My Passionate Affair with Recipe Books
My Collection of Recipe Books
Recipe Books are My Launching Pads!
Recipe books are my portals to another world. They transport me spiritually to a place where I have the power to heal through the culinary arts. Cooking is a form of giving love and warmth to my family and friends. In addition to The Joy of Cooking , which I enjoyed using when sharing an apartment with a roommate in the early 1990s, there are many books floating about the universe that have been a source of joy for me to use.
Each of my recipe books has a story behind it, and is related to who I am. Below is a catalog of some of the recipe books I have on my shelves, and the reasons why I chose to give a copy of them a home with me at my castle. In many of them, there are delicious salad recipes, so that is one meal "course" I will consider covered by all of my other recommendations.
One - van Gogh's palate loved French cooking
My passion for the art of Vincent van Gogh connected me to this book when it hit the bookstore shelves. My husband gave it to me as a birthday gift and I have enjoyed reading the art history presented at the beginning of the book as much as the recipes.That is one of the aspects of the book that bring me pleasure and make the book so valuable to me.
Some of the recipes that I have made most often include cream of carrot soup, beef stew, herb-crusted baked salmon, orange soda, honey madelines, and hot cocoa.
Two - When there is little time for fancy footwork
When I look for a straightforward recipe for preparing a quick and tasty meal, I open The Big Book of Easy Suppers . It captured my attention while I was shopping at the Brookline Booksmith in Brookline, MA and has served me well over the past 6 years or so. I have relied on it throughout the years, and many a friend have enjoyed a meal at our home from one of the recipes between its covers.
The recipes I have used most often include: sauteed shrimp with garlic and white wine, baked salmon and peas, baked orange rosemary chicken, pancake supper, and mixed berry cobbler.
Other books in my collection that are listed to the right are Pasta (Williams-Sonoma Kitchen Library) and Mommy Made and Daddy, Too! The pasta recipe book is one that has been in my collection since I moved to Boston. I bought it at a Williams Sonoma store in Cambridge, MA. The other recipe books listed are titles with variations on the same theme. Since I have a deep respect for the vegan lifestyle, I have included one for all of you who are committed to eating vegan.
Here is an important note about the last book on the list, which offers recipes for cooking healthy family meals, snacks, and desserts. I had not known of its existence before I delivered my daughter into the world, and it was a gift from one of my husband's aunts. I have used it to make a plethora of fun and yummy food, both for and with my little girl. It is a must-have in the recipe book collection for all families with young children. The most recent recipe used from this was the sweet potato-apple pie, of which both my husband and daughter enthusiastically ate second helpings on a chilly November evening.
Three - Satisfying your inner pizza demons
My passion for pizza equals my passion for all other foods combined! My family loves to make pizza together, and with friends. One Saturday evening a year or two ago, a friend and her daughter stayed for a longer visit in order to make and eat pizza together for dinner. What fun we all had! Last New Year's Eve, my co-housing community hosted a make-your-own-pizza party to welcome in 2010. I had a blast helping to create the dough for several of them.
When it comes to toppings, my daughter likes mostly cheese on her pizzas, and my husband is not happy unless there is a thick blanket of pepperoni on top of his. I love "Hawaiian" pizza, which is basically pineapple and Canadian bacon. I relive fond memories every time I eat this type of pizza. The first time I ever tasted pineapple pizza was as a student studying abroad in Ireland.
Other favorite pizza toppings of mine include: eggplant, garlic, tomato/basil/ricotta, and mixed veggies. As a dessert pizza, I made the sweet hazelnut pizza, using Nutella, from my beloved Pizza Deck, also purchased at the Brookline Booksmith .
Four - Welcoming neighbors with an Autumn harvest
Cooking with apples is one of the aspects of autumn that I look forward to most. I bake more and invite guests in for warm food and drink and lively chitchat. The book that I use most is The Apple Cookbook , by Olwen Woodier. I bought this book on a whim when walking down the hall at Brigham and Woman's Hospital in Boston. It was an impulse purchase I am glad that I made.
The recipes that I use most in this book include Apple Ratatouille, Mulligatawny Soup, Zucchini and Apple Soup, and the Maple Sweet Potato Casserole. The desserts that I have made from it include Apple Fool, Apple Envelope, Wassail, and Applesauce-sweetened brownies. For a healthy afternoon snack, I have made the Apple Smoothie and Frosty Apple Shake for my daughter and I. To give you a greater range of choices, I have provided links to a variety of apple cookbooks.
The one cookbook that I have listed that is not directly related to cooking with apples is a cookbook that does not fit into any one category covered on this page, but is one I have used most often for preparing food at harvest time. That is the Four Seasons of Italian Cooking . I have used the focaccia recipe in this book as my pizza dough and have made the butternut squash soup and Tuscany bread for dinner. It has been requested for pot lucks by friends and cohousing community members. This book is also one that presents more information about cooking Italian food from various regions of Italy, with pictures of traditional Italian kitchens, a feature, like that of Van Gogh's Table, which increases its value for me. It was an anniversary gift from my husband, to celebrate our first year of marriage.
Soups with bread make hearty meals, especially paired with buttered bread or half a sandwich
![]() | Amazon Price: $4.66 List Price: $19.95 |
![]() | Amazon Price: $8.24 List Price: $22.95 |
![]() | Enlightened Soups: More Than 135 Light, Healthy, Delicious and Beautiful Soups in 60 Minutes or Less Amazon Price: $18.61 List Price: $27.95 |
![]() | Amazon Price: $10.99 List Price: $27.99 |
![]() | Amazon Price: $6.19 List Price: $17.95 |
Five - Soup warms the soul when the cold winds blow
What would we do each winter if we did not have soups? Soup + Bread = Love for a hardy New Englander such as myself. I am aware that this applies to others who live in regions that experience gusty winds, if not snow squalls and nor'easters. Soups and Breads are survival, for making them keeps both the home and the heart warm during the coldest, darkest months of the year. One of the pleasures of co-housing is that I can cook for lots of my neighbors as I cook for myself, and I have the opportunity to taste the soups they love to make.
For those of you who do not experience weather that is cold as New England, cold soups refresh the palate. My favorite soups that fall into this category are Mexican gazpacho and Moroccan cucumber mint soup. Some of the soups recommended on my Amazon list include both types.
Some of my neighbors own bread-making machines, which allows them to accomplish more tasks around creating a hot, steaming loaf of delicious, mouth-watering comfort that melts butter on contact. My bread machine was inadvertently left behind when we moved last summer, so I have had to begin making loaves from scratch again. There is much to be said for the therapeutic value of kneading.
Included on this list is a cookbook for readers who must eat a gluten-free diet. I hope that the book I have recommended through Amazon contains recipes that result in delicious breads for you to enjoy with your soups.
Have fun experimenting with various soup-bread combos to find the one that is most satisfying for you!
Six - Baking together in the Kitchen
Some of the warmest memories from our lives, especially those begun during childhood, include baking cookies in the kitchen. My daughter and I have baked sugar cookies to decorate with girl scouts, lemon cookie sandwiches, chocolate chip cookies, oatmeal cookies with and without raisins, and gingerbread cookies. We look forward to continue our baking adventures as more leaves are blown from the trees and the snow flurries begin to fall.
When I worked for Crate & Barrel during the 1996 Christmas season, I bought myself an International Cookie Cookbook, which I did not see listed with all those offered by Amazon. I did find others, though. Some of them may contain a recipe that could become one of your family favorites.
The next best thing to shopping for cookie, cake, and cupcake recipe books is shopping for the kitchen tools for making them. I am tempted to give my daughter her own rolling pin for Christmas (or have "Father Christmas" bestow it on her). When we browse through the baking isle of stores such as Crate & Barrel, I love to purchase a unique cookie cutter. Next on my wish list is one in the shape of a turkey.
Five - Holiday cooking across generations
The weeks leading up to significant holidays offer opportunities to share time with family, baking traditional breads and treats. Stories are shared and traditions are passed on to the next generation of homesteaders.
Not only does baking together bring extra warmth and fun to the home, it can also lower stress and increase enjoyment. The more help, the better! Baking is both entertainment and comfort, with satisfying rewards that are directly related to one's labors.
My recommendations include recipe books for a variety of cultural traditions. The first one, The Frugal Gourmet Celebrates Christmas , was purchased at a local "Buck A Book" store about 20 years ago and has been a source of inspiration through the history lessons attached to each recipe included by Jeff Smith. Some of my family's favorites from this collection are Angel Hair Pasta with Whipped Cream and Porcini, Unleavened Brown Bread for Joseph (wheat cakes brushed with sesame oil), Honey Cake with Rose Water for the Angels, Oven Roasted Potatoes, and Warm Milk with Honey for the Infant Jesus. My heart is aglow as I write about them.
Christmas is but one holiday celebrated during the winter months, so I have also included several other recipe books offered by Amazon, which cover the Chinese New Year and Hannukah.
Happy baking and Merry holidays to you all! May the approaching New Year bring you many blessings of health, happiness, and prosperity!
Copyright © 2010 by Seafarer Mama/Karen Szklany Gault
A guide to growing your own food
- The Complete Guide to Growing Your Own Fruits and Berries, and more
What better ingredient is there to put into your dessert than the fruit and berries you grow yourself? This link puts you on the author's home page, which highlights her writing accomplishments and provides a way for you to order a copy of her book.
Is your mouth watering yet?
Are you ready to build your recipe book library with my suggestions?
See results without votingComments
Thank you very much, K9keystrokes. Looking forward to reading more of your hubs about K9s. :0)
What a lovely read, thank you for sharing, though now I feel terribly hungry...
There goes my diet plan. :P
Thank you for reading, QudsiaP1. Glad you enjoyed this hub. :0) Hope you find a good recipe that satisfies among my recommendations.
What a great hub! While not quite to the same extent, I have a real fondness for cookbooks and have my own little collection. I loved reading about your love for cookbooks and what you shared. The Van Gogh's Palate one looks so interesting as do the others. I will have to check those out.
I love cookbooks and use them as bedtime reading often. People have bought me cookbooks from different places around the world and each book has history as well as the recipes--what good reads! Good food too, but I enjoy them for the story they tell as well.
Thank you for your lovely comments, Oceansunsets and FloBe! Glad you enjoyed my hub, and that my love of cookbooks resonated with you. :0)
Great Hub, I too enjoy collecting cookbooks, I have at
least 200 myself and they all have their own stories as
well, I love cooking and all my friends love to eat at
my house..Thank You for the read..bon appetit'
Glad you enjoyed my hub, "orchidmyst." Thanks for writing. It's so good to meet others with similar passions. :0) Last night I was assistant cook for our community meal and made a pumpkin mousse and the "Apple Cinnamon Squares" recipe from the Apple Cookbook. both came out delicious. So good when we can feed our family and friends with enjoyable meals, and thus show our love for them this way. In return, we get to enjoy their blessed company!
There needs to be more gluten free recipes. Thanks for your efforts.
-----------------
tuhinmiya@zoho.com
Thank you for stopping by and commenting on my hub. :0)
I too have an obsession with cookbooks. My favorites are the Taste of Home cookbooks. The next one I am eyeballing is the Rachel Ray cookbooks. I love her quick and snappy meals.
Great hub - thanks for the recommendation! :)
Thanks for stopping by and reading this hub,"barbergirl." Glad you enjoyed it. Rachel Ray's cookbooks are definitely tempting treats. I will have to look more closely at the "Taste of Home" series. :0)
Namaste





























K9keystrokes 18 months ago
You have a fantastic writing style that I find very appealing (no apple pun intended). I am now a fan, and glad to be!