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Post by **GypsyGirl** on Nov 17, 2024 20:45:49 GMT
The 25 Most Influential Cookbooks From the Last 100 Years (Gift link) Was just reading this article in The NY Times and found it interesting. Of the 25, I actually own 5 of them. The Silver Palette Cookbook was a favorite when I was first learning to cook back in the 1980s when we lived in San Francisco. They also sold a line of SP sauces and foods that I used as well. I felt like the recipes were so modern and cutting edge compared to the small town Southern cooking I was used to where Cream of Whatever was a mainstay. if you have collected cookbooks in the past, or still have them, how many from the list do you have? What is your most used? Any books you think should have been on the list?
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paget
Drama Llama
Posts: 7,109
Jun 25, 2014 21:16:39 GMT
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Post by paget on Nov 17, 2024 20:54:52 GMT
I have cookbooks and still buy them as well. I like to read them as books and pour over the recipes, pictures, and stories for inspiration… and then most of the time I find recipes online but I still love my cookbooks! I actually don’t have any on the list.
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Post by peano on Nov 17, 2024 21:19:33 GMT
I own 2: Moosewood from back in my vegetarian days and The Joy of Cooking. I’m sure many of the books on the list are too fiddly for me.
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Post by ~summer~ on Nov 17, 2024 21:33:56 GMT
15
I have the tartine and Jerusalem on my coffee table right now lol
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huskergal
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Jun 25, 2014 20:22:13 GMT
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Post by huskergal on Nov 17, 2024 21:34:18 GMT
I own zero of them and have only heard of 2.
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Post by x2mom on Nov 17, 2024 22:14:36 GMT
I currently have The Silver Palate, 25th anniversary. I donated the original then had regrets and found a new copy at a thrift store.
Also donated Moosewood and The Joy of Cooking, which I could never get into.
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Post by Zee on Nov 17, 2024 22:21:45 GMT
That was a very interesting read, though I think this list is not one most regular American home cooks would agree with. This is more for chefs and advanced home cooks. Especially the French Laundry book and the one about eating snout to tail. Both sound ridiculously pretentious. I giggled at serving someone a plate of roasted bones with a side of greens, or passing anything through a cloth 50 times.
Any list of "influential" cookbooks from the last 100 years that doesn't include the iconic red gingham Better Homes & Gardens cookbook, or the Betty Crocker cookbook, just isn't complete to me.
I have a 1937 edition and a 50s edition Better Homes & Gardens that I keep purely for their nostalgic appeal.
I also admit that I love Teresa Giudice's original Italian cookbook because it's informative and really helped me get comfortable with Italian cooking! Don't laugh 🤣 I graduated to Giada's cookbooks. Love her.
Over the years I purged a lot of my cookbooks but I kept Teresa, Giada, a Thai book, a Mediterranean book, a couple vegetarian and vegan books, and Martha Stewart. I kept Jamie Oliver's book because it's beautiful but I didn't have a lot of those seasonal things on hand and don't eat most of that meat. I also have a few cookie recipe magazines and a book.
I also have my own cookbook with my own recipes, adapted by me or from memory of family meals, that I know my kids want (they ask for certain recipes).
I definitely want to check out the Mexican cookbook in this list, and Jubilee for sure.
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Post by Zee on Nov 17, 2024 22:28:45 GMT
That was a very interesting read, though I think this list is not one most regular American home cooks would agree with. This is more for chefs and advanced home cooks. Especially the French Laundry book and the one about eating snout to tail. Both sound ridiculously pretentious. I giggled at serving someone a plate of roasted bones with a side of greens, or passing anything through a cloth 50 times.
Any list of "influential" cookbooks from the last 100 years that doesn't include the iconic red gingham Better Homes & Gardens cookbook, or the Betty Crocker cookbook, just isn't complete to me.
I have a 1937 edition and a 50s edition Better Homes & Gardens that I keep purely for their nostalgic appeal.
I also admit that I love Teresa Giudice's original Italian cookbook because it's informative and really helped me get comfortable with Italian cooking! Don't laugh 🤣 I graduated to Giada's cookbooks. Love her.
Over the years I purged a lot of my cookbooks but I kept Teresa, Giada, a Thai book, a Mediterranean book, a couple vegetarian and vegan books, and Martha Stewart. I kept Jamie Oliver's book because it's beautiful but I didn't have a lot of those seasonal things on hand and don't eat most of that meat. I also have a few cookie recipe magazines and a book.
I also have my own cookbook with my own recipes, adapted by me or from memory of family meals, that I know my kids want (they ask for certain recipes).
I definitely want to check out the Mexican cookbook in this list, and Jubilee for sure.
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Post by cmpeter on Nov 18, 2024 0:01:53 GMT
Just two…Joy and Moosewood. Neither of which survived our recent move and my purge.
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Post by compeateropeator on Nov 18, 2024 0:19:00 GMT
We had an original Moosewood cookbook in our apartment back in the early 80s. It ended up with one of my other roommates when we went our separate ways. ETA - I do still have The Joy of Cooking. No others mentioned although a couple of them look really familiar. Also I agree with Zee about The Better Homes and Gardens one. I have 2 of those, a really old hard cover loose leaf binder one and then a slightly update paperback bound one. The paperback one is in about 3 different pieces but it still use it. And the Betty Crocker one also should be included. If you are talking about influencing the general population to at least be able to cook dinners and know some basic terms and techniques. 😆
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Post by Linda on Nov 18, 2024 0:31:01 GMT
Any list of "influential" cookbooks from the last 100 years that doesn't include the iconic red gingham Better Homes & Gardens cookbook, or the Betty Crocker cookbook, just isn't complete to me. I tend to agree and I would add Good Housekeeping to the list as well The only one I've owned was Joy Of Cooking. I've borrowed and used Moosewood as well the Diet for a Small Planet but not owned
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Post by Zee on Nov 18, 2024 0:38:18 GMT
Any list of "influential" cookbooks from the last 100 years that doesn't include the iconic red gingham Better Homes & Gardens cookbook, or the Betty Crocker cookbook, just isn't complete to me. I tend to agree and I would add Good Housekeeping to the list as well The only one I've owned was Joy Of Cooking. I've borrowed and used Moosewood as well the Diet for a Small Planet but not owned Oh yes that's actually what I meant to add rather than Betty Crocker! Thank you!
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Sarah*H
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Jun 25, 2014 20:07:06 GMT
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Post by Sarah*H on Nov 18, 2024 0:59:17 GMT
I do collect cookbooks, I have almost an entire bookcase of them. I only have 3 from this list though - Joy, Mastering and Moosewood (actually several different Moosewood cookbooks.) I own two sets of Mastering - a pretty new one and a vintage early edition I found at a fleatique last year. Joy gets the most use and I've only made a couple recipes from the others. The cookbook we've used the most in my home is Eat This, It Will Make You Feel Better (Dom Deluise) and a lot of the single topic BHG cookbooks from the 60s like - Fondue or Casseroles. I gravitate towards cookbooks from the depression era, community cookbooks (love love love) and regional cookbooks like Charleston Receipts. ETA: We have many of the cookbooks from BHG like this ( Fondue and Tabletop Cooking) and some of them are hilarious to page through now but there are also a lot of really great recipes in these books!
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ellen
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Jun 30, 2014 12:52:45 GMT
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Post by ellen on Nov 18, 2024 1:21:48 GMT
I own the Moosewood cookbook and that’s it. I use my three ring binder Betty Crocker cookbook that my mom gave me over 30 years ago often. Sometimes you just need some basics. I have a Better Homes & Garden one that is similar that gets pulled out about as often. My hometown church cookbook from the late 80s is probably my best cookbook.
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Post by AussieMeg on Nov 18, 2024 1:22:34 GMT
I don't own any of those cookbooks.
I do own a few books that would be considered "influential" if a similar list was made for an Australia audience, by cooks / chefs such as Margaret Fulton, Stephanie Alexander, Donna Hay, Maggie Beer etc. Then of course there is the Country Women's Association cookbook, and Cookery The Australian Way, which everyone has used in their Home Economics lessons at school since the 1960s!
ETA: I do have several Yotam Ottolenghi cookbooks, just not the one in the article. I have Sweet, Plenty, and Plenty More.
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Post by CarolinaGirl71 on Nov 18, 2024 1:29:26 GMT
Interesting question! I only have two from the list- Julia Child , Mastering the Art of French Cooking, which I salvaged from my mother when she downsized, and Irma Rombauer, The Joy of Cooking, which I received as a wedding gift 46 years ago
I have never done much at all with Julia Child’s book. When DD was a baby, I was a SAHMom and we only had one car. I cooked a lot from Joy, mostly because DD took long naps and I would rather cook than clean! I tried a lot of desserts and breads. The one I remember most fondly was Bagels, from scratch. They were very good, but I thought it was way too much effort when I could easily buy them.
I have lots of other cookbooks not on the list. I love the church and regional cookbooks that were popular in the 80’s and 90’s, and I also have some books from Food Network stars. Lots of Ina Garten, also Giada, Bobby Flay and Vivian Howard (she had a book signing here with her first book). I also have a lot of the Southern Living yearly books, my mother used to give them to me for Christmas each year.
I mostly get new recipes online now, but I’m keeping my cookbooks just in case I need them.
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milocat
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Mar 18, 2015 4:10:31 GMT
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Post by milocat on Nov 18, 2024 1:52:02 GMT
I've only heard of The Joy of Cooking and Mastering the Art of French Cooking. I don't own either.
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Post by katiekaty on Nov 18, 2024 2:40:35 GMT
I have 18 on this lit. I am a huge collector of cookbooks, having over a thousand cookbooks. It’s my favorite bedtime reading to gab a cookbook and relax. I pick out recipes to try, snapping. Photos of the pages and a picture of the book for future reference. I print it out. We have a critique list for out our making the recipes. There are so many other books that should have been on that list instead of some that are. Fanny Farmer’s book should habeen one as it’s one of the earliest books that spread among women and United cooking techniques and ideas. It’s also one of my favorites and with adjustments we cook from it today!
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Post by workingclassdog on Nov 18, 2024 4:03:16 GMT
Ha.. I have only heard of one of them, the Joy of Cooking. The rest is a nope. My life didn't have fancy food in it like those cookbooks. Our cookbooks consisted of church cookbooks, The Better Homes and Garden (isn't that the red checked one?) and while I was on my own and first married, it was a Pillsbury cookbook that I still use to this day. Really the only other cookbooks that ever interest me was the Pioneer Woman ones, and I can assume those would never make a list like that. lol.
My very first 'cookbook' (which included other things) was called "Where's Mom Now That I Need Her".. it was VERY basic stuff, like how to cook an egg, or potato, etc... then stuff like how to fix things and so forth. My mom bought it for me as a joke.
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Post by voltagain on Nov 18, 2024 5:05:30 GMT
I only recognized one of the books but never bought it. I did thumb through it decades ago when I was a young newly wed. It made cooking sound extremely labor intensive and next to impossible. My favorite cook book was published as a fundraiser. It was a bridal shower gift. The recipes had been donated by local women. So the flavors and techniques were all "farm wife" cooking I was familiar with. I just recently parted with it. Got married in 1978
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Post by katlady on Nov 18, 2024 6:43:25 GMT
I don’t own any of those. I don’t really look for cookbooks. I inherited a lot of my cookbooks from my mom. She used to buy the ones compiled by Junior Leagues and churches from all around the country. My favorites include one from Texas, one from Georgia, and a couple Hawaiian/Japanese ones from So. Cal and Hawaii.
ETA - As a kid, I did have the Betty Crocker kid’s cookbook. Anyone else have that? I remember making a few things from that book.
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Post by melanell on Nov 18, 2024 11:59:18 GMT
I don't own any, and I think I only even recognized two of the them--The Joy of Cooking, and Mastering the Art of French Cooking.
I can certainly understand why many of them were chosen, though, especially earlier books that dealt with foods from specific countries or areas of the world.
We do have a few shelves of cookbooks in our house, and there are a few we go back to with some regularity, but they just don't happen to be any on this list.
I would say these are the most frequently used cookbooks in our house:
Le Cordon Bleu Complete Cooking Techniques Betty Crocker's Cooky Book (This only comes out at Christmas, but it does so every year.) 1000 Vegan Recipes The Complete Cookbook for Young Chefs The Complete Baking Book for Young Chefs
And the most recent addition to the cookbook shelf is Tasting History by Max Miller.
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Post by zuke on Nov 18, 2024 12:44:51 GMT
I have 7 or them 1. Mastering the Art of French Cooking ...Growing up in the 70's, my mother cooked her way through that book, way before the movie came out. We ate like kings and queens. 2. Baking with Julia 3. Joy of Cooking 4. Silver Palate 5. The French Laundry 6. The River Cafe 7. Moosewood I have 3 or them plus I have 7 other Moosewood cookbooks that Mollie Katzen wrote. We're not vegetarian but love the Moosewood restaurant in Ithaca, NY. The food is always delicious and simple.
Missing from that list, in my opinion is 1. Betty Crocker 2. Paul Prudhomme's Louisana Kitchen
I have a lot of Food Network chefs books but as much as I like them, I don't think they are influential.
I collect cookbooks. I probably have about 100 now. It donated about 200 in the last year or so. I just don't have the room in this house. I rarely buy them from a store. We go to garage sales every week just for the fun of it. I always look through the cookbooks. I usually pay just $1 for each book but less than 5 times, I've paid $2. LOL I love to read them as if they're novels. They are very relaxing for me. As I go through them, I mark the recipes that I'd like to try with sticky tabs. We try these recipes 2-3 times a week or more. I love that my husband loves to sook as well.
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Post by crazy4scraps on Nov 18, 2024 14:35:48 GMT
I have a lot of cookbooks but the only one I own from that list is the Silver Palate. I don’t think I’ve ever made anything out of it. I believe MIL had Joy of Cooking but I think it got donated. Most of the cookbooks I own are specific to dessert recipes although I do have the Better Homes red and white gingham cookbook and also the Betty Crocker book that aren’t on the list but should be.
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casii
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Jun 29, 2014 14:40:44 GMT
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Post by casii on Nov 18, 2024 16:19:59 GMT
I have way too many cookbooks and read them like novels. Ha
I have the Julia Child books and Moosewood. My Julia Child's are vintage and from a friend who passed away.
I do break out Moosewood a few times a year.
That Betty Crocker didn't make the list is wild to me. I think we were given 3 copies when we got married. DH breaks it out on the regular to cook standards.
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Post by grammadee on Nov 18, 2024 16:32:25 GMT
The three most influential cookbooks/series in my life have been:
The Joy of Cooking. So full of useful information! It taught me many basic facts and techniques. I still look up details about preparing a food I have not cooked in awhile.
Pilsbury Cookbook. Simple basic recipes for all things baked (and some unbaked).
Jean Pare's Company's Coming series. She is from my part of the world. All her recipes work in my climate. Wide variety of recipes, all with pretty basic ingredients and simple prep steps, from soup and appetizers to delectible desserts. I am making a Christmas treat from one of her books today!
Only the first of these is on the list.
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Post by snugglebutter on Nov 18, 2024 16:43:21 GMT
I have an older copy of the Joy of Cooking and I've checked out a few of the Moosewood cookbooks from the library. I just recently picked up a different Marcella Hazan book at the library and am looking forward to trying a few of her basics - bolognese, minestrone etc.
I like reading cookbooks but don't keep that many around for reference. Just recently I was thinking that I need to thin out my collection. (Don't ask me about my Pinterest boards though lol)
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Sarah*H
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Jun 25, 2014 20:07:06 GMT
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Post by Sarah*H on Nov 18, 2024 16:47:12 GMT
I'm surprised Mark Bittman didn't make this list.
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msladibug
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Post by msladibug on Nov 18, 2024 18:32:13 GMT
i love reading physical cookbooks too. I just bought snoops cookbooks--- Snoop Dogg Cookbook Set: From Crook to Cook: Platinum Recipes from Tha Boss Dogg's Kitchen and Snoop Dogg Presents Goon with the Spoon. to give to my son. I do own the FannyFarmer Cookbook and my first Betty Crocker cookbook for girls and boys. i did have to replace it bettycrocker because over the past 60+ yrs the pages totally detererorated(?)
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kelly8875
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Oct 26, 2014 17:02:56 GMT
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Post by kelly8875 on Nov 18, 2024 19:13:02 GMT
I love cookbooks. I have probably around 50 of the. Of this list, I have a couple, maybe 3. I love to flip through, read them, get inspiration. I do believe it's what made me a good cook.
I think when I was first cooking, I would say good old Betty Crocker was my go-to book. All the tips and conversions, variations and photos were very helpful. Once I learned technique, I started to play more in cooking. I do also love my Pioneer Woman cookbook, because at the time, I needed to cook for my family. She gave great inspiration, and we have similar food styles. Church cookbooks, soup cookbooks, desserts, etc...I love the specialty books too!
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