Cookbooks

Topics without replies are pruned every 365 days. Not moderated.

Moderator: Dux

User avatar

Topic author
seeahill
Font of All Wisdom, God Damn it
Posts: 7842
Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2005 6:07 pm
Location: The Deep Blue Sea

Cookbooks

Post by seeahill »

I just ordered another one of these sons of bitches. I must have two dozen of them. And I hardly ever use the ones I have, so why do I buy another one? I'm thinking it's a procrastination deal. Like, "I have to sharpen all my pencils before I start writing. Oh, and I better wash the sheets etc."

Oh, I can make things that taste good, mostly on the grill and smoker. But that isn't a year 'round deal here in Montana.

So: the books:
Mark Bittman's "The Basics" is a bit too basic for me.

I have Bayless on Mexican, Hazin on Italian, Jaime Oliver on how he will make me a better cook. I've only made a few from these.

There's this Gordon Ramsay book, Home Cooking, which I now have. I'm sorta semi-retired so I can take some time. I may want to actually work my way through the book, One book.

I know, Ramsay seems like an asshole, but he has had a 3 star Michelin restaurant in London for over ten years. Also, he started off in Scotland as a futbol player. Got injured. Went into hospitality. He brings a jock mentality to the kitchen. (I'm not going to teach you how to cook Michelin starred meal, I will teach you how to cook at home. But, for Christ's sake, there are certain techniques you must master.)

I may work my way through this book just to see.

That's my thinking at this point. I'm suspect I may get some cookbook suggestions here. So fire away,
Image

User avatar

Schlegel
Top
Posts: 2161
Joined: Thu Jan 06, 2005 11:21 pm
Location: Virginia

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Schlegel »

Jaques Pepin has an encyclopedic book of techniques/dishes you might want to check out, as well multiple straight cookbooks. I very much like his approach to food.
"Why do we need a kitchen when we have a phone?"

User avatar

Topic author
seeahill
Font of All Wisdom, God Damn it
Posts: 7842
Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2005 6:07 pm
Location: The Deep Blue Sea

Re: Cookbooks

Post by seeahill »

New Complete Techniques?
Image


JohnDoe
Staff Sergeant
Posts: 293
Joined: Fri Sep 13, 2013 6:35 pm

Re: Cookbooks

Post by JohnDoe »

Food Lab by J. Kenji Lopez-Alt is fun and based off McGee's On Food and Cooking, which is lots of science related to cooking, but not necessarily cooking per se. Some bread baking books are fun for a mix of science and recipes. I have Forkish's Flour, Water, Salt, Yeast, Robertson's Tartine Bread and Reinhart's Whole Grain Breads. Cooking Know-How is very cool. Lots of recipe templates for, say, a braise of chicken thighs, but then as many as eight variations based on subbing ingredients into the basic template (e.g. butter for olive oil, shallots for garlic). My first cookbook was Peterson's Essentials of Cooking, which is loaded with techniques and simple recipes. I love knowing the methods first. All my books go to that and now I feel like I can just cook on my own. Oh, and Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat by Nosrat. Another book that empowers you to cook without it.

User avatar

nafod
Lifetime IGer
Posts: 13101
Joined: Sat Apr 22, 2006 5:01 pm
Location: Looking in your window

Re: Cookbooks

Post by nafod »

I like cookbooks that are books, and not just collections of recipes. But sometimes a collection of just recipes can be cool too.

Pizza Camp from the owner of the restaurant in Philly is good. Lots of thoughts and good pictures along with his recipes. Quirky too.
Don’t believe everything you think.

User avatar

Bram
Sergeant Commanding
Posts: 8247
Joined: Sat Apr 01, 2006 11:38 am

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Bram »

The only cook book I've ever bought was Bobby Flay's "Bold American Cuisine"

His guacamole recipe in this book (he calls it avocado salsa) is the best damn guacamole I've ever had. I've made it regularly for the past 9 years and always get compliments on it.

It goes very well with the triple layer zucchini quesadilla on the adjacent page:

"An adventurer comes back and tells you what they did, while an explorer comes back and tells you what they learned."

User avatar

Schlegel
Top
Posts: 2161
Joined: Thu Jan 06, 2005 11:21 pm
Location: Virginia

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Schlegel »

seeahill wrote: Wed Sep 25, 2019 2:14 am New Complete Techniques?
You would not go wrong with that either, what i have is Essential Pepin. 700 recipes plus a DVD of demonstrated techniques.

I will probably buy the other too, though i expect some duplication, just because they have been out long enough to be available quite cheaply now.
"Why do we need a kitchen when we have a phone?"

User avatar

Fat Cat
Jesus Christ®
Posts: 41334
Joined: Mon Jan 03, 2005 4:54 pm
Location: 悪を根付かせるな

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Fat Cat »

Jacques Pepin has tons of great videos on YouTube for freeeeeeeee.
Image
"I have longed for shipwrecks, for havoc and violent death.” - Havoc, T. Kristensen

User avatar

Schlegel
Top
Posts: 2161
Joined: Thu Jan 06, 2005 11:21 pm
Location: Virginia

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Schlegel »

Fat Cat wrote: Fri Sep 27, 2019 1:31 am Jacques Pepin has tons of great videos on YouTube for freeeeeeeee.
Yes, and he's very watchable. Those months I was pouring dinner into a tube in my stomach I would watch him every day on PBS and imagine eating food again one day.
But I still like to have books.
"Why do we need a kitchen when we have a phone?"

User avatar

Grandpa's Spells
Lifetime IGer
Posts: 11559
Joined: Thu Jan 06, 2005 10:08 pm

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Grandpa's Spells »

JMO but cooking websites are generally superior to cookbooks at this point. Once Upon a Chef is pretty much excellent across the board. Start with the steakhouse burgers.
One of the downsides of the Internet is that it allows like-minded people to form communities, and sometimes those communities are stupid.

User avatar

Fat Cat
Jesus Christ®
Posts: 41334
Joined: Mon Jan 03, 2005 4:54 pm
Location: 悪を根付かせるな

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Fat Cat »

Schlegel wrote: Fri Sep 27, 2019 2:06 am
Fat Cat wrote: Fri Sep 27, 2019 1:31 am Jacques Pepin has tons of great videos on YouTube for freeeeeeeee.
Yes, and he's very watchable. Those months I was pouring dinner into a tube in my stomach I would watch him every day on PBS and imagine eating food again one day.
But I still like to have books.
Yeesh, glad you're better brah. Yeah, I agree about books completely. The one area where video is priceless is technique: I had to watch him bone a chicken whole before I was comfortable making a gallantine. That frog makes it look so easy.

Image
"I have longed for shipwrecks, for havoc and violent death.” - Havoc, T. Kristensen

User avatar

Schlegel
Top
Posts: 2161
Joined: Thu Jan 06, 2005 11:21 pm
Location: Virginia

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Schlegel »

His concentration on communication of technique is one of the things that make him such a treasure. He's worth a dozen Food Network "celebrities" put together.
"Why do we need a kitchen when we have a phone?"

User avatar

Schlegel
Top
Posts: 2161
Joined: Thu Jan 06, 2005 11:21 pm
Location: Virginia

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Schlegel »

Grandpa's Spells wrote: Fri Sep 27, 2019 3:05 am JMO but cooking websites are generally superior to cookbooks at this point. Once Upon a Chef is pretty much excellent across the board. Start with the steakhouse burgers.
They are useful, we do use the Milk Street Kitchen website (accessible with a magazine subscription) as it's about the only magazine I've seen that consistently has multiple recipes that look interesting every issue. Most cooking mags I rarely see even 1.
But websites can vanish without warning. My books I'll have unless my house burns down.
"Why do we need a kitchen when we have a phone?"

User avatar

Fat Cat
Jesus Christ®
Posts: 41334
Joined: Mon Jan 03, 2005 4:54 pm
Location: 悪を根付かせるな

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Fat Cat »

Grandpa's Spells wrote: Fri Sep 27, 2019 3:05 am JMO but cooking websites are generally superior to cookbooks at this point. Once Upon a Chef is pretty much excellent across the board. Start with the steakhouse burgers.
Thanks for recommending that site, I'm looking at it now! I kinda of agree, but I'm old fashioned and love a good cookbook. Where else can you get something like cooking lessons in Nicoise cooking from the mayor-turned-mob-boss Jacques Médecin, sharing recipes which have been passed to him over generations? You can't find that on YouTube.

The cookbook:

The man: https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-ente ... 86011.html
Last edited by Fat Cat on Fri Sep 27, 2019 8:25 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Image
"I have longed for shipwrecks, for havoc and violent death.” - Havoc, T. Kristensen


JimZipCode
Top
Posts: 1462
Joined: Wed Sep 26, 2007 2:48 pm

Re: Cookbooks

Post by JimZipCode »

Schlegel wrote: Fri Sep 27, 2019 7:05 pmThey are useful, we do use the Milk Street Kitchen website (accessible with a magazine subscription) as it's about the only magazine I've seen that consistently has multiple recipes that look interesting every issue.
Every Milk Street recipe I've tried has been RIDICULOUSLY over-seasoned and over-spiced. As if Christopher Kimball had a stroke, and no one can bear to tell him he can't taste anymore.
“War is the remedy our enemies have chosen. Other simple remedies were within their choice. You know it and they know it, but they wanted war, and I say let us give them all they want.”
― William Tecumseh Sherman

User avatar

Topic author
seeahill
Font of All Wisdom, God Damn it
Posts: 7842
Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2005 6:07 pm
Location: The Deep Blue Sea

Re: Cookbooks

Post by seeahill »

I have a couple of shelves of cookbooks I've purchased over the years under the absurd assumption that simply owning the book will make me a better cook. It's time for me to buy one book that's heavy on technique and work my way through it. It looks like the newer version of Pepin's La Technique is what I need.
Image

User avatar

Schlegel
Top
Posts: 2161
Joined: Thu Jan 06, 2005 11:21 pm
Location: Virginia

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Schlegel »

JimZipCode wrote: Fri Sep 27, 2019 8:23 pm
Schlegel wrote: Fri Sep 27, 2019 7:05 pmThey are useful, we do use the Milk Street Kitchen website (accessible with a magazine subscription) as it's about the only magazine I've seen that consistently has multiple recipes that look interesting every issue.
Every Milk Street recipe I've tried has been RIDICULOUSLY over-seasoned and over-spiced. As if Christopher Kimball had a stroke, and no one can bear to tell him he can't taste anymore.
Has not been an issue for us. But cutting spice and salt amounts is easy if the underlying idea is good.
"Why do we need a kitchen when we have a phone?"

User avatar

Fat Cat
Jesus Christ®
Posts: 41334
Joined: Mon Jan 03, 2005 4:54 pm
Location: 悪を根付かせるな

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Fat Cat »

seeahill wrote: Fri Sep 27, 2019 9:11 pm I have a couple of shelves of cookbooks I've purchased over the years under the absurd assumption that simply owning the book will make me a better cook. It's time for me to buy one book that's heavy on technique and work my way through it. It looks like the newer version of Pepin's La Technique is what I need.
Another strong one in that category is the OG of them all, Mastering the Art of French Cooking by Julia Child. Many recipes are multi-page because she assumes no prior knowledge of French techniques by her mid-century American audience. To this day, my most frequently referred-to cookbook. Only the first volume is necessary, but a nice thing about her recipes is they ALL work and have been vetted over decades.
Image
"I have longed for shipwrecks, for havoc and violent death.” - Havoc, T. Kristensen

User avatar

Topic author
seeahill
Font of All Wisdom, God Damn it
Posts: 7842
Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2005 6:07 pm
Location: The Deep Blue Sea

Re: Cookbooks

Post by seeahill »

FC, thanks. I found my late wife's copy of Mastering the Art of French Cooking. You're right. 30 years ago, I thought it was fussy and time consuming. Now I see the value in it.

A little bittersweet looking at it, though. I see the recipes she checked off, her notes, the pages she dog eared. There are also dinners I recall, and recipes we cooked together on rainy Saturday afternoons. Ten years ago, I wouldn't have been able to look at it. Now, it's a collection of cherished memories.
Image

User avatar

Schlegel
Top
Posts: 2161
Joined: Thu Jan 06, 2005 11:21 pm
Location: Virginia

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Schlegel »

Can't get that on a website.
"Why do we need a kitchen when we have a phone?"

User avatar

nafod
Lifetime IGer
Posts: 13101
Joined: Sat Apr 22, 2006 5:01 pm
Location: Looking in your window

Re: Cookbooks

Post by nafod »

As long as we are talking online, this is a great recipe. I have my wife make this for my birthday instead of a cake.

https://cooking.nytimes.com/recipes/378 ... plum-torte
Original Plum Torte
MARIAN BURROS

YIELD 8 servings
TIME1 hour 15 minutes

Original Plum Torte
Andrew Scrivani for The New York Times
The Times published Marian Burros’s recipe for Plum Torte every September from 1983 until 1989, when the editors determined that enough was enough. The recipe was to be printed for the last time that year. “To counter anticipated protests,” Ms. Burros wrote a few years later, “the recipe was printed in larger type than usual with a broken-line border around it to encourage clipping.” It didn’t help. The paper was flooded with angry letters. “The appearance of the recipe, like the torte itself, is bittersweet,” wrote a reader in Tarrytown, N.Y. “Summer is leaving, fall is coming. That's what your annual recipe is all about. Don't be grumpy about it.” We are not! And we pledge that every year, as summer gives way to fall, we will make sure that the recipe is easily available to one and all. The original 1983 recipe called for 1 cup sugar; the 1989 version reduced that to 3/4 cup. We give both options below. Here are five ways to adapt the torte.
Don’t believe everything you think.

User avatar

Turdacious
Lifetime IGer
Posts: 21341
Joined: Thu Mar 17, 2005 6:54 am
Location: Upon the eternal throne of the great Republic of Turdistan

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Turdacious »

For those interested in Iraqi cuisine-- Nasrallah's 'Delights from the Garden of Eden' is very good and includes some interesting food history (it's out of print and expensive now).
"Liberalism is arbitrarily selective in its choice of whose dignity to champion." Adrian Vermeule

User avatar

Fat Cat
Jesus Christ®
Posts: 41334
Joined: Mon Jan 03, 2005 4:54 pm
Location: 悪を根付かせるな

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Fat Cat »

seeahill wrote: Sat Sep 28, 2019 9:06 pm FC, thanks. I found my late wife's copy of Mastering the Art of French Cooking. You're right. 30 years ago, I thought it was fussy and time consuming. Now I see the value in it.

A little bittersweet looking at it, though. I see the recipes she checked off, her notes, the pages she dog eared. There are also dinners I recall, and recipes we cooked together on rainy Saturday afternoons. Ten years ago, I wouldn't have been able to look at it. Now, it's a collection of cherished memories.
That's a bit heavy brah; I cooked dinner for my family last night (rôti de porc grand-mère) from it as a quiet salute.
Image
"I have longed for shipwrecks, for havoc and violent death.” - Havoc, T. Kristensen

User avatar

Topic author
seeahill
Font of All Wisdom, God Damn it
Posts: 7842
Joined: Sun Jan 02, 2005 6:07 pm
Location: The Deep Blue Sea

Re: Cookbooks

Post by seeahill »

Merci
Image

User avatar

Fat Cat
Jesus Christ®
Posts: 41334
Joined: Mon Jan 03, 2005 4:54 pm
Location: 悪を根付かせるな

Re: Cookbooks

Post by Fat Cat »

It does illustrate one of the many ways in which electronic shit can never truly replace books.
Image
"I have longed for shipwrecks, for havoc and violent death.” - Havoc, T. Kristensen

Post Reply