Anyone have a good cookbook they can recommend? I've gotten a couple of emails about the Rachel Ray cookbook..my friend that cooks really well watches her show so I thought about checking that one out. Any suggestions are welcome.
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"Thanks to Stephenie Meyer everytime I hear thunder, I imagine vampires playing baseball."
well, for all the vegetarians out there...or for those carnivores who like a little green once in a while, i really love the moosewood cookbook. i don't cook all that much, but i love the recipies in this book.
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"But I want you to remember, I intend this breast satirically." Susan from Coupling
Two cookbooks I use a lot are "The Joy of Cooking" and "How To Cook Everything." They both have an incredible amount of recipes spanning all types of cuisines. I also love "Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking" by Marcella Hazan, and I just got "Everyday Italian," the first cookbook from Giada DeLaurentiis.
My hands down, all-time, what-I'd-want-if-I-were-stranded-on-a-desert-island cookbook is "The Best Recipe" by the editors of Cooks Illustrated. I think it's even better than the Joy of Cooking. Great for just about every recipe.
I also really like Rachel Ray's 365 No Repeats cookbook. It's got a lot of great recipes that are all really easy.
Personally, I think Rachel Ray's cooking is kinda cruddy; I don't like almost everything of her's I've tried so stopped cooking and watching her stuff.
Not a cookbook, but I am totally addicted to Cooking Light magazine. They keep us fed pretty much year round now and the food is good, healthy, and there's a nice variety. I'm rarely disappointed with a recipe from them.
Honestly, the one I use the most is my Betty Crocker's New Cookbook: Everything you need to know to cook. It gives more basics than any other cookbook that I own (I have about 50) & I refer to it often. It's the common sense stuff that you should know but might not. Like how long to bake potatoes & how to make a cheese sauce. Plus it has yummy recipes.
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Who do you have to probe around here to get a Chardonnay? - Roger the Alien from American Dad
I like every recipe that I have made from this cookbook, and they are really easy recipes too. Apparently it's Canadian though-- which I didn't know --so I don't know where you can get it in the States. It's called Best of the Best Vol. 1-- the best recipes from the "Best of Bridge" series.
I also like it because my mom gave it to me, so it's kinda of like a passing of the torch kinda of thing
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"In matters of grave importance, style, not sincerity, is the vital thing"
Honestly, the one I use the most is my Betty Crocker's New Cookbook: Everything you need to know to cook. It gives more basics than any other cookbook that I own (I have about 50) & I refer to it often. It's the common sense stuff that you should know but might not. Like how long to bake potatoes & how to make a cheese sauce. Plus it has yummy recipes.
ITA. I learned to cook using a Betty Crocker cookbook from 1967. It's so funny how you think you know how to make everything but then the recipe in the cookbook manages to make it greater.
Barefoot Contessa - The French Cookbook (that's not the name, but it's all supereasy french dishes that all look so yummy. I've made a couple of the recipes and enjoyed each a lot)
Julie Child - Mastering the Art of French Cooking - I must admit I've only cooked the potato leek soup (and it is delicious). They make for good reading - and some of the recipes I would never make for lack of time or inclination. However, they are tremendously inspiring.
Anything by Nigella Lawson. She is such a good writer, and her recipes unfailingly good.
I also really like my McCall's cookbook from 1960. It was my mother's when she first started to cook as a little girl, and it's just good and old fashioned.
The Gourmet cookbook (the big yellow one) is sort of a modern all-encompassing cookbook - and has the most wonderful brownie recipe ever!
Marion Burros, "The New Elegant But Easy Cookbook" and another one that I think is called "Cooking for Comfort" by Burros as well. The recipes are super reliable, but still impressive. I don't know how much you cook, but if you're into learning new ethnic cuisines, my favorite book right now is "Simply Thai Cooking" by Wendee Young and Byron Ayanoglu
I like Cooking with Faith Ford. Awesome southern recipes. I bought it because it had Lousiana Meat Pie & I've been missing those since highschool. However, I still can't cook. How does anyone find the time & how not to turn things are books I need? And I'm single for goodness sake, so what's up with that? It's hard to cook for one.
I love this one, too, as it gives lots of interesting info on veggies & great recipes.
My parent's use the Nigella Lawson one a lot & I also like the Joy of Cooking or an old Betty Crocker. The old Joy of Cooking, too, has good info.