Cookbooks and recipes

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norgeway

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 28, 2009
Messages
9,376
Location
mocksville n c
I was asked if I still used cookbooks now since recipes were on line well. It's easier to find in a book for me and my old fashioned brain. Here are a few of my cookbooks. These are my most used and are the ones in the kitchen. I have about 4 times this many in all

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Neat collection

I bought a few cookbooks in college at a used book store that were filled with decades of handwritten notes, remedies for everything, and various recipe clippings. One in particular I couldn't believe a family threw out. Mary B. Perry of Hayward, CA was either a real witch or a terrible cook. Though by her taste in recipes I have a hard time believing the latter. Something a little sad about it but I've sure gotten a lot of mileage out of it. Great collection you have - thanks for sharing!
 
Sustenance

I agree--what a beautiful Radarange!

I enjoy reading cookbooks; I have an awful lot of cookbooks from which I've never cooked a recipe. I see that old Encyclopaedia of Cooking there! The books that I've tended to keep over the years are those pertaining to breads and whole grain cooking, to seitan, to cakes. They're the ones that I will actually use.

As I know you know, those vintage cookbooks can be fun but ingredients have changed over time, particularly yeasts and flours. They can be fun to try and modify if there's time. Some of those vintage general cookbooks tell us how much more restricted our eating has grown, particularly with regard to different meats and vegetables that were common then, not so now.

My mother loved reading cookbooks; a friend of mine died recently, leaving over 2K cookbooks for her husband to deal with.

I prefer cookbooks with photos; the British make some really beautiful cookbooks with color photos of every recipe.
 
First off, add me to the list of those lusting after that Radarange!

 

I do pull my share of recipes from on-line sites and keep them in ever-thickening Pee-Chee type folders alongside cookbooks in the kitchen, but I still have so many books that I don't have space for all of them there.  The ones I keep in the kitchen I tend to actually use, whereas the ones kept in the den are primarily for reference, technique or inspiration. 

 

Some books belonged to my mom, like the Encyclopedic, The Pope School (Mom just called it "Mrs. Pope's), James Beard's American Cookery, Sebastiani Family (aka Mangiamo!) and nearly all of the spiral bound ones.  The bulk of them were my own thrift store finds or free discards, and I've had to start getting rid of some that I've never touched.  Kind of a one-in, one-or-more-out rule now.  I'm still waiting to see something by Lidia Bastianich show up at a thrift store.  I'd snap it up in an instant.

 

A couple I bought because I liked how they looked:  Elizabeth David's Mediterranean and French Country Food, and a first edition of The Sunset Cook Book from 1960, and the Chez Panisse Menu Cookbook because it's autographed by Alice Waters.

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I still like to see the recipe in print myself.  My wife is a cookbook collector, and I've also inherited some family recipe boxes filled with great memories over the years.  I've found that local cookbooks from churches, civic groups etc. are some of the best because the recipes are most often tried & true family favorites.
 
Great seeing members' cookbook collections!

All of my cookbooks went to the local library in the major downsizing of this past summer. Nearly every recipe I used from those books is in a cloud-based app called Pepperplate; also have a printout of each in manila file folders in a filing cabinet. I usually keep the iPad on the counter to view whatever recipe I'm making; or I tape the printout to a kitchen cabinet.

The cookbooks are gone but still available via the library.
 
I have around 60 cookbooks. I know how to find some recipes, but from others I don't know in which book they are. I find it's very easy to find a recipe on the internet. Fill in the ingredients and if necessary the cook and it brings you fast to the recipe.

My favourite websites are from the BBC. BBC Food and BBC Good Food:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/

https://www.bbcgoodfood.com
 
flipbook

Samsung has a feature with their "droid" phones called flipbook. It is a magazine with daily articles. One of the categories is food. The recipes are great and widely varied. Comfort style foods, vegetarian, vegan, ethnic, rich desserts, light desserts.
 
A book sales person

used to call where one of us worked years ago, so he bought a Christmas cook book, a BBQ cook book, and a Mexican cook book. What we tried and liked, along with recipe's from our Cooking Light subscription, and Food Network, we printed, sleeved, and put in a large ring binder.
My sister gave us one called "The best recipe". It's loaded with good tips on roasting meats, poultry, baking, plus recipes.
Mom got us one of Paula Deen's small books one year, and we bough one of Rachel Ray's small books.
Do Kitchen Aid mixers still come with a cook book? Cusinart used to include a small one by James Beard.
There is just everything available online for printing of course.
You can learn so much from youtube also.
If you can temper eggs, blanch vegetables, make a roux, sear, and know how different proteins react you can cook.
I liked the 2 fat ladies, Julia Child, and Ina Gartin, Alissa Di Arabian, Sunny Anderson, Mario Battali, Sarah Moultin, Bobby Flay, Nick Mauer, Jeffry Zakarian, Michael Lamonico, the chef who ran Windows on the World in NY before 2001, Bibba Cigiano, the Italian lady from Boston who's son owns Eatily with Mario Batali and the gal from Louisville too, but at the moment, their names escape me.
 
Brand-Name Cookbooks

For reading, even if not cooking, I've always enjoyed those slim cookbooks put out in the past by brand-name companies. Our thriftier mothers and grandmothers used to get those volumes for very little money and they tended to have great recipes in them. Why? Because the companies were going to put recipes in them that showed the best side of what they were selling. I have a few dozen of them and enjoy reading them regardless of whether I'm using them. I keep them in the same clear sleeves that I do for sheet music.
 
Hans, Pepperplate is so easy to use even I can do it. The best feature is that you can go to any of the supported recipe-oriented websites and import recipes to your heart's content with just a couple of clicks. You don't have to type a single word!

1. Photo #1 lists the websites it will automatically import recipes from. I'm going to choose allrecipes.com.

2. Oh, look! I found a recipe for Cake Mix Cookies.

3. Copy the URL (just as we do to add links here at AW). Paste the URL into the box.

4. Press ADD.

5. Nothin' up my sleeve...presto! Recipe with photo magically appears in my Pepperplate app. [this post was last edited: 10/31/2017-20:10]

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I had fun this weekend reading online a tri-lingual (English/German/Hebrew) cookbook from 1938 or so from Palestine (i.e. Israel before it was Israel). It was intended to help German/European women moving to Palestine with how to cook in the desert; with things like oils rather than animal fats, and with fresh vegetables/fruits most of the year. I saw it referred to in the Netflix Discovering Israeli Cooking, and looked it up on the internet. It was sponsored by some of the local vendors (oil, cookstoves, tomato canners, LP gas, etc) so read a little like some of the sponsored cookbooks you see in the same era and into the 50s here.
 

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