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Debbie Ridpath Ohi reads, writes and illustrates for young people.

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« adventures in cooking | Main | limpy boy »
Monday
Jan132003

cookbooks revisited


Tom Jeffers and me



Congratulations to Rand Bellavia and Adam English (Ookla The Mok), who have been invited to be Interfilk guests at GAfilk in Atlanta next January! Looks like I have to go for sure now. :-)

A while back, I asked you all about cookbooks and recipe storage. Here's some of the feedback I received:

Favourite cookbooks



"I have some of the old standbys, like The Joy of Cooking and The Betty Crocker Cookbook. I hope to inherit my mom's copy of Meta Givens' Encyclopedia of Cooking. She has way too many cookbooks that she doesn't use. She was upset that I gave my copy of The Silver Palate Cookbook to a friend years ago. (It has since been replaced.) My current favorites are Sundays at Moosewood Restaurant (Sesame Noodles, page 183) and the one I picked up at last year's Greek Festival, held at the local Greek Orthodox Church. One of these weekends, I want to make a large pan of pastitio and freeze most of it. I also want to get my hands on a copy of Moog's Musical Eatery, which was written by Shirleigh Moog, wife of Bob Moog, inventor of the electronic music synthesizer." - Jim Poltrone




"Another cookbook lover here and my friends include Joy (of Cooking) and Betty (Crocker Cookbook), and more recently, Julia (as in Baking with). I have some I'll probably never use but are beautiful, like art books. My current favorite of that sort is The French Laundry Cookbook (named for the now-famous place in the SF Bay Area). I like looking through cookbooks compiled by groups like churches, mainly to be amazed and sometimes frightened by what folks consider food/favorites, but unlike Amanda, I don't buy them. That said, my favorite cookbook for Japanese American recipes was put together by a local JA organization." - Joey




"I adore cookbooks. I got 2 for Christmas (OK, technically 1 for Christmas and 1 as a very belated birthday present): Off the Shelf and How to Be a Domestic Goddess. I prefer really easy recipes that don't require a whole lot of advance planning. (I've cooked once this year... it's a start...)" - ElectricLandLady




"Looks like we have a bunch of Cooking Light Magazine fans . . . I am a fan too *grin.* It fact, that's how I got my Mastercook, preloaded with a bunch of Cooking Light recipes. The Joy of Cooking is my standard reference book too :-)" - Andrea




"As for collecting recipes books -- I've gotten tired of it!! After about 20 years of collecting books, I finally burned out! I no longer care to read through new ones. But I won't do without my Joy of Cooking (for a reference), my old photo album, and the few Specific Carbohydrate cookbooks I have." - Luisa




"Regarding my favorite cookbooks - my current fave is Cooking Light Magazine. They also have a great searchable database for recipes on the 'net." - Ana




"Cookbooks - Any cookbook by Cooking Illustrated .. and cookbooks based on well-known cooking magazines .. You know it's been well tested :- ) BTW - I heartily recommend Cooking Illustrated Magazine .. Doesn't accept advertising and goes into intimate detail of why a certain recipe works .. It's addictive reading. And yes, I loooove to cook." - Andrea




"Delia Smith all the way. She doesn't just tell you to do stuff, she tells you HOW to do stuff (i.e. instead of saying 'caramelize the onions' she says "heat up the oil until it's sizzling. Now put in the onions. It will look like you've got far too many but don't worry, they'll collapse considerably. Now sprinkle in the sugar but don't stir too soon...") Very reassuring. And when she says something should happen in five minutes, it does.

I'm convinced that her One Is Fun cookbook won me my husband's heart. You can't go wrong when you can whip up a really tasty meal in about half an hour. (And it's a great book for couples. So much easier to double up a recipe for one than to divide a recipe for 4-6 people!).

I also like the Moosewood Cookbook I got last year. Haven't made it much further than the breads and breakfasts section but, thanks to one of their recipes, for the first time in her life this Scottish girl is actually enjoying porridge (oatmeal)!" - Julie




DGlenn tends to improvise rather than use cookbooks.

"I don't avoid recipes entirely; it's just that I usually don't think of trying to follow one. But I'm trying to force myself to start writing down recipes for things I make, for the times when other people ask me for a recipe. I'm not too good at that yet (see the recipe for squash and potato soup that I posted in my LiveJournal in November). I need a system that'll remind me to take notes for future recipe-writing-down while I'm making stuff up." - DGlenn




"I love to read cook books. I love to read new recipes and think how different flavours will blend together and if I really like the look of a dish, I will try to modify the recipe so I can work around my food allergies. However, unless I am trying a new baking recipe, I can usually get a decent result without actually using a recipe." - Silmarien




"I love reading cookbooks as well. I like Betty Crocker, and one called American something. I have a number of cook books and browse them occasionally. I playwith recipes once I've gotten used to them. There are several that I consider 'mine' these are when I've fiddled with old ones and made changes. I love to cook, I wish I had more time, and a family who enjoyed different types of food. Don't get me wrong, they like what I do, they just don't like new things." - Heather B.

"I have over 50 cookbooks and I love to pull them out and read them. I tend to use them for ideas, but I almost never follow a recipe exactly. The exeption is for baking, you kind of have to be more specific with yeast and baking soda than you do with tomato sauce. I cook frequently enough that I can generally pull something together with only a peek or two at a cook book for temp or spicing suggestions.

Current favorites are the Nigella Lawson books, because she's fun to read. I've made a few of the things in How To Be A Domestic Goddess (all about baking) and they turned out really well. She also emphasizes that most things are a suggestion, and if you want to play with the recipes you should.

I also use Better Homes & Gardens New Cook Book, The Joy of Cooking, and Sunset magazine as references, for things like how long to cook a turkey and what temperature. Current reads, aside from Nigella, are Jane Grigson's English Food, Jamie Oliver's new book, and James Peterson's Splendid Soups." - FishDreamer




"While I never tire of watching other people cook on TV, I tend to memorize a dozen recipies and do variations off those, making a dive for Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone when I need a fancy dish or a clue on what to do with a pound of parsnips." - Nan




"Good Housekeeping's Cookery Book, Delia Smith's Complete Cookery Course, Good Housekeeping's Complete Book of Vegetarian Cookery and finally A Taste Of The Orient. The first of these is a copy printed in 1966 so it's as old as I am." - David




Recipe storage



Mastercook - Janet, Andrea and others




"I enter my recipes, then print them out and either put them in page protectors in a 3-ring binder or in a photo album. As old and creaky as my eyes feel after a long day's work, I like being able to print them out in LARGE PRINT MENU style so I can read them from half-way across the kitchen. I can't recommend this product too highly (I wrote a review of it for Amazon and actually got emails form some people about it!). I also figured out a way to export entire cookbook folders to my PDA, so if I'm at the store and see a good deal on eggplant, I can check my recipe and make sure I don't forget the other ingredients for bouillabaise!" - Janet




As for recipes, my three boxes of clippings are a testament to my inability to organize them. I had file folders but I couldn't keep up. Luisa's photo album setup sounds very workable to me, though. - Joey




" I used to use the 3" x 5" cards, but have since "graduated" to a 3-ring binder with hardcopy of the recipes. Many of my recipes are typed in to the computer as a word processing file. Some of the older ones are in WordPerfect; the newer ones are in MS Word. The binder doesn't have any page protectors right now, but I do like the idea. Some of the recipes I have are photocopies, which I should scan for posterity (or in case of catastrophe). I have way too many recipes clipped from newspapers and magazines that I've never tried." - Jim Poltrone




"For the recipe organizing... I personally have a card file, which is full, mainly of recipes I don't use. Real Simple's December/January issue has an article on setting up a recipe binder for yourself, complete with colour coding and lots of office supplies (a plus!) -- basically you get a binder, a whole bunch of clear plastic envelopes, and coloured paper for the backing, so you can colour-code recipes you've already tried vs. recipes you haven't tried yet. It also recommends writing down recipes you use a lot and what books to find them in, also writing down entire menus and the ingredients required on a single card. Looked like fun but I thought on the whole I'd pass for now, too much effort. If you're looking for A Project, it could be useful. The pictures are pretty, anyway." - ElectricLandlady




"I don't store recipes so I always end up losing them. Then I have to call the person I got it from or I have to try and find something similar on the web. Or I make something else I can find in a cookbook. Almost all of my 'standbys' I can make from memory. These include: lemon cookies, potato chip cookies, baked chicken, margarita chicken, stroganoff, spanish rice, chicken curry, waldorf salad, red potato salad, tuna noodle casserole, macaroni and cheese, chicken cheese soup and french onion soup." - Amanda S.




"I store my recipes in one of those photo albums with the see through film that goes over the pictures. I've had it since the late 70s. I find that the newspaper cut outs are going yellow, so now I tend to photocopy them first. I have yet to fill the book -- I end up removing recipes I don't like.

Despite all the computers in my house, I don't think I'll ever put my recipes on computer. In fact, some of my recent recipes from a web page got printed out and put into my photo album. It's actually a joy -- some of the recipes bring back such wonderful memories. Like the one of a favourite dip sent by my friend Joanne in the late 80s through our VAX VMS e-mail system and printed on the line-printer at work at the CBC. Or my favourite banana bread recipe supplied by some actress in the back of the TV-guide in the 70s." - Luisa




"Storing recipes: I have used MasterCook but quite often I download recipes from CookingLight.com (I'm a fan of the magazine).

I print recipes out and put them in plastic sheet protectors in a ring binder. Handy for the kitchen and good for wiping off splashes. It also makes it easy to reorganize. I used to write out recipes on paper and keep in a daily planner type thing, but paper recipes get ratty really quickly..." - Julie




Today's Blatherpic:

Tom Jeffers and me. It was Tom's birthday yesterday! Tom is sick at home right now. :( Please feel free to e-mail him with happy thoughts. Here's the song I wrote for Tom seven years ago.

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