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.

Recommended Posts

Posted

I've followed the "Cookbooks - How Many Do You Own?" thread. Now I'd like to

ask - which is the one you have that you'd rescue if you could only pick one? I've

purchased several based on what many of you have purchased or written about,

but I guess I'm ultimately looking for the creme de la creme - an ultimate

collection.

Burgundy makes you think silly things, Bordeaux makes you talk about them, and Champagne makes you do them ---

Brillat-Savarin

Posted (edited)

The one cookbook I would rescue in a fire is my three-ring binder full of printouts, magazine tear-outs, recipe cards, and such. But if you mean the one commercially-available book I would take with me if I knew I could have only one, forever, I'd be hard pressed to say. I'd want a general-purpose book, but none of the ones I currently own fits that bill. Which is probably why I have so many cookbooks!

The book I cook out of most often, and most happily, is "Staff Meals from Chanterelle" by David Waltuck. It's got a ton of recipes, and they run the gamut from back-of-the-box (shepherd's pie, sloppy joes) to ethnic (lots of chinese) to company-nice. The trick of cooking green beans is worth the price of admission alone. I can only think of one recipe I have made out of this book in the last 3 years that I didn't like, and that was because I didn't like one of the ingredients.

Rounding out the top five:

- Asian Ingredients (Bruce Cost)

- Rick Bayless's Mexican Kitchen

- Baking Illustrated

- LA Times California Cookbook

[edited for a grammar nit]

Edited by ScorchedPalate (log)

Anita Crotty travel writer & mexican-food addictwww.marriedwithdinner.com

Posted

If only one....

The Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking - by Marcella Hazan.

The recipes are delicous and easy - rarely needing a laundry list of ingredients and very much suited to the home kitchen. Marcella is amazing at conveying the essence of good cooking and the pleasures of a well made pasta or a slow roasted meat.

I often read it before I go to bed so that my dreams are filled with happy meals...

Posted

Me: The Escoffier Cookbook

Wife: The Joy of Cooking

They both have a spot on the counter. The rest of the hundred or so(who counts) reside elsewhere. Joy is great for it's sheer volume and diversity of recipes and Escoffier's is just pure cooking from stocks to Cherries Jubilee.

A island in a lake, on a island in a lake, is where my house would be if I won the lottery.

Posted

Depends on the season and the year. This winter, it was All About Braising. Come early summer, it will be the St. Paul Farmer's Market Cookbook or Alice Waters Vegetable book.

I guess year round, I refer probably most often to Baking with Julia or Julia and Jacques Cooking at home.

But, most often, I reach for my recipe box. Recipes cut from newspapers, magazines, from friends, from family, and especially those recipes written by my great grandmother in spidery fountain pen.

Susan Fahning aka "snowangel"
Posted

Certainly Braising with Molly. But I reach mostly for my William Sonoma series of books these day..

Marlene

Practice. Do it over. Get it right.

Mostly, I want people to be as happy eating my food as I am cooking it.

Posted

Joy of Cooking if I could have only one but it would be awfully traumatic leaving all the others behind. I fear I would weep uncontrollably.

"There are, it has been said, two types of people in the world. There are those who say: this glass is half full. And then there are those who say: this glass is half empty. The world belongs, however, to those who can look at the glass and say: What's up with this glass? Excuse me? Excuse me? This is my glass? I don't think so. My glass was full! And it was a bigger glass!" Terry Pratchett

 

Posted

Charmaine Solomon's Complete Asian Cookbook. I could not do without it; it's beaten to a pulp, not surprisingly. But I agree with andiesenji: I'd come loose from my tether if I lost my collection!

Chris Amirault

eG Ethics Signatory

Sir Luscious got gator belts and patty melts

Posted

1978 copy of The Great Chefs of France by Anthony Blake and Quentin Crewe. It would be on the top of the bag which had the Bocuse, Troisgros, Verge, and Guerard books, all from the 70's, in case of a fire.

Posted

My boyfriend and I have worn out one copy of Silver Palate New Basics and are working on a second, so I'd have to say that. It's not even that we use so many of the recipes; it's just a handy reference for looking up an ingredient and getting some ideas. Actual recipes, I use more by Julia and Marcella but the New Basics is a good book to keep out on the counter. (I might have said Joy of Cooking too and maybe I just don't consult it much any more because I have so much of it memorized.)

Posted

That is one of the hardest questions I've ever tried to answer... For largely sentimental reasons, probably the original Silver Palate Cookbook.

Life is short; eat the cheese course first.

Posted
Joy of Cooking if I could have only one but it would be awfully traumatic leaving all the others behind.  I fear I would weep uncontrollably.

All of that, andie.

"Joy" is a Desert Island Cookbook, that includes fancy French fripperies, pancake recipes and what to do with a dead possum. And popovers.

It may not be the book I pull out most often, cookbook flirt that I am, but if I were limited to one: no contest.

Margaret McArthur

"Take it easy, but take it."

Studs Terkel

1912-2008

A sensational tennis blog from freakyfrites

margaretmcarthur.com

Posted

Fanny Farmer.........the most recently updated, not my Gram's 1933 edition!

It's a great jumping-off point for the American repertoire........and I'm loving the large print and easy-on-the-eye serif.

I'm a canning clean freak because there's no sorry large enough to cover the, "Oops! I gave you botulism" regrets.

Posted

laurie colwin's two books (ought to count as one, you could hide them easily within an escoffier)

"There never was an apple, according to Adam, that wasn't worth the trouble you got into for eating it"

-Neil Gaiman

Posted
I've followed the "Cookbooks - How Many Do You Own?" thread.  Now I'd like to

ask - which is the one you have that you'd rescue if you could only pick one?  I've

purchased several based on what many of you have purchased or written about, 

but I guess I'm ultimately looking for the creme de la creme - an ultimate

collection.

where are you from?

Posted (edited)

The French Chef..Julia Child

edited to explain...as a new wife I knew nothing about cooking, but had major access to a beautiful garden. tomatos, peppers, eggplant etc. all grown with love. A woman who was teaching me to sew told me to buy this cookbook as I was ruining the produce. My first ratatouille, cassoullet, etc. came from there. I don't know that it saved my marriage, but it really helped! Since then I have bought hundreds of cookbooks but none have had the impact that little paperback has.

Edited by highchef (log)
Posted

The Good Housekeeping Illustrated Cookbook. It was my first cookbook and it's still where I go when I'm looking for good basic recipes. I have lots of other books that I like, but this one's still my reference.

I've made notes on many of the recipes, and losing those would be the worst!

Marcia.

Don't forget what happened to the man who suddenly got everything he wanted...he lived happily ever after. -- Willy Wonka

eGullet foodblog

Posted (edited)
which is the one you have that you'd rescue if you could only pick one?  I've

Well, I'm not gonna be able to pick just one.

The ones that were the most important to me when I was first learning to cook were, "Kitchen Primer" by Craig Claiborne, a paperback two volume edition of "The Joy of Cooking" from the eighties, and "Classic Chinese Cuisine" by Nina Simonds. I don't go back to Joy or Kitchen Basics for recipes much anymore; but, I still make quite a few dishes from Classic Chinese Cuisine.

For baking, bread especially, and medium to advanced home cooking, I think it is hard to beat Julia Child's "The Way to Cook". I often use the procedures or amounts in Way to judge recipes I find on the Internet.

Erik

edited to fix title of Claiborne book

Edited by eje (log)

---

Erik Ellestad

If the ocean was whiskey and I was a duck...

Bernal Heights, SF, CA

Posted

I would have thought that the Larousse in its modern form would've made an appearance on this thread by now.

I can agree with the Escoffier as a possible 'there can be only one' candidate as it provides basic technique with minimal fuss, but it is just classical cuisine.

'The Book' however, is an encyclopaedia that also happens to have loads of recipes no? covering a range of cultures. Something for everyone.

"Coffee and cigarettes... the breakfast of champions!"

Posted

There are many cookbooks I have that I think are excellent. If you asked, pick your top 5, or even top 3, now then there is some room to really debate the merits. For just one though? No contest. Joy of Cooking. While I can improvise on many things, if I need to know the basics, that is the source.

Charles a food and wine addict - "Just as magic can be black or white, so can addictions be good, bad or neither. As long as a habit enslaves it makes the grade, it need not be sinful as well." - Victor Mollo

Posted (edited)
I've followed the "Cookbooks - How Many Do You Own?" thread.   Now I'd like to

ask - which is the one you have that you'd rescue if you could only pick one?  I've

purchased several based on what many of you have purchased or written about, 

but I guess I'm ultimately looking for the creme de la creme - an ultimate

collection.

where are you from?

Maryland - altho I lived for 2 yrs. in Baton Rouge and fell in love with Cajun/Creole cooking

Edited by MicBacchus (log)

Burgundy makes you think silly things, Bordeaux makes you talk about them, and Champagne makes you do them ---

Brillat-Savarin

Posted

A New Way to Cook, by Sally Schnieder. It's the one I go to for 95% of my basics...

Todd McGillivray

"I still throw a few back, talk a little smack, when I'm feelin' bulletproof..."

Posted

Julia's "The Way to Cook" used to be my go-to book - wonderfully illustrated as well.

But lately I find myself turning to Bittman's "How to Cook Everything." As a friend said when he saw all my cookbooks, if you have that, why do you need any of the others?

Mitch Weinstein aka "weinoo"

Tasty Travails - My Blog

My eGullet FoodBog - A Tale of Two Boroughs

Was it you baby...or just a Brilliant Disguise?

Posted

Lots of faves already mentioned here, Joy of Cooking, Hazan's Italian, Larousse.

I am also very fond of the Chinese cookbooks by Pei Mei.

×
×
  • Create New...