
They say that print is dying.
Great magazines have left us (I still miss Gourmet) for lack of subscriptions and monetary interest. Newspaper presses are stopping in one city after another. Yesterday, some good friends of us said that they are reading most of their books on their telephones.
Print is dying, right?
Not in this house, it's not.
We subscribe to the Seattle newspaper, no matter how thin it grows. (Danny's the one who reads it every day. He's far more up on the news than I am these days.) Stacks of books in every room threaten to topple over onto the adjoining stack. Lu loves when we read to her; she probably hears 40 books a day. (Many of them she demands to be repeated 12 times each. Thank goodness I'm still crazy about Curious George.) And even though I have started, tentatively, reading a few articles on our new iPad, and even downloaded a free copy of Winnie the Pooh to read to Lu when we are traveling, I will never pass up the chance to take a well-worn book into the bath.
From the amount of cookbooks we receive and buy every year, we're keeping the publishing industry humming.
(Perhaps you have bought our cookbook
We feel really lucky. Due to the nature of our work, we're sent copies of cookbooks from publishers almost every week. As some of you might remember, we did regular features last year where we cooked out of one book all week long and gave you our recommendations. (We especially loved David Leite's The New Portuguese Table
In the past few months, we have been too busy traveling and spreading the word about our cookbook to spend evening after evening with anyone else's book. Of course, this is the season for stacks of cookbooks to appear on Amazon and your local bookstore. We have been overwhelmed with choices.
We thought, therefore, we'd just share our 12 Best Cookbooks of 2010. (We tried to narrow it down to 10, but we couldn't do it. Think of it as 1 cookbook for every month of the year.)
Oh, and we're giving away a copy of each one.
Even in a big year for cookbooks, some stand out strong. In the past few weeks, we have been looking through our favorite cookbooks of the year, cooking here and there, curling up in bed reading to each other at the end of the night. Reading a great cookbook is like entering an entirely new world, like walking through the closet to Narnia.
For me and Danny, there are a few criteria that will keep a cookbook in our kitchen:
-- trusted recipes that work
-- a strong, clear voice from the author
-- a sense of playfulness with food
-- a feeling of joy in the act of standing in front of the stove singing through the instructions
-- spices or ingredients, flavor combinations, and techniques we had never considered
-- something intangible that inspires us to put down the book and go cook instead of read
We don't run a newspaper or food magazine here. This is our personal site, entirely biased and constantly changing. So we don't claim that the following cookbooks are The Best Cookbooks of 2010.
We just want to share them with you.
(Oh, and this list is organized alphabetically by the author's last name (with one exception), rather than beginning with the best book and the following eleven. Also, not one of these books is a "gluten-free" book. They are great cookbooks that have inspired us in the kitchen.)
This book, Anjum's New Indian
Until a few weeks ago, I had never heard of Anjum Anand. I didn't know she existed. However, our book editor, Justin, who has a food blog of his own, started posting photos of enticing shrimp curries and Bengali squash with chickpeas a few weeks ago and my mouth began watering.
Since reading and cooking out of Modern Spice
I really love this book. So does Danny. It's clear and plainspoken. Unlike some of our other favorite books of the year, there is not a lot of the author in here. Instead, she focuses on why she has chosen each recipe as a way of highlighting a particular region of India. (To say "Indian food" is, of course, an oversimplification.) The photographs are splendid and plentiful, which helps those of us unfamiliar with the dishes.
Something that struck me was her description of a Goan shrimp cake: "This is an old Goan dish that many have already been forgotten about and locals are worried that it might soon become obsolete as newer, faster recipes encroach on the New India." I love that dispersing a recipe like this can save it. I'll make it, gluten-free.
Green meatball curry, Bengali red lentils, Kashmiri lamb cooked in milk, Coconut chicken fry, Wild Mushrooms in Black Marsala — these are just some of the dishes we're going to be cooking in our kitchen in the next few weeks. We're making lots of cookies for you. I can't wait to feel those spices on my tongue.
"MaggyPam!" Lu shouts out when she sees the cover of this book.
You see, she loves Pam Anderson and her daughter, Maggy, who visited us here on Vashon in the fall. (Poor Sharon. She's the third of Three Many Cooks, but Lu didn't have a chance to spend enough time with her to shout "MaggyPamSharon!") She also loves this video about the three that our dear friends Todd and Diane made about their book. Honestly, she wants to watch it every single day. She sits there, transfixed, watching these wonderful women in the kitchen, cooking food and talking, laughing and making memories as they chop herbs and onions.
"Food!" Lu shouts next when she sees this book. And she's right. That's this book.
Perfect One-Dish Dinners: All You Need for Easy Get-Togethers
Pam writes clear recipes relying on tested techniques. In this book, she focused on helping people to get dinner on the table quickly, so there's more time to sit around that table after the food is finished and talk. (The dishes can wait. The conversation is what matters.)
After all those times of watching the video with Lu, we're making the sweet Italian sausage cassoulet soon!
For the past five years, I have been baking gluten-free cookies, breads, and pizzas. Honestly, the first three years were a steep learning curve. What I love about this process is the mistakes, the leaps up, the investigation, the writing of ratios, and the failures. And oh, have there been some failures.
Starting a couple of years ago, I had an intuitive feel for the flours and how they tasted, how they worked together in heat, how they rose or fell. I knew that I didn't like the bean flours. Coconut flour left me annoyed since it sucks all the moisture out of everything it touches. Amaranth flour, once a favorite, now sits in the back of the cupboard for its grassy taste. Still, I didn't really understand it. Sometimes the recipes worked and sometimes they did not.
Two books changed everything about the way I bake and helped our recipes to work for you. One was Michael Ruhlman's Ratio
You see, Kim Boyce was in a similar situation as mine (except she's a trained pastry chef, and I'm just figuring out the craft at the kitchen counter). At home with her daughters, she intended to bake every day. She didn't want to give her kids that much bleached white flour. So she started playing with amaranth and teff, plus other whole grains. Her book is a gorgeous evocation of the successes she had. And, it will make you hungry.
After reading and baking from Good to the Grain
Now, I always make sure that our gluten-free baked goods have 40% whole grains and 60% starches. In many ways, that means that gluten-free baking is more nutritious than goods made with only bleached white flour! It also works. Danny and I came up with our all-purpose gluten-free flour mix after reading Good to the Grain. We'll be using it in the coming weeks for our holiday cookie binge. It's 40% whole grains and 60% starches.
Thank you, Kim. You really changed my baking life. I'm pretty sure that anyone who buys this book will feel the same.
Every Wednesday, I read Melissa Clark's column in the New York Times dining section. Most Wednesday evenings, I am making whatever dish she created in black ink on newsprint for me. Melissa has this wonderful power, not only to make you hungry (many folks can do that on Twitter), but also to make you feel you must fling away the newspaper and turn on the burners of the stove.
I truly adore her book, In the Kitchen with A Good Appetite: 150 Recipes and Stories About the Food You Love
(Do you remember that scene in Annie Hall where Alvie Singer says, "I don't just love you. I lurve you. I loff you." That's how I feel about this book.)
Melissa's prose manages to be both crisp and giddy, filled with conversation and descriptions of quirky relationships between people. Each recipe has an essay preceding it and usually they're funny. (How often do you laugh at a cookbook?) Reading Melissa's book, you just want to sit at her table and talk while she cooks and you peel the onions for the next course.
However, the book is more than chatting at the table. These recipes are extraordinary, filled with great ingredients but fairly easy to prepare. Melissa has an incredible palate. I'm still waiting to try the pan-fried cheese with anchovy-date salad, the chorizo corn dog bites, the heirloom potato latkes, and the lamb tagine with apricots, olives, and buttered almonds. I'll be cooking out of this book for years.
There's a batch of the gingerbread cookies, with orange zest and cardamom, in the fridge right now. Next week, you'll see how they turn out.
Or, you could buy the book and make them yourself.
A friend of mine flipped through our copy of The Frankies Spuntino Kitchen Companion & Cooking Manual
I love it.
Danny and I were lucky enough to meet the Frankies in June, which inspired this roasted vegetable pasta salad. Listening to them talk about the the ethos of their cooking, and thus the cookbook, inspired me deeply. Slow cooking, good ingredients, simple preparations, and an insistence on doing things right. As well, in their restaurants, the Frankies emphasize dishes that fill you up but don't leave you full. Olive oil instead of butter. Plenty of great vegetables. You won't find any recipes for ooey-gooey lasagna here.
I still haven't found the time to make their Sunday sauce, a process that takes three full days. (I don't feel like we've been home for three consecutive days this fall!) However, I certainly will soon. I love that the Frankies embrace time in front of the stove. Instead of emphasizing shortcuts and pre-cooked ingredients, the Frankies want you to spend more time in the kitchen. That's where the magic happens.
Listen, if I had a hard time writing in any way objectively about Melissa Clark's book? I throw up my hands and let go when it comes to Dorie Greenspan's Around My French Table: More Than 300 Recipes from My Home to Yours
I adore Dorie Greenspan. I've written about her so many times on this site that she might as well be a shadow contributor. Before this fall, my adoration came through reading her recipes, making her baked goods, hearing her kind, gentle voice in my mind when I shaped dough and made my way through World Peace cookie disasters. Dorie not only writes recipes that yield meals full of flavor and comfort, but she also writes them so well that you are bound to succeed.
In fact, there's a passage in her new book that made Danny and I both want to stand up and cheer after reading it:
"Just about every time you cook or bake, you've got to make a judgment call — it's the nature of the craft. I tested these recipes over and over and wrote them as carefully and precisely as I could, but there's no way I could take into account all the individual variables that will turn up in your kitchen. I couldn't know exactly how powerful 'medium heat' is, how cool your steak is when you slide it into the pan, how full your skillet is when you're sautéing, and a million other little things that affect the outcome of what you're making. And so, I've given you as many clues as I can for you to decide when something is done, and I've often given you a range of cooking or baking times, but the success of any cooking — whether from this book or any other — depends on using your judgment. Don't cook something for 15 minutes just because I tell you to — check it a little before the 15-minutes mark, and then keep checking until it's just right. I always feel that when I send a recipe out into the world, I'm asking you to be my partner in making it, and I love this about cookbookery. I trust your judgment, and you should too."
You see what I mean about her? Anyone who pushes you to use your senses and learn to trust yourself? That's who you want in your kitchen.
I have to tell you, I am hopelessly biased about Dorie Greenspan now, even more, after I met her in San Francisco this fall. The fact that I spoke on a panel about writing cookbooks with Dorie at BlogHerFood blew me away. What could I possibly say in the face of her knowledge? (True to form, I found something to say and probably talked too much.) She and I had a few brief, wonderful connections that will stay with me for years.
But here's the moment that stays with me most.
Aran and Danny and I were walking around the Ferry Terminal building, looking at great food and running after the kids. Danny came back from swooping up a fast-running Lu and told me, "Dorie Greenspan's at Blue Bottle coffee right now!"
Now, I have to tell you, I'm not big on celebrity. I lived with a movie star in London once (and I'm contractually obligated to not tell you anything about that). I grew up in LA, where "celebrities" thronged at every coffee shop. I was an actor when I was a kid. Someone famous? Whatever. It's talent that impresses me.
So I sort of stood there and hyperventilated for a moment. Should I even say hello? Dorie and I had written back and forth on Twitter for a bit, and she seemed to know who I was, which astounded me. Finally, I strode forward to find her.
All shy and not wanting to bother her, as she was preparing to leave with a friend, I said, "Um, hi, I'm Shauna."
At that, Dorie opened her arms with a giant smile. She went to hug me, and then she pulled back. In her right hand she held half a bread roll. She ran over to the trash can, threw out the roll, and then wiped her hand on her pants before she came over to give me the warmest, loveliest hug.
I wonder if she felt my tears on the back of her jacket.
Now, you might be thinking, what does this have to do with her new book? Everything. Wouldn't you want to cook next to someone this thoughtful and kind, this open and embracing? Dorie's new book is her most personal, a collection of recipes from her life in Paris, a city she loves ardently, more every year. Each recipe is imbued with the gracious passion that seems to fuel her. Whether it's roasted salmon and lentils, beef cheek daube with carrots and elbow macaroni, cinnamon crunch chicken, or Breton fish soup, every recipe inspires me to move into the kitchen.
Start cooking from Dorie's cookbook and you will soon adore her too.
I'm a little in awe of Amanda Hesser.
Seriously, not only is she one of the most accomplished and talented food writers in the world, but she's lovely and composed, even with 4-year-old twins. The woman knows how to string sentences together better than almost anyone else I read, no matter what the genre.
I remember reading Cooking for Mr. Latte to Danny in our first apartment together, laughing and wondering at the stories, then moving to the stove.
(Sense a theme here? We really do love the books that insist we put them down.)
Of course, I have been reading her in The New York Times since long before I lived in New York, well over a decade.
When Danny, Lucy, and I had breakfast with Amanda in New York, therefore, I was intimidated. In fact, I was a little tongue tied. (Afterward, Danny said to me, "Wow, I've never heard you at a loss for words before. You didn't sound like yourself." Great, I thought. I sounded like a blathering idiot in front of Amanda Hesser.) She could not have been lovelier. Eventually, I relaxed and sounded less like a spazz.
(Last month, Amanda came to Seattle for her book, and I had the chance to have dinner with her at Delancey, along with my friends Rebekah Denn and Nancy Leson. I was far less intimidated and talked like a (sort of) normal person, while also eating a gluten-free pizza made for me by Brandon. Once again, Amanda could not have been lovelier, more full of interesting food conversation, and gracious.)
I have to tell you, if I had owned a copy of The Essential New York Times Cookbook: Classic Recipes for a New Century
This is truly one of the most astonishing cookbooks ever published.
Imagining and sifting and crafting for six years, reading thousands of emails and letters from New York Times readers with their favorite recipes from the newspaper attached, spending too much time in the archives section of the NYT's building, translating cooking terms from the 1800s, making meal after meal after meal late at night, laughing and stumbling and cataloging more than 1200 recipes with her business partner, Merrill — Amanda Hesser took on a Herculean task.
What's unimaginable is how easily the book reads after all that effort.
This is my new Joy of Cooking. Whenever I need a base recipe from which to start, like pasta with vodka, I can open this book and find a recipe from Craig Claiborne and Pierre Franey, from 1982. I know that it not only made the initial cut of the New York Times editors, but it also was a favorite of at least three readers. Then, it was tested by Amanda and Merrill and made cleaner in the editing. This is a recipe that works.
Also, have I mentioned that the headnotes are hilarious? I kept Danny up late one night, reading one headnote after another to him.
Chickpeas in ginger sauce, spicy orange salad Moroccan style, short ribs with coffee and chiles, Maida Heatter's popovers, or just a perfect batch of rice — every single one of the 1108 recipes appeals to me.
This one will always be in our kitchen.
Thank you, Amanda Hesser. I may have been too stumbly to tell you this in person: this book is genius.
If you have been reading this website for longer than half a minute, you know how much I love David Lebovitz.
(Let me pause here and say how astonished I am that Danny and I some kind of personal connection with quite a few of the cookbook authors on this list. I never, ever expected this. Any of this. My life the last five years has been nothing but astonishment. I was a high school English teacher when I started this. You never could have told me that I would write a cookbook! Or that I would meet and become friends with some of the most respected cookbook authors in this country. I am constantly amazed. So I want you to know that this is the place from which I am writing these little recommendations, not from "Look who I know!" Some of you might read it that way. I can't control that. But seriously, I'm like a kid in a candy store here.)
I wrote an entire post about how much we love Ready for Dessert: My Best Recipes
I will just say that this book, like David, is meticulous and hilarious, full of important knowledge, and leading toward the delicious.
You're missing too much if you don't own it.
Guess what? We don't know the author of this book at all. No connection!
That doesn't make us love this book any less.
Danny is a pretty entrenched omnivore. Before he met me, he could not consider a day without meat. It's what he loves to cook and to eat. Me? I was a vegetarian for 10 years, which changed long before he met me. However, those sensibilities are still in me.
Slowly, over time, we have eaten more and more vegetarian meals. Sometimes, Danny winced, wishing for meat. However, when he started working at the restaurant on the island where he works now, he began shifting his thinking about vegetarian dishes.
You see, he has to come up with a vegetarian special for every Tuesday.
When Danny decided to make his restaurant in Seattle gluten-free, he did it for me. He didn't realize how many people would flock to the place, grateful. And he certainly didn't know how much it would improve his cooking.
A little deprivation breeds creativity. And so again, making vegetarian specials for people that are also gluten-free and dairy-free. Specials like roasted butternut squash and turnips, with wild rice and lentils, grilled tofu, and a parsley-sherry vinaigrette.
Now, Danny truly loves making great vegetarian food. He's a much better chef now too.
One of his biggest inspirations for creating these dishes? Plenty
This is a beautiful book. No one eating the dishes out of this book could feel deprived.
Ottelenghi taught me to build a depth of flavor in vegetarian dishes by roasting or smoking or pickling some parts of the dish. This changes everything. When I was a vegetarian, I ate a lot of rice and beans, and then I piled on the salsa. If I had eaten burnt aubergine with tahini and pomegranate seeds, or fried butterbeans with feta, sorrel, and sumac, or Castellucio lentils with tomatoes and Gorgonzola back then? I might never have stopped being a vegetarian.
Good food is good food. Labels sometimes stop us from trying meals that could change our lives. Gluten-free? Most of the world's great food is naturally gluten-free. Vegetarian? It can just be great food.
Urban Pantry: Tips and Recipes for a Thrifty, Sustainable and Seasonal Kitchen
But this book by Amy Pennington just keeps drawing me in.
Amy teaches people how to set up a well-stocked pantry, and then how to cook from that pantry. Pretty simple, right? That's the point, something Danny and I are realizing more and more clearly. Instead of going out and buying the ingredients we fancy that day, or buying ingredients for a specific recipe, we shop each week for what is missing from our pantry. It might seem more plodding at first, but it actually breeds creativity. If we have good whole grains, gluten-free flours, lentils and beans, oils and fats, vinegars, nuts, dried fruits, and some foods that always live in our refrigerator, we can make anything. Amy's book really helped us to change the way we organize our food lives.
You can't help but like Amy. She's funny and expansive, casual and passionate. She just wants you to cook.
More than any other book on this list, Urban Pantry: Tips and Recipes for a Thrifty, Sustainable and Seasonal Kitchen
What I love is that the recipes from Amy's pantry are never boring. Most books enticing to beginners teach you how to make plain, simple food. With recipes like walnut and garlic chicken, gremolata, cumin black pot with cabbage, and Indian pickled carrots, this book will help you make interesting meals full of flavor. You just won't have to go out shopping every day for new ingredients if you pay attention to what Amy is saying.
One of Danny's favorite foods in the world is the artichoke. When he saw the cover of this book, he wanted it. Of course, it didn't hurt that the author is David Tanis, head chef at Chez Panisse half the year, host of a private dining club in Paris the other half a year. Really, this was a no brainer. We bought this book immediately. You want Heart of the Artichoke and Other Kitchen Journeys
I love how spare and beautiful this book is. (Having photographs by Christopher Hirsheimer makes any book breathtaking.) Some of the books we love best this year (including ours) are full of narrative, winding stories and hilarious turns. Tanis is laconic, saying only what is necessary. For example, I love that the first section of the book is called Kitchen Rituals, simple acts of being in the kitchen, like how to peel an apple with a knife in one long peel. Or the joys of Ziploc bags, taking harissa with you as you travel to spice up your life, and eating raw artichokes for lunch. This may sound like too little for a cookbook. It's not. Each ritual taught us something about food that we didn't know before. (I'm making bags of freezer tomatoes in Ziplocs next summer.)
This is really a book about being in the kitchen all the time. It's not flashy. it's not trying to reinvent cuisine, it's not going to shout at you. Instead, Tanis suggests a life of cooking every day, without the idea that dinner has to be on the table, quickly. It's about living a life of food, graciously.
On top of that, the man really knows his food. I want to make his tea-smoked chicken salad with ginger vinaigrette immediately.
Also, the book is arranged by a series of seasonal menus: spring, summer, fall, and winter. This helps me enormously when I'm trying to find something to cook for the evening. We could be having duck confit with crisp panfried potatoes alongside celery, radish, and watercress salad with walnut oil soon. Dessert will be spiced pears in red wine.
Truly, I want to make everything in this book. Everything.
We happily recommended Plenty, a vegetarian book full of complex recipes that will make you love your vegetables and grains. Because life is not simple, we're also enthusiastically recommending Pig: King of the Southern Table
This is one of the kinds of cookbooks I love most: specific and focused. Villas, a respected food writer who has written more than ten cookbooks, turns his attention to the role pork plays in the South. Guess what? It's a big role. There's plenty to read and to cook here.
How about Carolina pork and sweet potato pie with biscuit batter crust? Or Maw Maw's mustard pork chops and dumplings in cider? Or sherried ham and squash casserole? I'm hungry again.
The book is filled with stories of the people who make and cook pork in the South, as well as little facts along the way. As you know, we love pork in this house. If you do too, you will absolutely love this book.
When we told friends of ours that we were planning to do this (epic-long) post, some of them said, "What are you doing? Why are you promoting other people's cookbooks when you are trying to sell yours?"
Well, I have to tell you, that's how we are. We love to give. We've been blessed enough to have these books in our home this year, and our bellies have been happy for the cracked-open books on our kitchen counter.
Also, we cannot say, "Hey, in the top 10 cookbooks of the year? Our book, Gluten-Free Girl and the Chef
But we'd like you to consider buying it. We think you'll like it.
Here's Where You Come In
Because we have loved these 12 cookbooks so much, we want you to have the chance to cook from them too. So we are giving away a copy of every one of these books, including ours. 13 of you will have a new cookbook soon.
Simply tell us what makes a great cookbook for you. We'll see if we can match the winners to the right book.
(Also, if you are thinking about buying any of these cookbooks, would you consider going through our site? If you buy anything on Amazon through these links, we receive a small amount of money for each purchase. This keeps us going in gluten-free flours for all the baking experiments!)
And, believe it or not, we had a heck of a time narrowing this down to 12 books. If you are interested, here are the other books we considered:
Cookbooks That Almost Made the Cut
Cooking for Isaiah: Gluten-Free & Dairy-Free Recipes for Easy Delicious Meals
Cooking with Italian Grandmothers: Recipes and Stories from Tuscany to Sicily
Doughnuts: Simple and Delicious Recipes to Make at Home
The Gourmet Cookie Book: The Single Best Recipe from Each Year 1941-2009
The Newlywed Kitchen: Delicious Meals for Couples Cooking Together
Nigella Kitchen: Recipes from the Heart of the Home
Food Books (not quite cookbooks but still amazing)
As Always, Julia: The Letters of Julia Child and Avis DeVoto
Food Heroes: 16 Culinary Artisans Preserving Tradition
Salted: A Manifesto on the World's Most Essential Mineral, with Recipes
Spoon Fed: How Eight Cooks Saved My Life
Will Write for Food: The Complete Guide to Writing Cookbooks, Blogs, Reviews, Memoir, and More
Cookbooks We Don't Own Yet But Hope To Soon
Barefoot Contessa How Easy Is That?: Fabulous Recipes & Easy Tips
Keys to Good Cooking: A Guide to Making the Best of Foods and Recipes
One Big Table: 600 recipes from the nation's best home cooks, farmers, fishermen, pit-masters, and chefs
In the Green Kitchen: Techniques to Learn by Heart
Noma: Time and Place in Nordic Cuisine
The Sunset Cookbook: Over 1,000 Fresh, Flavorful Recipes for the Way You Cook Today
What I Eat: Around the World in 80 Diets
What makes a cookbook great so it stays in your kitchen?













432 comments:
«Oldest ‹Older 201 – 400 of 432 Newer› Newest»I have to admit the first thing that catches my eye are the pictures...I just don't have the confidence in my cooking abilities yet, so I need a photograph that I can compare my work to.
After that I love colorful dishes that incorporate a variety of ingredients. Thankfully my kids enjoy a varied menu!!
I really am not posting to WIN, but I must say that you two (three), make some of the best GF meals EVER!
Next time you are in Portland, you might want to hook up with the owners of New Cascadia Bakery. They have a great space
for a Book Signing.......and of course has a built in GF following. The entire facility is GF.
Ciao-Sharon
Oh my, this is incredible. I already just want to lay in my bed and re-read all of your incredibly intimate reviews of these books. If I could, I'd curl up and insert myself somewhere in the GB's of this machine, just to get closer.
A good cookbook seduces me. It throws me a look, it says something to me that sticks in my mind and draws me back to it over and over again, when I'm first getting to know it.
Like in Melissa Clark's book, her Sesame Halvah Toffee worked its way into my mind like a bad biker boyfriend. Because even though I was looking for hearty, delicious, healthful soups & stews to cook during the week for the two of us, that toffee recipe knew what really turned me on.
I want to go back to my books over and over again. Year after year, as I get older, learn more and maybe gain some wisdom along the way, I can go back to my books and find things in them that I never saw before. It's as if they say to me, "we've been waiting for you to catch up." And, they don't harbor any hard feelings.
Now, if you'll excuse me, I need to re-read your whole post again. From the beginning.
I am a full-time law student about to graduate and start studying 10 hours a day for the bar. My life for the past few years has been stressful, overwhelming, and exhausting, and it will stay that way for another 8 months before I'm all done with the learning and can start branching out.
But I'm 26 and I love cooking and not having as much time or money for it anymore upsets me. I look for recipes -- and could use a cookbook -- that call for few, simple, common, and/or inexpensive ingredients, and that make -- or can easily be converted to make -- leftover portions. And help me reuse the leftovers in a new way, maybe!
What makes a cookbook great so it stays in your kitchen?
A cookbook lasts in my kitchen if the recipes are reliable. I want a cookbook where I can make a new recipe when company are coming and know that it will turn out perfectly.
My ideal cookbook would have recipes that I can trust enough to do the taboo thing and cook a dish for company that I haven't tested out myself. It has intriguing flavor combinations which I wouldn't have come up with myself, yet the author describes the dish in such a way that makes me want to try it out. I also really love little educational tidbits which I can apply for more than just this recipe. Pictures are definitely a plus, but not a must. That said, the biggest hole in my current cookbook collection is for vegetarian recipes. I am not a fully committed vegetarian, but I usually don't eat meat more than once per month. The only vegetarian cookbook I own is Madhur Jaffrey's World of the East. I have found some gems in it, but it is definitely for the adventurous...not for trying out on friends.
I love a cookbook I can't burn through - literally! I have a terrible habit of leaving my cookbooks on the hot stove, so I look for cookbooks that tell a story so gripping I won't put it down. As for a good match - aside from any that doesn't kindle the pilot light :) - preserving and reviving classic and heritage "works of artful life" is my passion. So I'd treasure Anjum's New Indian, and I'd look forward to pouring its bounty onto the plates of my family and friends.
For me, a good cookbook is plainly written with clear directions. Sure, stories are great. But when I'm trying to cook, I want the recipe easy to read, maybe even on one page (or thoughtfully split between many). I don't want to be bogged down with stuff that won't help me with the recipe.
That said, cuisine-wise, I'm open to anything. We're an omnivorous household consisting of one former vegan, and me, the one with Celiac. We eat just about everything and even the ManBeast happily cooks gluten free for me!
A big part of a cookbook for me is the pictures - step by step pictures make it all the more fun. I'm always willing to try a recipe that doesn't sound great if the dish looks amazing...apparently my stomach is directly connected to my eyes!
I love a cookbook that has lots of beautiful food pictures and simple, classic recipes that don't necessarily require a million steps to perform. A cookbook that contains realistic ideas for a work-night dinner, but with options that can easily be dressed up for a nice dinner party with friends!
Shauna, thank you for your thoughtful post. So glad you like the book.
I love a cookbook with great pictures - even better if a recipe has multiple step-by-step pictures. I'm always interested in trying a recipe with a beautiful picture, even if the dish's name or ingredients don't sound appealing!
I do like photos in cookbooks, but only if they are great photos. I like to 'read' cookbooks too, so I love it if there's a preface to each recipe - what it would go good with, why it's special, & such. I like 'every-day-ish' and 'make-from-scratch' recipes. And I like a book that 'feels' good - not necessarily glossy, but comfortable & manageable to hold & open & use. If it invites me to write in it, jot notes in it, tell when I made it & who for...that's a book for me.
A good cookbook has great photos, good directions, some narration, and easy to find ingredients. Healthy, unprocessed kind of foods are my favorite type of food so that reflects to the cookbooks I use.
The best cookbooks are the ones that grow with you as you become a better cook. They have basic information that can help readers tackle a dish for the first time, but they also indicate possible variations that can continue to challenge or inspire the more practiced cook.
I have a couple of cookbooks that fit this description. They stay open on my kitchen counter more than they reside on my bookshelf. I try the recipes again and again, adding or changing or deleting ingredients as I try variations on favorite recipes.
Something that makes a cookbook great for me is that it makes me consider new flavor combos or look at a familar ingredient in a new way. I'm also a sucker for great photography (love reading Dorie Greenspan's blog entries about taking the pix for her books).
Shauna, you assembled an impressive list of new cookbooks.
I like originality, humour, intelligence, great writing, and clear recipes which reflect my tastes, more or less. Good photography is a strong hook, but I try to not be swept away by pictures.
Thanks,
Dan
I want a cookbook that emphasizes vegetables and is full of recipes that have lots of flavor.
First of all, print will never leave my home. There is nothing like curling up in bed with a great book or cookbook. I spend a lot of time on my computer for work and I don't want to spend my "pleasure" time on here!
My second cousin introduced me to your blog a couple of weeks ago and I have been reading it faithfully--and with great relish!! I can't wait to try some of the recipes!
A cookbook for me has to have real food that tastes really good. I love intense flavors and spices. I read cookbooks like novels. I have two by my chair right now! My collection is full of marked pages of recipes to try. I also make lots of notes if I really like something, and have completely 'x'ed out ones I didn't like!
Your list of cookbooks is amazing and I would love to have any of them--as well as yours! I look forward to checking them out.
That was a great read, thanks!
What I love in a cookbook is learning to make things come alive with new ingredients. I grow a lot of my own food and can, so I get stuck making the same things over and over. I find my greatest creativity in the kitchen and love to push that to new limits and expose my family to new things.
And of course, I love yours!
To me there is nothing better than a great cookbook! I cherish all of mine and spend hours browsing the book store just looking at all the cooking books!
I love books with lots of pictures and easy to find ingredients, and obviously good recipes by a trusted chef.
Gotta say I've been lusting after Dorie Greenspan's book, and not only because it's beautiful, but I'm positively head over heels for France!
I rarely follow exact recipes. I cannot help but to add additional ingredients and substitutions to any recipe in the hopes of making it "my own" even if it's my first time making the dish. I enjoy cookbooks with recipes that are forgiving in this way and allow me to express my culinary creativity :)
What a great round up of cookbooks! I'm very new to being gluten-free and almost as new to cooking in general. A cookbook that isn't too difficult for a beginner is my favorite. They let me feel like I, too, can cook!
Oh wow. So many good cookbooks and not one in my collection. I am in awe of your knowledge of food - and your love for creating it. As we've journeyed into gluten- free-dom I have routinely turned to you and The Chef for guidance, inspiration, and fix-its. And that's what a good cookbook is for me. It's takes me to another place in my mind and helps me transport my food there too. It also gives me ideas for new foods - and ways to fix/tweak the things I already know.
What I think makes a cookbook good is that it inspires me to cook, makes my mouth water, teaches me new things, has beautiful photos or illustrations, good writing (but sometimes really good cookbooks are just good recipes), and last but very necessary desserts are a must!
I loved reading about all of the books thank you!
Pétra
A brilliant post as always! I have a few of these books (Dorie, Amanda, of course yours) and now I want ot own ALL of them. sigh. I agree that a book that makes me want to go make the dish right away is jey. I also love books like Amanda's and yours that tell a story. And books that can help me make a healthful dish full of flavor with not too many ingredients in a reasonable amoutn of time? genius. Oh yeah, and if they have beautiful photography (not sure what the inside of David Tanis's book looks like, but the cover is GORGEOUS) then I am likely to read it for the sheer pleasure of seeing those photographs.
xoxox
A brilliant post as always! I have a few of these books (Dorie, Amanda, of course yours) and now I want ot own ALL of them. sigh. I agree that a book that makes me want to go make the dish right away is jey. I also love books like Amanda's and yours that tell a story. And books that can help me make a healthful dish full of flavor with not too many ingredients in a reasonable amoutn of time? genius. Oh yeah, and if they have beautiful photography (not sure what the inside of David Tanis's book looks like, but the cover is GORGEOUS) then I am likely to read it for the sheer pleasure of seeing those photographs.
xoxox
I have 3 all-time favorites in my kitchen: One is exhaustive, and clearly written (The Joy of Cooking), one is full of simple, beautiful, man-pleasing food (Mad Hungry) and one is a precise but beautiful ode to baking (Baking from My Home to Yours..Dorie Greenspan).
Great photos of delicious tried and true recipes that include really healthy ingredients - some that are different than the average recipe but not so bizarre that they are impossible to find and always recipes that my kids will love too. :)
This was such an awesome post - thanks for your great reviews. I can't wait to get a copy of your book.
I would love Melissa Clark's book, it's just my kind of cooking. Simple good meal for me and my hubby. I also would love the New York Times cook book to practice new cooking methods, learn new dishes... However, I think I really would like to have a copy of Anjum's New Indian cook book. I know nothing about Indian cooking, but I just married a Pakistan man. He was born in America, raised in America, so he loves my American cooking. Simple meals that gives the happy warm feeling in our tummies. However, his mother, my new mother in law is very Pakistani. All her cooking involves foreign spices and technics that I have.. no idea how to do. I feel so lost in her kitchen. Maybe this book will help me feel little more familiar with her magical ways in the kitchen.
"This is an old Goan dish that many have already been forgotten about and locals are worried that it might soon become obsolete as newer, faster recipes encroach on the New India."
Ok I totally teared up at this. I have to have these amazing books that you're recommending. Even if I've got to get them the *hard* way, I will :) I love that you took the time to share such in-depth reviews. I am a huge fan of cookbooks, and constantly on the lookout for more. I love to cook real food, food that tastes good, makes my body happy, and food that makes other people look at me, and say wow, eating allergen-free is pretty awesome!
My favorite cookbooks make me drool! The descriptions, the flavor combinations, the pictures! I'm such a visual person, and love a good photo!
I also really enjoy the simple recipes, the ones that come together beautifully b/c they're full of great ingredients. I work full time, and when I'm not working, I like to play with my family and friends. I like to entertain. But I don't like to be stuck in the kitchen all day, except on Sundays when I make myself make something!
What a fantastic giveaway! Thanks you guys! Can't wait to see your book under my Christmas tree!
I love cookbooks. I love the passion it takes to write a great cookbook. I love photos of delicious-looking food. I love to curl up with am interesting cook book or cooking magazine and plan out all of the new recipes I want to try out during the upcoming weeks. They inspire me!
What i love is a cookbook that spurn me to cook something healthy and delicious, recipes that inspire me to try something new like roasting peppers for pizza and a cook book that has shopping lists included in the glossary, love that!
I love to read cookbooks and really can never see myself using anything but print. My family has varied food allergies and dislikes so it is an adventure every time that I open a cookbook to find something that would appeal to everyone.
I love any cookbook that makes me buy something that's not already in my cupboard. I love finding new things and flavor combinations that I never would have thought of before.
Wow. Thanks for the thoughtful information on the books!
I am commenting for the first time. I've been reading your blog for about 6mos. now -- and enjoying very much. Thanks for all you do. I am really looking forward to buying your book when I am back in the States.
My mom and I found out we were allergic wheat by accident (then from medical tests). What happened is that I started cooking Indian food and my mom and I began to thrive. Then I returned to my teaching job and my mom went back to her regular cooking and all her usual ills came rushing back. That got her thinking and into the doctor's office. As you no doubt know, if you are cooking Indian food and serving it with rice (which is easier than chapatti or naan for most Americans), there is usually no wheat involved. And there are all those healing spices in everyday Indian dishes.
Anyhow, that you lead off your list with an Indian cook book caught my eye. NOT that you need any more cook books to check out!!!! -- but you mentioned diving into Indian food more, so I wanted to quickly share with you, Six Spices by Neeta Saluja because she really lays out the Indian cooking methods and the dishes are everyday fare and fantastic. And also Julie Sahni's Classic Indian Cooking has meat recipes to die for! (I am thinking of the chef's liking for meat here.) When I am in the States I cook from a range of excellent Indian cook books, including the ones you mention. Saluja and Sahni are good for daily food and farmer's market finds. (BTW: I've lived and cooked in India for the past year.)
I'm in a rut though... it is hard now, after so many years to break away from the Indian cooking. So I am really appreciating your list because as I reenter the cooking book scene, cookbooks seem to have lost the pull on me that they once had now that I can't eat wheat (or soy).
What keeps a book in my kitchen? What do I love in a cookbook? More than anything, I love being in the kitchen and cooking. Time spent in the kitchen making food with my hands is the best part of my day. And post gluten, I have kept with me the books that speak to being with and making/creating good food. Don't get me wrong, I love eating, and I am very fond of fantastic flavors, and I love cooking for people and the camaraderie that comes from sharing food, and food history, etc. but often all that is just an excellent excuse for me to spend time in the kitchen -- my favorite place in the world to be. (What use is all the great cooking with out people to share it with, huh?)
Again thanks Shauna. I have really enjoyed your site, your words.
Wow. Thanks for the thoughtful information on the books!
I am commenting for the first time. I've been reading your blog for about 6mos. now -- and enjoying very much. Thanks for all you do. I am really looking forward to buying your book when I am back in the States.
My mom and I found out we were allergic wheat by accident (then from medical tests). What happened is that I started cooking Indian food and my mom and I began to thrive. Then I returned to my teaching job and my mom went back to her regular cooking and all her usual ills came rushing back. That got her thinking and into the doctor's office. As you no doubt know, if you are cooking Indian food and serving it with rice (which is easier than chapatti or naan for most Americans), there is usually no wheat involved. And there are all those healing spices in everyday Indian dishes.
Anyhow, that you lead off your list with an Indian cook book caught my eye. NOT that you need any more cook books to check out!!!! -- but you mentioned diving into Indian food more, so I wanted to quickly share with you, Six Spices by Neeta Saluja because she really lays out the Indian cooking methods and the dishes are everyday fare and fantastic. And also Julie Sahni's Classic Indian Cooking has meat recipes to die for! (I am thinking of the chef's liking for meat here.) When I am in the States I cook from a range of excellent Indian cook books, including the ones you mention. Saluja and Sahni are good for daily food and farmer's market finds. (BTW: I've lived and cooked in India for the past year.)
I'm in a rut though... it is hard now, after so many years to break away from the Indian cooking. So I am really appreciating your list because as I reenter the cooking book scene, cookbooks seem to have lost the pull on me that they once had now that I can't eat wheat (or soy).
What keeps a book in my kitchen? What do I love in a cookbook? More than anything, I love being in the kitchen and cooking. Time spent in the kitchen making food with my hands is the best part of my day. And post gluten, I have kept with me the books that speak to being with and making/creating good food. Don't get me wrong, I love eating, and I am very fond of fantastic flavors, and I love cooking for people and the camaraderie that comes from sharing food, and food history, etc. but often all that is just an excellent excuse for me to spend time in the kitchen -- my favorite place in the world to be. (What use is all the great cooking with out people to share it with, huh?)
Again thanks Shauna. I have really enjoyed your site, your words.
Wow. Thanks for the thoughtful information on the books!
I am commenting for the first time. I've been reading your blog for about 6mos. now -- and enjoying very much. Thanks for all you do. I am really looking forward to buying your book when I am back in the States.
My mom and I found out we were allergic wheat by accident (then from medical tests). What happened is that I started cooking Indian food and my mom and I began to thrive. Then I returned to my teaching job and my mom went back to her regular cooking and all her usual ills came rushing back. That got her thinking and into the doctor's office. As you know, cooking Indian food and serving it with rice (which is easier than chapatti or naan for most Americans), usually no wheat is involved. And there are all those healing spices in everyday Indian dishes. (Let me know if you would like to know about more great indian cookbooks! Not that you need MORE cookbooks to look at!)
I'm in a rut though... it is hard now, after so many years to break away from the Indian cooking. So I am really appreciating your list because as I reenter the cooking book scene, cookbooks seem to have lost the pull on me that they once had now that I can't eat wheat (or soy).
What keeps a book in my kitchen? What do I love in a cookbook? More than anything, I love being in the kitchen and cooking. Time spent in the kitchen making food with my hands is the best part of my day. And post gluten, I have kept with me the books that speak to being with and making/creating good food. Don't get me wrong, I love eating, and I am very fond of fantastic flavors, and I love cooking for people and the camaraderie that comes from sharing food, and food history, etc. but often all that is just an excellent excuse for me to spend time in the kitchen -- my favorite place in the world to be. (What use is all the great cooking with out people to share it with, huh?)
Again thanks Shauna. I have really enjoyed your site, your words.
A good cookbook inspires me to wander around the store for two hours, carefully selecting fresh ingredients. I love leaving the store carrying a bag full of grains and produce, leafy greens bursting from the top, knowing that I have big plans for my next meal and a good guide to help me get there.
Thank you, Shauna, for the wonderful list! A good cookbook to me is one I love to read. It's one with delicious recipes that inspire me to try new variations and experiment. A GREAT cookbook helps me understand how recipes work (I own and love your new book; "Ratio" has become a go-to staple in my kitchen (right alongside my other favorite reference, "The Flavor Bible")
Like you, I know a lot of these cookbook authors and they are all amazingly talented! I feel like I know you, through twitter and your blog, so thank you for that. What makes a cookbook stay around my kitchen? Use, pure and simple. There is no 'recipe' for loving a certain cookbook. I'm always surprised by the ones I keep coming back to. The ones that eventually fall apart. Tape is currently holding together my Marcella Hazan and of course Joy.
What a fantastic list! I too love cookbooks and have been devouring them by the dozens lately as I learn to cook.
Dorie's World Peace cookies were the first recipe that I have success with in converting it to gluten-free which gives her a very special place in my heart.
That said, I love stories! I'm a huge fan of cookbooks that are part cookbook and part biography. If you've ever read Laurie Colwin then you know exactly what kind of book I like to read. I'm a huge fan of the stories behind the recipes, not just a ton of recipes.
I can read and re-read books like Sweet Life in Paris, Home Cooking, A Homeade Life ... and the list goes on.
Reading about cooking fills my soul and sometimes my tummy. It's the ultimate in books.
Thanks for sharing your favorites, I think some of these will be on my list!
My favorite cookbooks have lots of pictures - some are great photographs, whereas others are just simple drawings of vegetables or kids pulling carrots from a garden. Cookbooks full of recipes using lots of fresh vegetables from gardens or farmers markets are great - especially if they pair ingredients that are naturally in season and can be found in my area. And anything MIddle Eastern/Indian/Central Asian always gets our vote. I'm excited to check out your suggestions - Thanks!
I don't have many cookbooks. I just counted them - 8 in total and one of that 8 is yours! Thank you so much for putting the results of your relentless efforts toward glorious gluten free food to print. My idea of a great cookbook is one that teaches me the "why" behind the "do" which frees me to play. It might introduce new or new-to-me ingredients or demystify the chemistry involved. It has a comprehensive index that is ingredient oriented. It sometimes takes me around the world but most often takes me to my own backyard or farmer's market. Lastly, it calls me to stop cooking and sit down, so I can hear, "Mommy, this is the best ______ ever! Oh, and do you know what I ...," for the duration of the meal and beyond.
I like a cookbook I can carry round the house, spill my coffee over, read in bed, get flour all over in the kitchen, and excitedly recommend to friends. Good photos are helpful but not essential - some of my favourite books (e.g. Jane Grigson) have none at all. Good cookbooks are friends for life :)
If I can't put down a cookbook and want to put it down at the same time to start cooking, that's a good cookbook for me. It should have great stories connected to the recipes that make me smile. I'd like to turn to the cookbook for great recipes but also for references (if I just have an idea what to make but not sure how). It should have recipes that I like to do over and over again and the pages get so sticky because I've been using it so much. And when I finally eat the first piece of food I cooked from that book I have to close my eyes and the world stops for a moment. Because it's that good.
I love cookbooks and have a very long list of books I want to buy (that makes it very easy when asked what I'd like for my birthday or Christmas!)
A book stays in my kitchen if it's quick and easy for during the week - in order to make sure I used my cookbooks, I started picking one at random every week and cooking at least 1 dish from it. The books that have found their way back to the kitchen most often are Ching He-Huang's books (she might not be known in the US yet) and before starting my weekly cookbook I would have sworn that my most useful cookbooks were by Nigella! (How to Eat was the first cookbook I received, aged 14).
I need to re-start choosing cookbooks again, moving cities and then moving house twice in 3 months put it on hold over a year ago. I try to choose something new every week but my weekly food plans are stuck in the same rotation!
I've heard so many good things about Pam Anderson's book, I think that will be going on my Christmas list this year!
A great cookbook for me gets me excited to try out the recipes. I like colorful pictures, clear instructions and
comments from the author. I love trying new recipes and making meals that my family loves. If you saw my amazon.com history you would know that I am doing my part to keep print alive. I am planning to give cookbooks as gifts this Christmas. Thanks for the suggestions.
S. Dressel
I would love a copy of Plenty. I'm a longtime vegetarian and have been gluten-free for the past year - I feel great about the wonderful food I'm able to make that's both vegetarian and gluten-free, but I still could use a little infusion of creativity. It looks like an amazing book.
Great reviews!
I'd love to copy everyone else and fall head over heels in love with the Good to the Grain book. I'm kinda clueless about different grains and could use a solid (and delicious) education.
All of these are wonderful picks! I highly recommend checking out the Flour Bakery cookbook by Joanne Chang (came out earlier this month). I need to get my hands on Dorie's book. I'm ashamed to not own it :-(
Oh, that's a tough one! I have plenty of cookbooks (but never enough, if you know what I mean!). I always look at cookbooks as a sort of inspiration, never following the recipe to the letter, judging my own instincts and seasonal produce (apart from baking books!). So, essentials in a cookbook: clear theme, mouthwatering pictures, tested recipes and some logical division into chapters for easy navigation.
For me, it is recipes that work. I know how to cook so basics are not necessary, but a cookbook author who can take the complex and make it, if not easy, at least understandable, that is what I look for.
I enjoy simple, timeless recipes that are not complicated and that can become rhythmical with time. Good food, simple ingredients. When time allows, I do enjoy reading portions of cookbooks that allow the reader to understand the "why" or science behind the cooking methods or ingredient selections.
As a new cook and an even newer gluten free diner, the importance of a cook book is on functionality. I don't understand many of the big words that cookbooks often try to use and if there are too many steps, I often just give up. My favorites are Amish recipes or something that teaches me about the chemistry that is going on within the recipe. My cookbook collection does continue to grow as I continue to discover a love for cooking!
I've found a love for cooking recently - and even more recently discovered that I needed to eat gluten free. So recently the best cook books are the ones where I can fully understand the chemistry going on and know how to incorporate it within my gluten free eating now. I love easy recipes, ones without huge words or steps that folks only learn in chef school. Simplicity really is a bonus!
I love my cookbooks! Just looking at them on the bookshelves gives me a sense of well-being. What makes a cookbook a keeper for me? Well, I want to be able to tell that it was written by a person, rather than an institution. I want it to be opinionated and uncompromising. That the recipes work should go without saying. Good editing is something I may not notice, but I will surely notice its absence. The same goes for the layout and design. While I appreciate a pretty photo, many of my favorite books have none. I tend to prefer more specialized cookbooks to big general purpose ones. A book that does one thing well, whether it be a specific cuisine, a technique, or just a unique personal approach to the food, will usually hold my attention more than one that tries to be everything to everyone.
My favorite cookbooks have three common traits, generally. First, the fresh ingredients for a given recipe are season appropriate (ie. can be found in the garden or at the market during the same season). Second, the book can be read like a novel, taken to bed, and held rapturously in one's arms while dreaming of kitchen antics - my favorites in the readable area are of course Gluten Free Girl & The Chef, The Passionate Vegetarian (LOVE her), and Wild Fermentation (it really riles up the mad scientist in me :). The third is that it gives widely applicable "rule of thumb" knowledge - engendering deeper understanding of the processes. Cookwise is great for this, as is Wild Fermentation, and Ratio is on my Christmas wish list, in hopes that I can gain confidence on the GF baking issue :)
Overall, I love a book that both shares and invokes a passion for food and provokes an adventurous spirit.
Great giveaway! I love cook books! I have always had huge success with Jamie Oliver cook books - fresh, simple, easy to read recipes plus great pictures of amazing food - doesn't get any better than that!
Great selection of cookbooks! A good cookbook reads like a book but with added artwork in the photos. The Indian cookbook looks very interesting, must check it out!
I must say my current favorite cookbook is yours! I am having so much fun experimenting!! Keep writing!!
What makes a great cookbook for me?
A sense of the vision and personality of the author.
At least 5 "go to" recipes for that don't require me to run to the gourmet food store. (And that
can be expanded or contracted easily depending on the size of the crowd.)
A few gorgeous and carefully selected photos.
We are a tiny family of vegetarians (two grown ups and one very large-spirited 4 1/2-year old). I also love to cook for a crowd and host regular creativity sharing gatherings for our people. I need help creating vegetarian food that is so special omnivores won't notice what's missing!
I'm not that much of an accomplished baker (much less cook) yet, so I need a cookbook that explains everything to me. I just ordered Dorie Greenspans "Baking: From my Home to yours" because I've read nothing but rave reviews of it. My favorite book that I already own is David Lebovitz' "The Perfect Scoop", and I have to say, I'll never go back to store-bought ice cream. And it's so easy! I also read his blog regularly and bought his book about Paris, because I simply love the way he writes.
This post was really helpful to me, even if I don't win, I'll by some of these books for sure. And even though I'm don't eat gluten-free, I'll have to buy your book too, I just love your way with words, Shauna!
What a wonderfully delicious list! My husband and I recently entered the world of gluten-free for health reasons. I discovered gluten is a huge trigger for my incapacitating migraines. So I've been spending the last month trying to figure out baking gluten-free and reading everything I can get my hands on. A wonderfully tasty gluten-free cookbook with stories and explanations would be heavenly.
However, we also have noticed, in our effort to cut out gluten we are cooking/eating more and more ethnic cuisine - Indian and Thai mostly. Indian is so easy to make and so rich and wonderful. My spice cabinet is so full of amazing Indian spices now!
Thank you for this list, I'm bookmarking it and sending it to my mom for present ideas for me.
I love for cookbooks to tell me a bit more about combining flavours and putting things together. I am on a tight budget, which can make it hard with some of the things I like to look at, so a cookbook that delivers interesting delicious meals that will not cost a bomb are important to me.
(and I already have Anjum's new indian. So you know ;) )
I love for cookbooks to tell me a bit more about combining flavours and putting things together. I am on a tight budget, which can make it hard with some of the things I like to look at, so a cookbook that delivers interesting delicious meals that will not cost a bomb are important to me.
(and I already have Anjum's new indian. So you know ;) )
I love for cookbooks to tell me a bit more about combining flavours and putting things together. I am on a tight budget, which can make it hard with some of the things I like to look at, so a cookbook that delivers interesting delicious meals that will not cost a bomb are important to me.
(and I already have Anjum's new indian. So you know ;) )
A great cookbook inspires me to create not just the food in the recipes but the atmosphere the food creates. If it is a rustic recipe I want to set the mood in as though you are being transferred in front of a fire in an enchanting cottage in the country.
a 'keeper cookbook' in my kitchen has to have clear, precise instructions and descriptions on how something should look or the texture it should have at a certain cooking point is always much appreciated and oh so helpful! i also love a pic of each recipe, at least the ones that aren't commonly known. i hate looking at a recipe and scratching my head at what its supposed to look like ;)
Thank you for this amazing project! I purchased yours weeks ago and have been devouring it lovingly since! For me, a good cookbook shares both essential techniques with its readers AND forces the reader to think about different ingredients and spices in new and inventive ways. I don't need another recipe for mac and cheese, ya know?
There are basically two broad categories of "what I want in a cookbook"
One thing I love is a cookbook that makes me look at food in a new way. In college I was a vegetarian (before lamb) and after a numerous cookbooks with ingredients like "egg substitute" or "soy hamburger crumbles", I discovered Vegan with a Vengeance which has no industrially produced fake meaty stuff, but instead uses whole foods in all sorts of amazing creative ways. Noe that I am no longer a vegetarian this is one of the few cookbooks I retained from that time, and one I use at least a few times a month. Then there was How to Eat which makes even a simple roast chicken seem voluptuous and satisfying. Nigella Lawson makes every kind of cooking into a profound extension of one's zest for living.
The other category I love is the anthropological/historical ones, that let you really sink down into a food culture. It needn't be a "foreign" or "exotic" culture, indeed I think The Cornbread Gospels does just as good a job as something like Real Thai (actually practically everything Nancy McDermott has ever written falls in this category). I love the cookbooks that introduce you to a diversity of foods and traditions that is glossed over and homogenized by most "Cooking of __" style cookbooks.
A great cookbook inspires me to create the entire food experience. When you read the recipe you are transformed into the place it is setting and want to recreate this. If I am cooking a rustic French meal I want to take whoever I am cooking for to a small cottage in the Provence. I think this is what makes a great foodie experience.
A few years ago I would have said that great pictures were the most important part of a cookbook, but then I purchased The Lee Bros. Southern Cookbook and the stories that accompanied each recipe made me fall in love with it hard and fast. It was like reading a satisfying book with the added bonus of delicious recipes. I also love easy-to-prepare meals for jazzing up the weekday.
Thank you! I am finally inspired to start my Christmas wish list.
I love a cookbook that is clear about its process, but is mostly about a love of sharing great food. And I love recipes with a small list of great seasonal ingredients that I can pick up from the Greenmarket.
About a month ago, I tried "Braised Lamb with Concord Grapes and Green Tomatoes" from Olives and Oranges, an amazing cookbook by Sara Jenkins and Mindy Fox. It was incredible: juicy, earthy, slightly tart. Mmmm. Transportive!
www.dininginbrooklyn.blogspot.com
A great cookbook to me is one that I refer to over and over. Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything is one I go back to again and again. I also like cookbooks with beautiful photos, such as The Herbal Kitchen, by Jerry Traunfeld. I like cookbooks to teach me, just not list the ingredients and the steps. Teach me something, please!
Thanks for reviewing the books. We are not GF, but I truly enjoy your blog. Good eating is good eating, right?
What makes a good cookbook?
Great photography. Innovative but manageable recipes. Reflects a wholesome, healthy attitude towards food, just like I want in my kitchen. And, for some of my favourite books, they bring back memories of meals and vacations relished.
Well, now, you've just helped me create my holiday wish list! Thanks!
A good cookbook for me gives me the "why" of how things work together, but also gives me interesting recipes to make once as written, and then play with later. Good stories from people who love food and being in the kitchen make it perfect. I love to create good food, and the world of gluten-free has given me more reason to research and learn. As we move towards a more local and sustainable diet, we're trying to be less meat-focused, and enjoy at least three meat-free dinners per week.
I second the love for Amanda Hesser. Her pieces were the first thing I'd search for in the Sunday magazine, or online. What wit and talent.
Great post! Simple, fresh, local foods.
I loved this post! I´m totally addicted to books, and specially cookbooks, so I´ve put all of them on my wish list at amazon, except yours, that already sits here next to me in Barcelona. I´m the youngest of nine siblings, and I come from what was a very poor family during Franco´s times here in Spain. My mother could barely make ends meet, but her kitchen was always a paradise. Our whole life happened there, for the entire family and our friends too. We chatted and laughed while cooking, surrounded by simple seasonal ingredients and a lot of creativity. For me and my family, the story of humankind is intimately connected to food. I now have a gluten-free cafe here, and aim every day to bring my mother´s kitchen environment alive. My favourite cookbooks are those that connect me to that pulse of life, where I can sense what goes on in that kitchen, the excitement that the person feels when cooking, shopping for groceries, thinking about new recipes, seeing people taste the food. And those who have simple, clean, seasonal ingredients that bring to the table what the earth is producing at that very moment. I also love books that serve almost as an antropological essay, that tell us how cooking has developed through neighbouring countries, how it has travelled, how other countries or cultures have adapted the same dishes with a twist. I love those magical connections.
I believe that a good cookbook is one made up of recipes that tell a food story. I like cookbooks that share family recipes that people have made for decades. Food should be appreciated, so any good cookbook should take care of the ingredients and provide recipes that are cherished.
A great cookbook is mystery, travel, dreaming, history . . . it makes you want to try new things, but keeps you coming back for the recipes that will become part of your history. A great cookbook will be recommended to your friends, saved for your children. And your children will receive it (one day) falling apart, spattered with food and hand-written notes, held together with an elastic band.
A great cookbook is mystery, travel, dreaming, history . . . it makes you want to try new things, but keeps you coming back for the recipes that will become part of your history. A great cookbook will be recommended to your friends, saved for your children. And your children will receive it (one day) falling apart, spattered with food and hand-written notes, held together with an elastic band.
What makes a great cookbook to me is tried and true recipes with ingredients that don't require mail order (or internet). I like recipes with lots of fresh natural ingredients and the meals don't take forever to make (unless of course we're talking about desserts which I'm totally fine killing a whole day to make a dessert). I love Moosewood Weekday dinner recipes because I can make organic easy, but I do have to revert to my inner 5 year old and say I would prefer picturesto be included! Visuals!!!
That's why Pioneer Woman is so popular- it's dummy proof step by step pics that make things so easy. Too bad that takes up too much room in print, so at least 1 or 2 pics is great.
There are so many things a cookbook can be, but for me I like a cookbook that presents recipies that are well-written, thought out, and that I'm likely to turn to again and again.
I'm particularly interested in Plenty, which I'll be buying myself on your recommendation (if I don't win it, of course!).
Also, as you mentioned an Indian cookbook on your list, I wanted to share what is possibly the best Indian cookbook I've come across - Miss Masala, by Mallika Basu.
My boyfriend and I cook feasts from this on a weekly basis, and then freeze portions so that we can enjoy them in the week. We've even stopped going to our local takeaway because we can get better food at home!
I love cookbooks that inspire, have beautiful photos, relatively easy to find ingredients and recipes that I can accomplish after work.
Your new book is wonderful and we loved the shrimp with almond sauce, once I located the Marcona almonds!
The Urban Pantry sounds like a good book for me, it seems like I'm always running to the store for 1 or 2 ingredients that should probably be in my pantry.
Thanks for some gift ideas, too.
Thanks, Shauna! As someone with a cookbook problem,I will say that the handy reference tomes sit tight by the stove, but the ones that are artfully written and breathe with vivid stories will stay on my bedside table and beckon like a great piece of literature. Also, a respect for ingredients and a sense of seasonality are a must in a cookbook.
I love cookbooks that can thoroughly explain the recipe; pictures are always helpful. Even better is when those photos include images of people actually making and enjoying the cooking process.
Most importantly, I love making a gluten free meal that doesn't have us missing gluten at all.
New cookbooks are always spectacularly exciting! I go for vegetarian or vegan cookbooks or yummy baking books. I love great photos & commentary to compliment recipes. Interesting spice combinations & books with recipes from other parts of the world are always enticing. I appreciate recipes that allow for deviation & my own touch....I rarely follow a recipe strictly by the book.
Your description of a great cookbook sounds perfect to me. I'm an avid, but still very much amateur cook, so I love having beautiful photos to give me a sense of the basic direction of the recipe. Little editorial comments, opinions, suggestions are great - like a friend sharing a recipe rather than a cooking god issuing dictums - makes the whole process a lot more fun. You really hit it on the head with the "playfulness" part - food doesn't have to be heavy and serious, and that's a really freeing concept.
These books are all going on my Christmas wishlist.
Such great choices. I can't wait to explore them. Thanks!
I have learned to cook through experimentation with your site and a handful of other bloggers that are out there & from my mother's guidance. My celiac diagnosis and moving away from home spurned an absolute need to learn how to cook a variety of clean, healthy, tastey food. I now have a new appreciation for cooking and for how nutrition affects all parts of life. I am now confused with baking substitutions, simple sides for protein meals, etc. A perfect cookbook for me at this stage is one with seasonal, whole foods, gluten free or easy to adapt to GF, and with new ideas so I am not in a rut & can continue to have fun learning to cook.
Thanks so much for the great list! Print is definitely still alive in our house. I love having a good cookbook on my shelf!
For me, one thing I look for is normal ingredients. If I have to go to 6 stores just to get things for one recipe, I will give up. I also love seeing photos!
A good cookbook for me needs to have recipes that are clear and concise, so I know what is going to happen and when. I like a little background story about each one, too. Oh, and the recipes need to WORK all the time, not just when the planets align!! :)
a good cookbook? one with wipe-able pages. I always get mine dirty.
and I like it when recipes are more suggestion - you can use this or that vegetable, more of this or less of that spice, serve with this or that, etc.
i hope santa brings me a cookbook this year!
I'm terrified of cooking. Terrified. I don't know how it started - because I have wonderful memories of baking lovely treats with my Mother as a child - but just the thought of preparing a meal for someone now makes my heart race and my skin go clammy. I've had some disasters, which haven't helped... someone suggested poaching fish in milk once, which resulted in disintegrated fish on the floor; a gluten free lasagne is generally layers of gunk stuck together in a mess (but I have had one dear friend eat it none-the-less). Now I don't bother. I have a lot of cookbooks that go ignored on my shelf, while I eat out or heat store-bought soup. Despite this, I LOVE food. A great cookbook to me would be one that kept it simple, started with the basics, provided no-fuss/quick-win/easy-peasy recipes that a beginner could pull off, and helped me build my confidence. Because I have a real need now... it's not just me anymore and I'd love to make food for my partner in the same caring, giving, sharing way he makes meals for me.
A good cookbook must have easy, low-fat and delish meals. it also must have good pictures. I'm a creative person and I need to see what it is I'm trying to make.
Have you cooked with "Cooking for Isaiah"? Your blog along with this book really helped gluten-free cooking feel more natural. With two busy young children, I need uncomplicated recipes that seem familiar to the kids. You and Silvana Nardone opened up a whole new culinary world for my family. Thank you!
A good cookbook: good writing. Your comment about stories and funny headnotes. All the draws me in. I want to know WHY this recipe speaks to the author. I like it when they show off with pictures. And I like it when I take what a cookbook author has done and I make it my own. Helps me to be creative in my own kitchen
I love this! There's something so satisfying and beautiful about seeing a stack of good books. Especially good cookbooks, of which I've requested a few for Christmas.
The new generation of food writing is what pulls me in. Comparing my mother's worn and weary Quaker cookbook to your cookbook, to the cookbooks on this list, the story is more apparent. While the older cookbooks had their fair share of history the newer writers spill that history onto the pages. The love, the emotional connection, to each and every dish is there. And it draws you in. And that's the kind of cookbook I keep buying.
I love a cookbook that teaches me new things, is easy to follow and the recipes come from a reliable source. Those are the ones I reach for again and again. I read cookbooks often, just for enjoyment, but I really love them when the pages get stained and wrinkled from use. Then I write notes on recipe pages so I remember when I made it and what I liked/disliked etc ... I have a cookbook problem.
A good cookbook is one that over time becomes stained with sauces, chocolate, crumbs, etc.
A good cookbook tells a story through the recipes, making you want to jump into the kitchen! Oh and options for the non-meat eaters always help.
I'm just discovering the joy of cooking with my husband - we are newlyweds and try to put aside time every weekend to get in the kitchen together and celebrate through food. I have been gluten free for a year and a half, and my husband is so supportive - our home is totally gluten-free - so our time in the kitchen together has become a time of experimentation, of successes and a few epic failures! Thanks for inspiring me along the way! I picked up your new book last week and am working my way through it, making plans.
As to what I look for in a cookbook? I look for a book that is not simple, but breaks steps down into terms a new cook can follow. A book that inspires me to get off the couch and into the kitchen.
For me, a great cookbook needs to have some vegetarian recipes, a good index, a beautiful design (maybe including pictures of the food), and most of all recipes that are doable every day. I'm willing to spend some time from start to finish, but less willing to fuss over sautéeing 10 different ingredients separately and so on.
This is a very timely post. Just today, I bought an older house and the deceased lady's son was there to show me around. He was quite teary telling me about how his mother loved to cook for friends and family. He left for me all her cookbooks, handwritten recipes and baking pans, tools, spoons, etc. The cookbooks are priceless- grease stains, sugar stains, handwritten notes. In my mind's eye, I can see her in there with her apron on and cooking up a feast for all to enjoy. I can truly feel her spirit in that kitchen. Obviously, I was supposed to buy that house. (PS, his aunt has just been diagnosed with Celiac's)
A good cookbook for me is not too involved since I have less time as a busy mom, has good pictures that make me hungry, offers good healthy ingredients for raising children, and has a lot of heart.
I'm a single mom of three amazing kiddos (9, 7 and 5). I work full time and it would be really easy for me to fall back on Kraft mac and cheese or grilled cheese sammies every night. I'm an avid cook, baker and cookbook collector, while I love a good grilled cheese, that usually just doesn't cut it for us. I want my kids to look back and remember the delicious meals we shared. Doesn't have to be fancy, just fresh and full of flavor. I'd love to have any one of these books (except for Pig and only because we're vegetarian!)
What wonderful selections, the only two cookbooks I picked up this year were yours and Elana's pantry almond flour cook book. I like pictures, I like a story, and I also like to hear the author's voice through out the book.
What gorgeous hunks of prose about all these books. Makes me smile. A good cookbook to me lays out the ingredients and technique and tells me why I want to commit to this recipe. It is written by a cook with enthusiasm to share and experience to direct and inspire me as the reader. And not snooty!
I like cookbooks that are text-rich, ones which focus primarily on the chemistry of food and the physics of cooking. I value books that explain WHY (ex: you add lemon juice to milk to make it thicken, you blanche a duck in order to reduce the amount of fat on it, you don't over-saute garlic because it becomes bitter, and so on). My "keeper" cookbooks are full to bursting with practical information.
I just can't say how much I love your writing - it makes me feel like I have the freedom and the ability to really experiment and play and make mistakes and find joy in cooking - thank you!
I've been living in New York for a year now, and my fellow and I only just moved into our own apartment, so for the first time I really have a chance to "own" my kitchen and sprawl out and cook. Being New York, though, what I'm really working with is a teeeeensy kitchen with a teeeensy stove, a teeeensy amount of counter space and about 3 cabinets for storage. So - creativity time. Urban Pantry looks like exactly the right ticket!
Oh, cookbooks, how I love thee! A good cookbook to me has a good picture for every recipe. I love to read cookbooks so narratives/stories/history is always welcome but when it comes to wanting to cook/bake a recipe I am all about a visual. My eyes write the check and hope my skills can cash it. :)
Practically, I am trying to cook with whole grains and fresh ingrediants. Any of the cookbooks on the list would be great though!
For me, a good cookbook has descriptions that make the text come alive. I want to be able to picture those ingredients on my cutting board, that dish on my plate, those spices on my tongue. A well-written cookbook doesn't need pictures to get me hooked.
Also, the more veggies, the better.
I absolutely LOVE to cook, but finding out I was allergic to wheat just a few months after I graduated high school was devastating to me. That was two and a half years ago and I've discovered the wonderful world of "substitutions". I would love a cook book that is easy to tweak recipes so that they can fit my dietary needs. One of my all time favorite cook books is my mother's copy of the Better Homes and Gardens cookbook. Even though it's not inherently for gluten/wheat free cooking, that's what I use it for and I LOVE it. Thank you!
Me again! :) I also love to cook exotic types of food (Indian is my favorite) despite my allergy. ALMOST every one of my culinary creations has turned out fairly well and its fun to share them with my family. They can't even tell that I've changed it!
Mmm, these look incredible. I already have david lebovitz' incredible dessert book, which is wonderful but I can see I need to do more shopping!
I love pictures, but dont always need them, moosewood survives on my shelf despite not having any. I do like the recipe to be all on one or two pages as having to keep picking it up and turn the page is a bit hassly!
Much as I love dear dorie greenspan, one of my favourite recipes of hers, dories perfect party cake, is over several pages and I have to keep picking the book up and repositioning it on the cookbook holder.
I bought your new book today in the store as a gift for a friend, and loved it so much that I was loathe to wrap it up! I'll buy *my* copy through your site, though.
I'm a personal chef and what makes a great cookbook for me is very simple- it needs to provide someone like me, who lives in food, a breath of fresh air, a reminder of new and essential technique, and a laugh or anecdote never hurts either. As a cook, I have a hard time following recipes exactly EXCEPT when baking, which is why I feel strongly that baking cookbooks (like Dorie's! or David's) must be precise and careful with measurement and observation.
Happy Days,
Meryl
this past year it has been my goal to cook more-- real meals, not just a pot of rice and some frozen veggies. (i'm a vegan.) so out of all these cookbooks, the one that intrigues me most is urban pantry, and i'm definitely adding it to my christmas list.
i'm also considering ratio for my mom, who is a real master in the kitchen. it sounds like the kind of book she would love.
so thank you for all the wonderful recommendations!
To me the best cookbooks tell a story of which food is a major part, but not the only part. Its a novel were food is one character in the plot.
If you ever get chance check out Maura Laverty's cookbooks and novels. She an old Irish author whose books tell a great tale as well containing good old fashioned recipes.
The cookbooks that stay around the longest in my kitchen make have recipes for good desserts. Love ones with multiple recipes that I can come back to again and again.
I need a good cookbook that is simple to cook with. I have only gone gluten free in the past 2 years and the idea of 20 different flours combined gives me the chills! I am single, 25, and going to graduate school. I don't have time to measure all different flours or money to spend on all of them. I usually keep an all-purpose GF flour, coconut flour and almond flour on hand. I also use the crockpot a lot and like QUICK recipes because I teach school during the day and go to class at night! I need a cookbook for a crazy single lifestyle! THANKS!
I'm always attracted to cookbooks that remind me of storybooks from my childhood and textbooks from my favorite classes. I am a person who will spend the evening on the couch with a glass of wine, a notebook, and a writing utensil marveling over a new cookbook. I love to know the background and relevance of a recipe, so I spend a lot of time reading the introductions of recipes and chapters. I also like to pore over each and every recipe looking for new ingredients, or different uses for familiar ones, or even techniques that I haven't tried before. And the pictures! I almost want to buy two copies of the book sometimes- one for kitchen use, and one to tear the pictures out and hang on my wall. Good pictures really get me motivated to make the food, but also give me new and exciting ways to plate, too. The most memorable cookbooks awaken the imagination, whisk you away to new places, and leave both you mind and your midsection sated.
I only moved out of my parents' home about a year ago, so my cookbook collection is pretty small, but my first cookbook is still my favourite: The Joy of Cooking. Instead of reading my textbooks, I will happily read the descriptions of exotic foods or the methodical theory behind such time-honoured traditions as baking bread. I love the Joy because it not only tells me about the techniques needed for a recipe, it explains why they're needed.
As I've gained cooking experience, I'm now seeking cookbooks which have the same quality of instruction but instead focus on certain cuisines, since I love trying new recipes. Maybe winning one of your cookbooks will help. ;)
Wow. What an awesome list! I have heard about most of those books and own two of them, but it's always such a treat to hear what it is about them that other love.
For me to love a cookbook it has to...
1. Have amazing recipes using new idea's, ingredients or techniques
2. Have stunning photo's, of as many of the recipes as possible. I simply do not give books a chance if they don't have photos!
3. Have amazing desserts/baking recipes! I usually flick through a book from back to front. If there arn't tasty sweet treats, I usually don't buy it.
4. Have interesting headnotes. I love to read cookbooks like a novel.
Congratulations on your own wonderful cookbook, and for such a heart warming post. I had a smile on my face while reading it and laughed out loud more than once :-)
I love a cookbook with imaginative flavour pairings. Not funky pairings, exactly. Just really interesting and imaginative combinations brought forth by the truly food-wise mind. Then the cookbook not only provides a host of recipes, but inspiration for a multitude of other ones...and the confidence to try them out.
And I love love love your cookbook. Thank you so much for this list. Many of these will definitely make it to my Christmas gift list.
I like cookbooks that have recipes that push me to try ingredients I might not have used before, but also offer some dishes that I can make without doing a ton of research and prep. We LOVE books and have way too many of them (this it even possible to have too many books??) in our home!
A great cookbook is one that gets you excited to cook. One that doesn't use a ton of rare ingredients; one that has recipes for comfort food and some for fancy occasions. My 3 favorite cookbooks are all ones that I bought second-hand. They were all written in the 40's when it was important to use everything that was available. I also find that these cookbooks use a wider variety of grains than most cookbooks written today.
At this time in my life, I need recipes that are fabulous, yet easy to prepare. I have two-year-old triplets, plus a first grader, which make for a pretty hectic dinner time these days, and limited time for preparing food! I also need a cookbook with ideas that will tempt a picky six-year-old with celiac.
Thank you, by the way, for the giveaway, and for all of the wonderful recommendations - I want to add all of them now to my Christmas wish list!
A good cookbook:
a. explains why you should add spices to the onion before adding the liquid
b. defines blanche!
c. makes you flip around for complementary recipes or other definitions
d. doesn't take itself too seriously
e. knows its audience (the Kosher Palette, which we use often, is a good example)
f. tells a good story.
As the dad of a 4 yo celiac, finding good cookbooks has taken on new meaning.
A good cookbook is one I can snuggle up in bed with and then fall into a blissful sleep even though the book binding is stabbing me. Your book is one of those.
A good cookbook for me inspires me to cook. It trusts me to take the pattern of a new dish -- the instructions -- and turn it into a real thing that is delicious and lovely, that is just right for my table.
A good cookbook, in my opinion, takes simple accessible foods and a few easy extras to combine into something extraordinary.
Hi Shauna. I always have a hard time choosing new cookbooks, so to have a list of recommendations is great!
Also.. While it doesn't offend me, "spazz" is slang for "epileptic" and in England, it's offensive to the degree of the word "retard" in the States. I just wanted to let you know because I wouldn't want you to be inadvertently offending anybody.
Hi Shauna! Many thanks to you and Danny (and Lu, I imagine!) for reviewing these cookbooks. I personally can sit and read cookbooks like a novel, and I particularly enjoy reading stories that have been woven in with the recipes. I love beautiful photos that make me want to drop whatever I'm doing and make that dish, right in that moment. For me, a cookbook that stays in my kitchen is reliable and like an old friend. You can count on a good cookbook to produce delicious food every time. And I find it nearly impossible to part with them - just seeing them on the shelf in my kitchen makes me feel comforted.
I'm a college student who must eat gluten free so a great cookbook is one that is either specifically gluten free or easily converted recipes and one that does not require too many ingredients or really, really specific ones since I have a limited budget!
I LOVE print books and newspapers and will always have many in my house!!
I love a cookbook that explains what to how and how to it, that presents each dish like delicious art! Since I'm not a terribly experienced chef, I like pictures to know how its supposed to come out. Silly, I know, but you have to start somewhere! A great cookbook should have personality and flavor.
oh oh oh I forgot to add in my comment that a really really great cookbook to me also is loaded with vegetarian recipes or tips to convert them.
Liking a cookbook is sort of like liking a person. You just do. The recipes have to be wonderful of course, but the rest is just the essence of the author shining through. If I "get" the author, through her/his prose and recipe construction, I usually like the cookbook! A well-designed cookbook will catch my eye, no doubt about it. But, it's no match for the writing and the recipes.
I have two kids and limited time; I both want to cook things that are healthy and which don't have ingredient lists two miles long and/or require a trip to a specialty store. I am still looking for a vegetarian or an Indian cookbook which fulfills that wish.
I like cooking Meat and Desserts!
Or is it "Desserts and Meat!"? Hmm... I will have to think on that one.
My favorite cookbooks use more simple and easy-to-find ingredients (rural community in northern IN is *not* full of specialty stores :-)
Cookbooks are fun!!
Meadow
A few things I like in a cookbook are alternatives - substitution offerings if you will. Also love when they suggest pairings, like "this goes great with cauliflower" or something. I'm a gluten free vegetarian so I find most cookbooks have large sections I can't use anymore. I'm hoping to get yours for Christmas - it's on my list and I love that you promote other people's work, it's one the things that makes you great.
My friends laugh at me; where most of them use the library to check out novels, I borrow cookbooks. Stacks of them. And I read them. Cover to cover. When I find I've renewed oneas much as they'll allow, then I think about buying it. I do this because I have already acquired too many that collect dust on a shelf mostly thrift shop finds that seemed irresistible at the moment of acquisition. There are a few favourites that I seem to return to, with recipes that have gone above and beyond, and resonate on all levels.
I now have a gluten intolerant 4 year old granddaughter, plus a stepson who has been diagnosed with type 1 diabetes, so the joy of cooking has become a much more serious venture. I need all the help I can get, and truly appreciate your recommendations!
For me, a good cookbook is like a great friend, someone you turn to again and again, both for the familiar and for new inspiration. Not overly complicated, with an easy familiarity. It helps if there are just a few enticing photographs, and if the ingredients are readiliy available in one's pantry.
lovely ode to print!
Our place also is bursting at the seam with books. Who could give them up for all the ipads in the world!
I try to be very disciplined about buying cookbooks because I just don't have room for many more so I really need to be inspired - I love glossy photos but it is really the writing, the personality, the ideas.
I have so many cookbooks with the basics that I look for one with recipes that challenges me to cook something new, different and exciting! I also mostly buy vegetarian cookbooks because as I don't eat meat, books that are full of meat recipes just waste my space.
Well since my daughter and I have to be gluten and dairy free it is a cookbook that is easy to follow with great new ways to cook our old favorites. I made your GF stuffing for Thanksgiving and I gotta tell you it was a hit! Easy to follow, made total sense and was so yummy we were all just picking it out of the pan and eating it. :)
One that gives straightforward instructions with excellent results that my whole family enjoys.
I love cookbooks... it's sort of an addiction.
However, I tend to "use" rather than "follow" recipes. So my favorite cookbooks help me understand HOW to use an ingredient or HOW to make a type of food. Two of my go-to's are Deborah Madison's "Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone" and "The Joy of Cooking."
Most of the ones on your list fit the bill! (I'm sure "PIG" does, but I'll skip that one!)
Now I have to send the link to this post to anyone who might be getting me a Hanukkah present :)
I read cookbooks voraciously, usually while I'm eating. What I love most is narrative. Anna Thomas' Vegetarian Epicure is as old as I am and its stained, loose pages with the Modigliani-esque sketches still entrance. Cook's Illustrated and their detailed accounts of professional cooking travesty give me hope when I feel out of my element. And as a recently-diagnosed glutard, Gluten Free Girl and the Chef has been a godsend. That pastry tart crust is utterly made of win.
To keep me coming back and wearing out the edges of the pages, I need a cookbook with beautiful images as well as inspiring-sounding recipes. If I can't see what the food looks like, no matter how delectable the title of the dish sounds, I am far less likely to make it.
oh my goodness I love cookbooks. I love illustrations and photos. I love to read a bit of background about the chef, the dish, the inspiration, the cultural history, and I love a recipe that brings you through that adventure. Basically, I like to read and salivate at pictures as much as I love to slice, saute, and sear. I think that new cultures, fresh perspectives, and vibrant colors is what keeps my nose in a good cookbook!
What makes a good cookbook for me is when I am so engrossed in it that I take it to bed and stay up until I finish it.
This almost always comes from the head notes on the recipes or in the essays included.
Oh, and good recipes help, too! Recipes with whole, seasonal ingredients that are prepared simply.
Thank you for putting together this list!
I love a cook book with lots of pictures and funny comments! but then again, who doesn't? :)
I love a cook book with lots of pictures and funny comments! but then again, who doesn't? :)
A great cookbook needs to spin narrative in with thoughtful dishes and inspirational photos. Luckily-your book does just that! But I don't have any of the others and would love to!!!
Yeah for print media! Although I'm a HUGE consumer of audio books [no, not cook books--yet], I still love the feeling of a paper book, newspaper, or magazine in hand. This goes triple for cookbooks, and yours is an amazing collection.
For reading, oh, cookbooks in general and the ones with stories in particular. Now, for cooking, what sends me, a celiac diabetic cooking for one, to the kitchen is Madrah Jaffrey and Shauna, so I'm really lusting after your top choice and your new book. Got. to. have...
Wow--I really love this post and the way you reviewed the books. To answer your question, a good cookbook has great narrative of how the recipe came to be and what occasions it is good for; I also appreciate good step by step recipes with approximation for how long things take and tips for different variations of recipes.
I love cookbooks that first tell me a story - seduce me with the story, and I'll follow you straight to the food. And second, I'm looking for interesting flavor combinations and homey preparations...things that are too fussy or precise don't always make the cut in my kitchen when I'm working 2-3 recipes at once on a Sunday morning to get some of the cooking done for the week ahead.
I'll definitely be picking up Anjum's book...I'm always drawn to Indian flavors, especially in winter, when there's nothing so warming as a bowl of spicy lentil soup or dal.
Wow what a wonderful set of books! Quite strangely I had literally popped over to mention I have just reviewed your book and can certainly recommend anyone who doesn't have it to buy it!
I love books like yours which can be read almost like a novel and at the same time I love to learn new techniques and how to understand ingredients better. I like the combination of art and science that is really good cooking.
That said I live in the UK so you might not want to send me anything as the postage adds up!
I love your blog. I read and relish it every time I get a chance to take it in.
I love cookbooks that explain the science of what we are doing to achieve the beauty at the end. A good cookbook has photos (or illustrations) to keep you company, clear directions, and superb new ideas for menu and recipes.
What makes a cookbook great to me? After taking food for granted for 20 years, being diagnosed with celiac disease after years of struggling with symptoms, going through the hell of grieving all the foods I'd lost, trying all the premade "old-school" gluten free foods that resembled cardboard, and finally discovering that food can taste good again, maybe even better, it is hard to pinpoint what exactly makes a cookbook great. You see, I've realized that cooking is an art form in its own right. It combines skill, knowledge, ambition, creativity, instinct, and emotion. There is nothing better to me than creating a meal for a group of people I care for and connecting with them as we eat it. There are days its challenging and frustrating, but nothing is better than when you take a bite of something that tastes amazing. Now that I know what cooking is for me, I gravitate toward cookbooks that are informal, full of good stories and discussions, delicious recipes, and that teach me how to become better. I love it when a cook book allows me to see the person behind the recipes, and I laugh or cry at their words. It helps me realize that the author is on a journey too, and I am privileged that they allow me to share a part of it.
Thank you for rounding up these amazing cookbooks for us! What makes a good cookbook for me is the use of template recipes (I think I got that term from 101 Cookbooks). I LOVE it when I can use a recipe over and over (mastering basic techniques) to make different variations to suit my mood or the ingredients on hand/in season. It's essential for me to get a strong understanding of what the author is going for in each dish - whether that is accomplished via narrative (like Cooks Illustrated) or just including a great description of what the end product is like. Finally, if a cookbook has these things going for it AND is very comprehensive I am sure to refer to it again and again.
I love a cookbook that tells a story and the food is just one of the characters. If the story is good the food becomes even more inviting.
If you get a chance check out Maura Lavety's cookbooks and novels. She is an old Irish cookbook writer and novelist. Full of great stories and old recipes
Although I love cookbooks with the basics, just the recipes, I need pictures! And lots of them. And now that I own so many different cookbooks, I appreciate ones that tell a story. (like yours, love it!) I appreciate seeing what other people are up to the in the kitchen too!
I very much enjoyed Ruth Reichl and Laurie Colwin's books on cooking and food. The stories are what made the included recipes so delightful. Food and cooking makes for happy stories and memories. That's what I enjoy most in a cookbook.
This is, quite possibly, my favorite subject-- good cookbooks!
I like to read a cookbook like a novel, and, from when I get a new one, I take it around everywhere with me-- on the bus, beside the bed, reading in the bathtub...you name it!
I like pictures and it is important for the recipes to actually work, but what I really like are the stories behind the recipes-- descriptions of what inspired it or how it was incorporated into a meal. I also like it when the author shares a little of the creative process with the reader-- its like being in the kitchen next to them...While I do actually cook recipes directly, I also just like to soak them in and use them as a springboard for a new riff.
I was so excited to see the photo of the books on flickr. I already have many of them on hold at the library. I don't often purchase cookbooks because I already have so many so a new has to be really, really good. My all time favorites are the books by Jeffrey Alford and Naomi Duguid because they make me want to BE them! I fully agree with your comment about Narnia. Above all else, it must be a good read.
P.S.- I loved the video of Pam Anderson and her daughters an just from watching it created a dish similar to her sausage cassoulet and have had it twice so thanks for that!
I agree with you -- I enjoy looking at and posting recipes online, but there is no replacement for cookbooks (or books and newspapers) in print. I have so many! I don't really have a list of things that I absolutely must have in a cookbook but as a busy mom, I do find it helpful when recipes list the projected prep and finish times. Of course, most of my cookbooks don't have this, but if I'm looking at a recipe I've never tried and it doesn't have this, I try to skim through it and estimate myself.
I love cookbooks. No matter how many recipes I get online, there's just nothing like sitting down and thumbing through pages of deliciousness! My favorite cookbooks are full of fantastic pictures (this usually inspires me to start cooking), stories of the recipes (love those) and are clear in their instructions. I love to learn about different cultures through food and I love innovative recipes that I wouldn't necessarily come up with on the fly. I like recipes complicated or simple, doesn't matter to me, as long as the food comes out Amazing!
By the way, I've requested your cookbook for Christmas, hope I get it!
I love cookbooks. No matter how many recipes I get online, there's just nothing like sitting down and thumbing through pages of deliciousness! My favorite cookbooks are full of fantastic pictures (this usually inspires me to start cooking), stories of the recipes (love those) and are clear in their instructions. I love to learn about different cultures through food and I love innovative recipes that I wouldn't necessarily come up with on the fly. I like recipes complicated or simple, doesn't matter to me, as long as the food comes out Amazing!
By the way, I've requested your cookbook for Christmas, hope I get it!
In the past four years, I got married, started grad school, got diagnosed with severe gluten, dairy, and egg intolerance, and converted to (Eastern) Orthodox Christianity. Orthodox Christianity has extensive fasting periods in which we eat essentially vegan (Lent, Advent, Wednesdays and Fridays of almost every week). I have always loved to cook (a family heritage) I am learning to love the rhythm and seasonality of this (both natural and religious seasons), but when I combine it with being a gluten-free, busy and not-rich grad student, sometimes cooking is more of a burden than a joy. Nowadays I experiment with ethnic foods quite a bit, but overall I gravitate toward cookbooks with vibrant and unexpected flavor combinations, fresh but mostly simple ingredients, and enough flexibility to inspire me during vegan and carnivorous periods alike. (For instance, I love but don't own Alice Waters' "The Art of Simple Food." I swear everything I make tastes better for a day or two after I read it!)
By the way, I made your brussels sprout salad for Thanksgiving dinner (with sheep's milk pecorino) and it was splendid. I also made an apple pie with your vegan pie crust and topped it with a gf-oat and pecan crumble. All the non-allergic people gobbled it up and asked me to make it again next year. Thanks!
For me, a great cookbook has gluten-free and vegan recipes... (or dairy substitutions). I enjoy using cookbooks with pictures. I love recipes that call for common ingredients that I have on hand. I also love a durable cookbook that will hold up through my successful, and sometimes disastrous, cooking experiences!
I agree, I like reading cookbooks that draw me in with stories and the personality of the cook. Sometimes that's a big glossy travelogue with recipes, sometimes its the family reunion binder with aunt Muriel's directions for a casserole that feeds an army.
I have been reading your blog for a few months now, ever since I saw your cookbook in Madison Market in Seattle. I am a student at Seattle Central trying to stay off the "college diet" and keep a partner with the appetite of a 12 foot tall pubescent football player fed (without breaking the bank) by cooking nearly all my meals from fresh ingredients. In July, I was told to stop eating wheat and dairy by my acupuncturist. I thought, "Well, what can I cook then?" You and other GF bloggers have helped me to answer that question. In fact, now I eat better, more nutritious, more flavorful food than I ever have. I'm still learning how to cook - let alone how to cook GF. The only cookbook I own is a Joy of Cooking I got from my boyfriend's mother when he and I got our first apartment. I hope to expand my collection in the years to come (also hoping that your book materializes under the tree). I want to thank you two for the passion for cooking you have helped me develop.
A great cookbook is one I love to read in bed before going to sleep, with recipes that make me want to get right out of bed -- forget sleep! -- and start cooking them. I like good photos, clear ingredient lists and directions, and most of all, a true "voice" from the author. Just like a good food blog!
I cannot imagine a life without books, and have passed my love of books on to my children, now grown--and good cooks--and to my grandchildren, who call me their "Book Granny."
I love a cookbook that has been well-loved. By that, I mean the ones you find at your church sales, Salvation Army and thrift stores. I especially love reading the notes and comments that their previous owners wrote. My favourite is a cookbook from my mother-in-law's collection - she wrote who she served it to, what she substituted and if she would make it again.
accessible writing, sustainable food choices, and meals I can feed the various food preferences of my family after a long day at work. I think I need some MaggyPam in my life!
I love cookbooks with beautiful, full page photos. Even the most fabulous recipe can look rather bland on the page without an accompanying image. You eat with your eyes first, after all! I also like to read cookbooks like magazines, flipping through until something catches my eye.
I love cookbooks with beautiful, full-page photos. Even the most fabulous recipe can appear rather bland without an accompanying image. You eat with your eyes first, after all! I also like to read cookbooks much like I read magazines, flipping through until something catches my eye.
I have six of those cookbooks on my existing wishlist already! I may have to add a couple more! A good cookbook to me reads like a novel. I love the stories behind the recipes. And of course, hopefully the recipes are delicious. Pictures are welcomed, but not always necessary. Thanks for having the giveaway :)
Several things come to my mind about my favorite cookbooks: Glossy pages with fantastic pictures of the dishes and a good-to-read-in-bed backstory. A nice, pleasing font, a table of contents and an index. And lastly, tips to make the dish vegetarian, dairy-free, and especially gluten-free.
My favorites are ones where the recipes are accessible and easily integrated into the daily routine. Its as if the recipes were always in my life and I couldn't imagine life without them!
I am always in search of a good cook book all about baking. I enjoy cooking, but I love baking. I've always had a sweet tooth and enjoy reading a good dessert recipe and browsing gorgeous photos almost as much as baking the dessert itself. After my celiac disease diagnosis last year, I felt I needed to buy gluten-free only cookbooks, but thanks to your blog and a recent class I took, I am branching out and learning how to convert traditional recipes into my own delicious gluten-free versions. I now am looking for any good baking/dessert book and look forward to the challenge of recipe conversion!
I read cookbooks like they are novels. The stories grab me first, the pictures and finally the recipes themselves. I love to explore the cookbook and make it a part of my family. I am a bit of a cookbook junkie!
What makes a great cookbook for me...the following:
1. First and foremost - a unique voice and a specific sense of place. I appreciate books that take me into a deep-rooted culture of food. The best of the ethnic cookbooks can do this, but so can books exploring traditional food ways. I don't want dumbed down short-cuts for an American kitchen, and I am willing to travel with the writer on a journey to understand what I need and how to use it.
2. A good section on list of ingredients, with explanation as to best way to source them, best brands, etc.
3. The recipes work. I know this sounds like a given and kind of redundant, but so many coffee table books have recipes that *almost* work but not quite. The books I return to over and over again are ones that I know I can open at random, pick any page, and trust the recipe will succeed brilliantly.
No matter what, I still go back to print - there's something about the feel of a book in hand that e-books just don't have. As for a cookbook that'll stay in my kitchen --well. I live in SE Asia. Some ingredients are incredibly expensive or at least hard to get around here, so any cookbook I pick up needs to have enough recipes in it that utilize ingredients I can find, or that I can easily substitute. That said, I will pick up just about any that have good ideas in them because I never know when they might come in handy. Good writing, clear directions, and non-patronizing tone are also important.
Hello: Thank you for the opportunity to win the cookbooks. I usually just make stuff up out of my head, but my sister loves cookbooks. I would love to be able to gift them to her.
As a novice in the kitchen, I haven't fallen in love with cookbooks yet. But I love your site and can imagine what a good cookbook can do. I remember when my daughter was diagnosed with all those food allergies and Carol Fenster's Cooking Free saved me from crying everytime I needed to prepare food. Her recipes aren't melt-in-your-mouth delicious, but for me she was a pioneer, leading the way into a new world of baking and eating. And even when I find other books to love, I won't get rid of that first life-saving book.
A good cookbook for me is one that concentrates on recipes that fit my dining needs (dinners and side dishes, mostly) has ingredients that are not tremendously specialized and are easily found (usually from farmers markets or a Whole Foods, etc.), and matches my cooking skill and available time (advanced intermediate-advanced, not much time for making dishes that take a while). I like cooking and not baking and find cookbooks that reflect that. I also admire the creativity of the author. I can, for the most part, sense a recipe that has just been thrown together and one that has actually been tested and enjoyed by its creator. (Without including names, you can usually tell who is prone to be found on which side of this coin!)
And after getting some news from the woman helping me with my diet/nutrition yesterday, we're going to try to remove wheat from my diet to see if it improves my health. So I have a brand new need -- just one day old -- to find wheat/gluten - free foods and recipes. And that's how I ended up on this site, my first visit here.
Since daughter was diagnosed with multiple food allergies, I find ethnic cooking easier and am trying to start a collection of those without much success. I also want to keep our Southern traditions in an allergy friendly way, kinda intimidating.
I'm finding that I really enjoy reading cookbooks. Not just the recipes, but the text, the blurbs at the top of recipes, and the technical information.
A book that is in frequent rotation for inspiration is always one that offers recipes I might not think of on my own or pulls me out of my comfort zone in the kitchen.
It also must have a really good index.
For me, any great cookbooks should contain recipes that strive for delivering a layered complexity in taste without indulging in unnecessarily complicated steps. They should also have lucid instructions, at least one photo per recipe and passionate presence of the authors.
What an awsome list! Thanks for sharing so many great suggestions.
A great cookbook for me is one that is pleasent to read, teaches me something or gives me new ideas, and inspires me to run to the kitchen! I love cooking and baking fancy complex dishes just as much as simple tasty ones.
I love cookbooks! Cooking is a lost art form...today there is too much take-out, frozen, boxed, etc. So to see the recipes, with all the precise measurements, and the glorious and delectable photographs is to see fine art in your very own home! I aspire to be as great an artist...and to find the courage to ad-lib once in a while!
I love cookbooks. I often pick up one of mine when I'm feeling overwhelmed. I will leaf through the recipes that I've made time and mark the ones that I hope to try. I'm getting married in the summer of 2011 and working on my cookbook collection. Those who only have electric recipes are missing out!
Awesome! Thanks for the insight on the cookbooks, I'm ALWAYS looking for recipes.
Something that not only contains a great set of recipes, but also inspires changes in my current go-to dishes.
And of course, some great pictures.
A good cookbook can be read easily, is hard to put down, and makes you drool all over the lovely photos!
I was so excited when I read this post. Thank you for taking the time to put this list together. First I look at the photos-they have to have some heart and soul in them ,not just stock pics of bread. Then I review bits and pieces of the recipes-have to have a lot of the heart and soul of the chef in them. And I love little stories or notes or helpful hints. I just started with Dorie Greenspan's Around My French Table thru French Fridays with Dorie blog. And Mowie over at Mowielicious turned me onto Otto Lenghi when he mentioned his Orange Polenta Cake. Print rocks !
We, too, have books on shelves, stacks and in every imaginable nook and cranny in our home. My husband is a bookseller and our 18 month old son is a huge lover of books already. When I saw your list of cookbooks I was so excited! I love cookbooks and am getting into cooking more and more now that my son is eating food with us. I have done much of my searching online as there is a vast resource, but when I find recipes this way I miss the cookbook experience. I love feeling the pages, smelling the ink, seeing the photos and reading the cook's thoughts and words, seeing the recipe the way they intended it. Making food that inspires and tastes as good as it sounds is a large part of the exploration. I am also a fan of things that are quick and easy to prepare while entertaining a little person in the kitchen. :)
These cookbooks all look amazing and I would love to cook from all of them. The type of cookbooks I find myself turning to again and again are full of stories about the food. I also love gorgeous photos but honestly, I'll pick good stories and food writing over photos any day!
Simplicity. Between my schedule and my husband's schedule, I thrive on dinner recipes I can whip up in 30-45 minutes. Also, dinners that freeze well. I'm on the road a fair amount and having meals in the freezer makes it easy on my man!
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Let the conversation be spirited and full of questions. However, any nasty comments with a personal attack, or scurrilous ones with no intention but to hurt? They]re not getting published.
This is why I am no longer accepting anonymous comments. Too many insulting comments come through those.
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Now. Enough of that. Let's talk.