Which Cookbooks?

Photo of cookbooks on shelving

As I’ve mentioned a couple of times recently, one of the things I want to work on are my cooking skills.

I’ve got quite a few cookbooks already and I have no need for “general” cookbooks at all, though if somebody thinks that a particular cookbook is a “must have” please let me know. You can never have too many cookbooks!

What I am looking for, however, is more specific ones ie. ones for specific cuisines or cooking skills.

Italian I have fairly well covered, though if anyone has any other recommendations of Italian cookbooks written by Italians in Italian please let me know. I was given a copy of Cracco’s “E nato prima l’uovo o la farina?” for Christmas and I plan to make several of the recipes from that in the coming weeks and months. I really like the way Cracco has laid out the book so I’ve ordered his most recent one as well!

So which cuisines?

French. What is the “go to” cookbook favoured by French cooks? I was looking at Julia Child, but while it’s a “classic” I also think it’s more than a little dated and I’d prefer a cookbook in French by a French chef. What would you use if you wanted to get a good grounding in the basics of French cuisine?

Chinese. I’ve been trying to cook a few Chinese and Asian dishes over the last while and it’s definitely a cuisine I’d like to explore more. But which cookbooks are the ones to look at? Ken Hom? Somebody else?

Indian. I’ve got a really awful Indian cookbook that has nice pictures but the recipes are terrible. I love Indian food and would really like to cook more of it but am currently stuck with a couple of rather rudimentary curries and butter chicken.

Are there any other cuisines I should be looking at?

By Michele Neylon

Michele is founder and CEO of Irish hosting provider and domain name registrar Blacknight.

6 comments

  1. Julia C for French food is perfect to be honest. Indian food, try Meera Sodha’s French India. Nigella is never wrong and I think the Flavour Thesaurus is a must have. Fuschia Dunlop for Chinese.

  2. Katia
    Really? I’d have thought Julia Child would be considered a bit dated at this stage.
    Thanks for the other pointers – any particular Fuschia Dunlop titles?
    Thanks
    Michele

  3. Julia is still relevant for traditional fare. As for Fuschia, it depends what regional Chinese cuisine you’re after.

  4. Katia
    That’s helpful, though the lack of photos of the finished product kind of put me off a bit.
    I’ll go poke a few of the online bookshops to see which Fuschia titles are available – I keep finding that books I’m looking for are out of print recently 🙂

    Michele

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