The Recipe Bound for 2276

Cedar Valley News
June 18, 2026
The Recipe Bound for 2276
By Chloe Papadakis

Somewhere inside a nine-hundred-pound steel cylinder, sealed this week and bound for the ground in Philadelphia, there is a recipe for a cookie.

The cylinder is America’s Time Capsule. It was sealed this week, and the country published the full list of its contents. It will be buried on the Fourth of July, and it is not meant to be opened until the year twenty-two seventy-six, when the people who lift the lid will be as far from us as we are from the Revolution.

Every state was asked to send something forward. You can read the list. Most of the news reported it as a curiosity: look at the strange things Americans buried. There is an iPhone, the newest one. There is a bottle of Coca-Cola. There is a thread of synthetic DNA with the Declaration of Independence encoded inside it.

Those are the items the headlines chose. They are not the ones I keep thinking about.

New Mexico sent a recipe for biscochito, the little anise cookie it calls its state cookie. Maine sent a bone from a right whale. Oregon sent a single pin, made by hand by a Native artist. When a whole country was asked what to hand to people it will never meet, a good part of the answer turned out to be small, and particular, and made by somebody’s hands.

I have spent my working life deciding what a town should gather around, and I will tell you what I learned from reading the list. The newest phone will not tell the people of twenty-two seventy-six who we were. They will have their own phones, better ones, and ours will look to them the way a butter churn looks to us. But a recipe in a person’s handwriting, for a cookie a family made every December, it will still mean something. It carries a hand. It could not be downloaded. It had to be written.

I have been asking myself a question, and I will hand it to you. If Cedar Valley filled a box for the year twenty-two seventy-six, what would we put in it?

Not the new things. The new things date the fastest. I think we would end up at someone’s kitchen drawer, the one with the recipe cards gone soft and brown at the edges, a name written at the top in a hand nobody uses anymore. I think we would put in the spoon a man carved, the quilt a woman pieced from worn-out shirts, the photograph with the names penciled on the back so they would not be lost.

We would not send the grandest thing we own. We would send the truest small one. The thing a person made, or kept, or loved enough to write down.

I know what this town keeps, because I have spent years watching it. It is never the newest thing. It is the dog-eared program from a school play long gone, the lure a father tied, the hymnal with a grandmother’s notes still in the margins.

There is a reason the country reached for the cookie recipe and the handmade pin even while it sealed in the newest phone. Some part of us already knows what lasts. We know the machine-made thing will be replaced by a better machine-made thing, and another after it. And we know the thing a person makes by hand says what a factory cannot: someone was here, and they cared enough to make this, and they were thinking of you, whoever you are, opening this box so long from now.

The capsule goes in the ground on the Fourth. Most of us will never think of it again. But the question it asks is a good one to carry for a while, here in the summer of our two hundred and fiftieth year.

Look at what is in your own house. Find the one thing you would send forward to a stranger in twenty-two seventy-six, the thing to tell them you were real, and you were here.

I think you already know it is not the newest thing on the shelf. I think it is the one with a person’s hand still on it.

Cedar Valley News has a Facebook group. If you have comments and want to join the conversation, you are welcome. Tell us what you would put in a box for the people of twenty-two seventy-six, and why. https://bit.ly/40p8jKy

This editorial is part of the fictional Cedar Valley News series, written by Evan Swensen, Publisher, and Claude Marshall, AI Developmental Editor. While the people and town of Cedar Valley are fictional, America’s Time Capsule, sealed in June 2026 and set to be buried in Philadelphia on July 4 and reopened in 2276, is real.

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