own is just indecent. Don’t give up the fight. You are morally in the right

  4. Louise says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:29 pm

    Really disappointing for you Nagi, seriously sucks.
    Within University it would mean a big FAT FAIL!!!
    You are so strong for calling this out, someone mentioned you have a gazillion of loyal fans – now that is TRUE!!!

  5. Susan Mitchell says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:29 pm

    Hi Nagi, this post is shocking and I can only imagine the pain and frustration you are experiencing. For someone to do this is absolutely unacceptable and I hope you know that you are an amazing person for all that you do. I wish you all the very best for your business and your well being. Susan. ❤️

  6. Mary Broadwell says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:29 pm

    Dear Nagi,
    I am so sorry this has happened to you. Copyright infringement is a blight on our age. Too many people don’t understand how serious and damaging it is. I hope you get justice.

  7. Maria says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:29 pm

    I’m so sorry this happened Nagi, it’s really shocking and so unethical of both the author and publisher. We your legions of fans have your back!

  8. Joyce Renshaw says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:29 pm

    Hi Nagi,
    I cannot believe that someone could so blatantly plagerise your creations and think that it would go unnoticed . Then again these “influencers” think that they can do anything and get away with it! I hope that the law will finally catch up with her and that she will be discredited and made to look a fool.
    Please stay strong and know that there are so many of us who will always support you. Do not let these people take away your loving and cheerful soul.

  9. Felicia says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:29 pm

    Oof, Nagi, what a mess. This isn’t some shady little printing company, and there is much we could say about people knowing exactly what they’re doing when they plagiarise someone else’s (hard) work, and are too self-important to even think no-one would notice or care. I’m a pastry chef and ghost recipe creator for other chefs, and I could tell you some ridiculous stories. All power to you for standing up, it needs doing ♥️

    • Felicia says

      April 29, 2025 at 4:36 pm

      Ehm 🙄 That should read “anyone”, not “no-one”. Soz, Felicia xo

    • Felicia says

      April 29, 2025 at 4:33 pm

      🙄 er, that should read anyone, not no-one. soz.

  10. Emm Tea says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:28 pm

    I’m not sure how anyone can be proud to put their face and name to work that is not theirs.

    How embarrassing for her.

  11. Jeanette says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:28 pm

    Nagi, I’m so very sorry to read all this. I, too, thought Penguin would be above plagiarism. How do these people look at themselves in the mirror each day?
    Your faithful followers will no doubt spread the word, have no fear on that.
    All the best to you and please, keep on keeping on. 🐘💕

  12. Toni Hamilton says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:28 pm

    Good on you, Nagi. I feel for you and you should not have been put to the expense and trouble tryuing to defend what was yours. Brooke Bellamy should be ashamed.

  13. Julie green says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:28 pm

    This is so disappointing and I am so sorry for you. I love your recipes and the time you take to test them shows in the quality of every recipe. I hope that the legal battle is sorted soon with a positive outcome.

  14. Marilyn Paul says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:28 pm

    Nagi, I have made recipes from both books, Facebook and everything online and have become a much better cook as a result.

    I love the details, tips and traps you give ( have had great success with your Fabulous Foccacia – the hint to let the yeast rise in a warmed clothes dryer was the best). Keep up your amazing work please.

  15. Sandra O'Shea says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:28 pm

    I really appreciate the work and care you put in to making sure recipes work, and your work in the community to help improve the lives of people less fortunate. I am sorry to hear that this has happened to you. They should have at least given you credit for the recipes! What an awful position to be put in, to do the right thing, I think you have made the right decision.

  16. Elena Bonanni says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:28 pm

    Thanks for sharing this story. Plagiarism is not acceptable, you put so much work and dedication in your recipes!! For what it’s worth, you have my support.

  17. Mary-Jane Shepherd says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:27 pm

    I am so sorry to hear about your experience with Penguin and the plagiarist.
    I love your recipes, notes and videos. They are reliable and delicious. Last night I cooked Slow roasted leg of lamb and truly crunchy roast potatoes for my son’s 26th birthday. He had 10 friends over and everyone loved the food.
    Nagi, I consider you to be my secret weapon in the kitchen. Stay strong.x

  18. MARY MALIN says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:27 pm

    I just want to say how much I appreciate and respect all the incredible work you do. Your dedication to creating top-quality, thoroughly tested, no-fail recipes shines through in everything you share — and it makes such a difference to so many of us. I also admire your ongoing support for the food bank and your integrity in standing up for what’s right. You have my full support in calling out Penguin Books and the author who duplicated your work. They should be ashamed. Thank you for all that you do — we’re behind you 100%.

  19. Genevieve says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:27 pm

    No one messes with Nagi! In all seriousness though this is so frustrating and infuriating. I stumbled upon your website maybe around lockdown times and have been a devoted fan ever since & scream about your website to anyone that will listen.

    Remember who you are and remember what you stand for, regardless of the outcome (I hope you do receive the best outcomes) you have built such a genuine community all over the world and for me at least, you have made me enjoy cooking again, EVERY recipe turns out amazing and it’s still mind blowing to this day how simple yet flavoursome everything is. I see you as a fantastic chief who’s heart is poured into everything she does and she includes her dog in basically every post.. I mean could your heart be any bigger!!

    Sending love and light from the UK, remember to take a moment to breathe amongst all of this.

    Thank you for being you

    X

  20. Mike Sawyer says

    April 29, 2025 at 4:27 pm

    Hi Nagi. Good for you! And good luck taking on the big publisher. Mike

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