Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

What food-related books are you reading? (2004 - 2015)


Carrot Top

Recommended Posts

What food-related books are you currently reading? Do you read more than one at a time?

If it is a cookbook, do you tend to scan it or do you thoroughly read it...

Are you enjoying the book you are reading at the moment? Any comments on it?

I'm reading 'Much Depends on Dinner' by Margaret Visser and am enjoying it though it is a bit of a slower read than some others I've read due to the concentration level required to think through the historic and sociologic references.

Usually I read two or three books at the same time but am running short on titles I have an urge for...

I do tend to scan traditional cookbooks rather than read though I used to gobble up every word.

Tell us what is on your reading table!

Edited by Smithy
Adjusted title (log)
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just finished "High Bonnet" by Idwal Jones. Very funny, sly book. Odd use of language, it read like a bad translation, but I don't think it is. The imagery just sticks with you. The link leads to Amazon, which I hope leads to the eGullet commission purse.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I also have several titles in play at the moment (and that's just in food; I have more on top of that):

Le Inspecteur se met a Table - the "tell-all" book from a Michelin inspector.

Vino Italiano - a really good write-up on Italian wines, but really meant to be read with wines in hand, not as casual bedside reading

The Wilder Shores of Gastronomy - really good essays, but some are drier than others

And a seemingly infinite number of Wine Spectators and probably at least one issue of Gastronomica.

Derrick Schneider

My blog: http://www.obsessionwithfood.com

You have to eat. You might as well enjoy it!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In preperation for the return of oyster season, I have finaly got around to reading M.F.K Fisher's "Consider the Oyster."

I also just received my newest cookbook, "Heart and Soul" by Kylie Kwong. I became enamored with this Aussie chef ever since discovering her show on the Discovery Home channel. I am looking forward to cooking her red braised brisket, her slow cooked honeycomb tripe and crispy skin duck with blood plum sauce. Born into one of Australia's oldest Chinese families (she is fifth generation), the book has lots of interesting text about her family and the stories behind her dishes. The food is a combination of Chinese and contemporary Australian cuisine, along with some French techniques.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am re-reading, for the billionth time, Calvin Trillin's "Tummy Trilogy" and also Redmond O'Hanlon's "Into the Heart of Borneo," a non-food book filled with descriptions of odd meals put together by the intrepid adventurers (one of my favorite cliche descriptions.)

Another of my favorite non-food books brimming with meal descriptions is "Crystal Singer" by Anne McCaffrey. This light little SF story deals in sideways fashion with a planetary parasite that induces a ravenous hunger in its host at a particular time of the year.

My mom, bless her, got me subscriptions to Saveur and La Cucina Italiana so I am also busy with those.

"My tongue is smiling." - Abigail Trillin

Ruth Shulman

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just finished reading The Fourth Star, a year in the life of Daniel in NYC. Reading through the passages of Lee and Boulud yelling out orders was enough to make me stressed out! Such an amazing restaurant. Boulud is a master of his craft.

R. Jason Coulston

jason@popcling.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just found a 1960's version of "Le Cordon Bleu's Cooking School" encyclopedia set at a yard sale for 10 bucks...is some fun stuff...

One thing I thought was cool is that there are very few men in the photographs of the books, they are all women...

Cheffy

An Artist?!!!

Perhaps...

Gladiator?!!!

Most Definitely

http://www.restaurantedge.com/index.phtml?catid=47

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"The Taste of America," by John L. Hess and Karen Hess.

The book (and most of the columns that make up the book) first was published in the 1970s. so it's interesting to read some of their criticisms and see how much has changed...for instance, they gripe about the lack of good bread and seasonal produce available in most markets....they see supermarkets as the land of Wonder Bread and frozen peas. It's nice to see how the advances made in artisanal bread-making and greenmarkets have improved dinner table offerings.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just found a 1960's version of "Le Cordon Bleu's Cooking School" encyclopedia set at a yard sale for 10 bucks...is some fun stuff...

One thing I thought was cool is that there are very few men in the photographs of the books, they are all women...

Cheffy

I heard somewhere that Cordon bleu was originally the (blue ribbon) award given to women for their culinary prowess - :smile: But reading up I can't find that detail anywhere. :hmmm:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Schott's Food and Drink Miscellany, by Ben Schott, who wrote Schott's Original Miscellany. This is a great little read if you like useful and un-useful nuggets of trivia. Good to dip into when you have a free minute, with not too much mental concentration required.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I also tend to read several books at once. I usually have cookbooks next to my chair in the living room--which I do read, start to finish--and then regular chapter books next to my bed. I almost always read nonfiction. Right now my haul from the library contains several pressure cooker cookbooks, "Mastering the Art of French Cooking," "Cookwise," the Fannie Farmer baking book, Alton Brown's "Gear for your Kitchen," and then my nighttime reading is "With These Hands: the hidden world of migrant farmworkers today."

Rachel Sincere
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've picked up a bad habit this year of starting books and not finishing them or getting distracted with another. Currently I'm winding down on Slow Meditteranean Food by Paula Wolfert, which is fantastic.

I'm about 3/4s through the Fourth Star as well and I gotta say it's not doing it for me. Seems to be redundant: start each chapter with a story about one of the players in the restaurant, then plunge into the kitchen for that night's chaos.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Feeding a Yen", Calvin Trillin. Easy, short read, almost finished. Kind of sad because Alice disappears 2/3 into the book (she died)

I love cold Dinty Moore beef stew. It is like dog food! And I am like a dog.

--NeroW

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I just found a 1960's version of "Le Cordon Bleu's Cooking School" encyclopedia set at a yard sale for 10 bucks...is some fun stuff...

One thing I thought was cool is that there are very few men in the photographs of the books, they are all women...

Cheffy

I heard somewhere that Cordon bleu was originally the (blue ribbon) award given to women for their culinary prowess - :smile: But reading up I can't find that detail anywhere. :hmmm:

What I had heard in school was that the Cordon Bleu was given to chefs of boths genders for their prowess, but that the original CB cooking schools were limited to women, and specifically housewives who wanted a good kitchen education. (My school is a CB NorthAmerica school so I am inclined to believe this is either true, or great propaganda from the CB people.)

"My tongue is smiling." - Abigail Trillin

Ruth Shulman

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My condo is a mess lately with books and magazines piled all over. I definitely read more than one at a time and some become abandoned to be put on the shelf eventually.

My end table has stacks of Bon Appetit and Gourmet that I haven't gotten to reading yet. I've added some Wine Spectator and Saveur mags to these piles courtesy of my local library magazine exchange.

I just finished reading When French Women Cook by M. Kammen, a loving tribute to the wonderful cooks in her family tree that influenced her own cooking.

Then in honor of Julia Child I recently ordered two cookbooks of hers that are piled on my kitchen table for reading while I eat. One is Julia's Kitchen Wisdom and the other is Julia Child's Kitchen.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Last books read:

Schott's Food And Drink Miscellany - which was really cute and fun to read

The Whole Beast by Fergus Henderson - an awesome awesome cookbook

Reading now:

The Art of Eating - book one, Serve It Forth

For those who don't know, The Art Of Eating is 5 books by M.F.K. Fisher in one collected volume. Very very nice. When I'm through with Serve It Forth I'm going to read somebody else, then come back to Fisher's Consider the Oyster, then read something else, etc.

Up next:

A Cook's Tour - B&N recently had it in their bargain section

The Wine Bible

Alton's second book which is due in, I think, October

-Greg

Link to comment
Share on other sites

not particularly cuisine/culinary related...but has a food theme..kinda.. i am working my way through The collected short stories of Roald Dahl. just finished 'Pig' from 'kiss, kiss'. roald dahl is not just a children's author(the twits, charlie(willy wonka across the pond)and the chocolate factory are some of his more well known stories for kids). his short stories for adults are often bizarre, distrubing and completely confounding. utterly delightful in a confusingly dark sort of way.

pig is the story of an orphan who was picked up by a vegetarian, spinster aunt from virginia. she raises him to be a vegetarian, encourages him to create new recipes(brazilnut soup, flaming spruce needle tarts and such) and thinks that he should be a chef. she dies..and having never been exposed to the real world, he comes to nyc to collect his inheritance. and there he is introduced to roast pork. the rest is pure bizarro narration.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, Roald Dahl uses food as a theme in almost anything I can think that he wrote, so why not consider the writings food-related!

He also wrote a cookbook for children based on yucky looking and sounding things to cook which were actually edible. Lovely.

Really, I mean it. Ask any seven year old boy. Eating bugs is fun. :laugh:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yes, Roald Dahl uses food as a theme in almost anything I can think that he wrote, so why not consider the writings food-related!

He also wrote a cookbook for children based on yucky looking and sounding things to cook which were actually edible. Lovely.

Really, I mean it. Ask any seven year old boy. Eating bugs is fun. :laugh:

Here you go... :biggrin:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That Roald Dahl cookbook is great fun to read (jeez I can't believe the price, so inexpensive!)

We've borrowed it from the library several times and have made a couple of the recipes in there.

It is still not my ten year old son's favorite cookbook though. That space is filled by 'The Eat-A-Bug Cookbook' by David George Gordon. It says on the cover that it covers 'The Essentials of Bug Cookery...from Soup to Gnats'.

We have not made anything from this book yet... :biggrin: the ingredients such as one-half cup Western Thatching Ants are not easy to come by, and I refuse to help him search the neighborhood for them.

An enjoyable read, though...!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am reading Becoming a Chef (reading it all) and Culinary Artistry (skimming and reading). They are both written by Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page. Both are great books. They are not really cookbooks. They do contain really good information about flavor combinations, etc.

I was once diagnosed with a split personality but we are all okay now.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I am reading Becoming a Chef (reading it all) and Culinary Artistry (skimming and reading). They are both written by Andrew Dornenburg and Karen Page. Both are great books. They are not really cookbooks. They do contain really good information about flavor combinations, etc.

If you enjoy Page and Dornenburg, check out thisQ & A they did last fall.

"Some people see a sheet of seaweed and want to be wrapped in it. I want to see it around a piece of fish."-- William Grimes

"People are bastard-coated bastards, with bastard filling." - Dr. Cox on Scrubs

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Reading and working out of: Bernard Clayton's New Complete Book of Breads and also perusing my 1963 edition of Mastering the Art of French Cooking in honor of Julia Child.

Bob R in OKC

Home Brewer, Beer & Food Lover!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Guest
This topic is now closed to further replies.
×
×
  • Create New...