If a good cookbook is something of a manual for life, then a good cookbook library is something of a tour of all the competing philosophies for living. Are you a head-to-tail type, rearing to tear into life, or more interested in the gentler footprint involved in sustainable grains and zero-waste, plant-based consumption? Does your table offer a first-class ticket to spicy destinations across the globe, or a comfortable sinking into recollected recipes from your mother? Of course, you never really have to pick, but adding a few of these books to your kitchen library will give you a taste (literally) of the various ways you might entertain your palateâand occupy the world.
The Moosewood Cookbook by Mollie Katzen
The best cookbook for⦠the discerning hippie.
If you havenât yet experienced the satisfaction of whipping up an eggplant parm or a cardamom coffee cake large enough to feed an army from the pages of this cookbook, originally published in 1974 by members of Ithaca, New Yorkâs Moosewood Restaurant, then youâre in for a real treat. The Moosewood Cookbookâs food is healthy without ever compromising on deliciousness, making it the perfect retro-classic gift for everyone from kitchen beginners to seasoned pros. âEmma Specter
Mayumu: Filipino American Desserts Remixed by Abi Balingit
The best cookbook for⦠dessert obsessives looking to add some Filipino flavor to their repertoire.
Fish sauce, frozen calamansi juice, shredded coconut, and minatamis na bao (coconut jam) are staple ingredients for those looking to master Balingitâs playful yet seriously delicious desserts. These recipes draw from the authorâs California upbringing and adult life in Brooklyn, in addition to her Filipino-American heritage. From salty-sweet alfajores to the instantly viral adobo chocolate-chip cookies, every recipe in Mayumu is guaranteed to please a crowdâand familiarize you with the offerings of your local Filipino grocery store. âES
Please Wait to Be Tasted: The Lilâ Debâs Oasis Cookbook by Carla Perez-Gallardo, Hannah Black, and Wheeler
The best cookbook for⦠anyone seeking a tropical gaycation vibe from home.
Proudly queer and unabashedly colorful in both its decor and food, Lilâ Debâs is a Hudson Valley classic for a reason, and cooking a meal from the restaurantâs cookbook is a great way to summon the laid-back, cheerful vibe of the IRL space. Recipes for everything from ceviche mixto with popcorn (!) to flan to sweet plantains are sure to delight, and the bookâs chatty, convivial tone is likely to linger in your mind long after the meal has been consumed and the dreaded dinner dishes are done. âES
More Than Cake: 100 Baking Recipes Built for Pleasure by Natasha Pickowicz
The best cookbook for⦠the pastry aficionado with serious stamina.
Given Pickowicz is the pastry chef behind New Yorkâs acclaimed Café Altro Paradiso and Flora Bar, youâd think that her recipes would be too complex for the mere layman to follow. Iâm pleased to say, however, that Iâve made plenty of the offerings in More Than Cakeâfrom the onion and black sesame gougères to the parsnip, millet, and chocolate chunk muffins to the stunning crunchy almond cakeâwith hardly any trouble and a whole lot of praise from my household. Pickowiczâs recipes do benefit from careful attention to detail, but the end result is absolutely always worth the effort. âES
Indian-ish by Priya Krishna
The best cookbook for⦠mothers of all kinds (and their grateful offspring).
The recipes in Krishnaâs cookbook are an absolute delight, from her take on roti pizza to a salty-sweet lime beverage she refers to as âIndian Gatorade,â but perhaps the best part of *Indian-ish* is its emphasis on family legacies and learning through generationsâ worth of passed-down cooking tips. Krishna co-wrote the cookbook with her mother, Ritu, and their bond jumps right off the page, making this the perfect kitchen companion for the next holiday you find yourself cooking alongside your parents and trying to be okay with it. âES
Keep it Zesty: A Celebration of Lebanese Flavors & Culture from Edyâs Grocer by Edy Massih
The best cookbook for⦠anyone looking to be the most popular person at the picnic.
I hadnât eaten a lot of Lebanese food before my first trip to Edyâs Grocer in Brooklyn, but a single meal there was memorable enough to have me counting down the days until Keep It Zesty came out. There are lots of perfect options to prepare in this cookbook, but personally, Iâm gravitating most toward the spreadables (such as the Orangey Date Carrot Dip and Spicy Fig Jam). Itâs outdoor-eating season, and thereâs nothing I want to snack on more at a picnic than a chilled, tangy, complexly flavored dip. âES
Kismet: Bright, Fresh, Vegetable-Loving Recipes by Sara Kramer and Sarah Hymanson
The best cookbook for⦠the farmstand regular wondering what to do with all their new produce.
I live in L.A., which means A) I buy a lot of vegetables and fruits I have no use for at various farmers markets, and B) I eat at Sara Kramer and Sarah Hymansonâs restaurant Kismet (and its offshoot, Kismet Rotisserie) as often as I can. Now, those two habits are being delightfully fused by the Kismet ownersâ new cookbook, which is chock-full of exciting ideas for cooking vegetables. There are meat recipes, too (donât skip the harissa party wings!), but while my crisper drawer is still full of produce thatâs about to go bad, Iâll stick to the veg-only ones. âES
The Everlasting Meal Cookbook: Leftovers A-Z by Tamar Adler
The best cookbook for⦠anyone looking to refine their diet of leftovers and takeout scraps (guilty).
I donât think there âs a single cookbook out there thatâs affected the way I feed myself (and, more broadly, the way I see sustainability in the kitchen) more than this one. Adler, a Vogue contributing editor, is full of practical, cheerful, and frill-free ideas for how to put to use items that you might be tempted to toss in the kitchen trash. Now that I own this book, Iâll never throw carrot-top fronds away again when I can use them to make a delicious and alarmingly healthy pesto. âES
Jerusalem: A Cookbook by Yotam Ottolenghi and Sami Tamimi
The best cookbook for⦠someone who has the basic skills and is looking for a little more.
Everyone should have at least one cookbook in their kitchen that inspires and surprises them. For me, this is consistently anything with the Ottolenghi imprimatur. Iâve tried most of them, and universally, these books delight. I am not quite sure how these recipes assemble their special magic, but they are so consistently pleasing that they have offered the blueprint for both an elaborate, successful dinner party as well as many staple dishes that have made it into my âdonât need a recipeâ repertoire. Youâre not always going to have all the somewhat exotic herbs and spices on hand, but once you do, itâs full worth any effort you went through to obtain them. âChloe Schama
The Modern Vegetarian Kitchen by Peter Berley
The best cookbook for⦠mastering plant-based basics.
This was a book that was given to me as a gift when I lived on my own for the first time, a gesture more toward constrained budgets than health or ecological considerations. But this book has become a sort of bible of plant-based cooking for me, offering an entire education on the nutrients and properties of vegetarian ingredients. There are many vegan recipes in this book as well, but no matter how stringent-seeming their parameters, the final results never lack for taste. I am neither vegetarian nor vegan, but I am often very grateful that this book came into my kitchen early on in my cooking career; it has made me a better and more creative cook, while encouraging me to cook for a better future for our planet. âCS
Ad Hoc at Home by Thomas Keller
The best cookbook for⦠super precise but simple American recipes.
This is one of those cookbooks that will teach you the basicsâwith an eye toward perfecting them. Ad Hoc is one of the more casual outposts from Thomas Keller, the famed chef behind Per Se and French Laundry, and here heâs operating in a more relaxed registerâappropriate (and approachable) for a home cook. But thereâs no lack of precision. I remember one recipe for sautéed carrots that offers instruction on the precise angle of the cut, the way to roll the peeled carrot in order to obtain it, and how to tie the bouquet garnish so that a rogue spice wouldnât escape. I have to say, it was worth it. (Also look here for the best chocolate chip cookie recipe I have ever encountered; I am never disloyal to it.) âCS
The Joy of Cooking by Irma Rombauer
The best cookbook for⦠unearthing retro classics.
Everyone should have a cookbook like this, a doorstop that is almost more encyclopedia than manual. When my mom gave me a copy, she realized that the new edition no longer included the recipe for skinned squirrel that had proved a source of entertainment in her earlier edition, so she photocopied the page and tucked it in. This book is a history lesson, if you can get an old-enough edition. But it is also a supremely useful manual, with a recipe for almost anything. We may be living in the era of the search engine, but if you want to get streamlined instructions on the basics, without scrolling past 500 ads and a narrative designed to keep you beholden to those ads, add this to your kitchen library. âCS
The Book of St John: Over 100 Brand New Recipes from Londonâs Iconic Restaurant by Fergus Henderson
The best cookbook for⦠head-to-tail carnivores.
Anyone who loves to cook also probably loves to eat out, to experience the magic of the well-made meal, when someone else has made it. And so I think that everyone should have a book that reminds them of their favorite place to eat. When youâre feeling in a rut, these can serve as catalysts. My own copies of these ilk are the least batter- and grease-stained in my library (whole suckling pig is not a major part of my repertoire), but I think thatâs perfectly fine. Inspiration (and instruction) comes in all forms. âCS
The Jewish Cookbook by by Leah Koenig
The best cookbooks for⦠crafting holiday classics.
As anyone whoâs ever sat through a Seder knows, itâs often all about the food. This beautiful book is a compendium of Jewish foods, offering little, lighthearted lessons in their origins and significance. Itâs a lovely book for anyone who wants to perhaps adopt some of the traditions of their upbringing, but spent more time noshing on the challah and the latkes than watching what was going on in the kitchen. âCS
Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking: 30th Anniversary Edition: A Cookbook by Marcella Hazan
The best cookbooks for⦠your inner nonna.
Marcella (if you use her books, youâre allowed to call her by her first name) is considered âthe godmother of Italian cookingâ in America. Like so many cuisines in America, the book full of recipes that adopt a bit of the spirit of the melting potâHazan was a scientist by training who learned to cook in Manhattanâs Chinatown when she settled there with her husband. Hazanâs recipes are masterpieces of economy (see âTomato Sauce with Onion and Butterââwhich is exactly what it sounds like), but there is Proustian poetry in her work as well. âHolding the small fish by the tail and head, I brought it to my mouth, pulled back my lips, and used my teeth to lift the entire tiny filet off the bone and suck it into my mouth,â she once wrote of imbibing a fish. âOh the succulence of it! âSi mangiano col bacio,â the fishermen say; you eat them with a kiss.â âCS
Where Cooking Begins by Carla Lalli Music
The best cookbook for⦠changing up your shopping habits.
In a single volume, Where Cooking Begins teaches you how to shop more effectively, pare down your kitchenware, and master six classic techniques that work with just about any produce: sautéing, pan-roasting, steaming, boiling, confiting and slow-roasting. Oh, and it also has one of the best simple recipes for pastry dough ever, inspired by none other than Julia Child. âHayley Maitland
Mastering the Art of French Cooking by Julia Child, Louisette Bertholle, and Simone Beck
The best cookbook for⦠learning the five mother sauces.
Apart from being genuinely useful, Mastering the Art of French Cooking also looks exceptionally pretty on a kitchen shelfâand with traditional French cuisine back in fashion at last, learning how to make a truly perfect cassoulet or hollandaise is a brilliant use of dark winter evenings. âHM
Ottolenghi Flavor by Yotam Ottolenghi and Ixta Belfrage
The best cookbook for⦠realizing vegetables can be the star of any meal.
Yotam Ottolenghi is credited with introducing Londoners to the wonders of preserved lemons, zaâatar, and pomegranate molasses. His recent volume, Flavour, includes vegetable-centric recipes alongside straightforward lessons about the origins of tasteâfrom charring to agingâand how to intuitively marry flavors for spectacular dishes. âHM
Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat by Samin Nosrat
The best cookbook for⦠understanding kitchen fundamentals.
Less a cookbook than a full-blown gastronomical movement, Samin Nosratâs bestseller introduces readers to the most basic culinary principals on which all good food dependsâdistilling her years in the kitchen at Chez Panisse into elegant chapters on salt, fat, acid, and heat. Itâs one of those rare volumes that genuinely lives up to the hype, and will fundamentally transform the way that you cook even the most basic of dishes. Case in point: her buttermilk roast chicken. âHM
An A-Z of Pasta by Rachel Roddy
The best cookbook for⦠a renewed appreciation for a pantry staple.
A British ex-pat based in Romeâs vibrant Testaccio neighborhood, Rachel Roddy has devoted years to studying regional Italian cuisines, with an emphasis on pasta. Her A-Z guides readers through 50 shapes (narrowed down from more than 1,200 varieties currently eaten across Italy) and the most delicious and/or traditional ways to serve them. Each tempting chapter, from âAnnelliâ to âZiti,â includes an introduction about that particular varietyâs historical significance and a Roddy anecdote about meals eaten everywhere from a friendâs home in the Florentine hills to crowded trattorie hidden away down Roman streets. âHM.
Black Food by Bryant Terry
The best cookbook for⦠celebrating the food of the African diaspora.
Itâs hard to overstate how brilliantâand how long overdueâBryant Terryâs Black Food actually is. Beautiful enough to display on your coffee table (graphic artist Emory Douglas, a former Black Panther in Oakland, contributed visuals), this âcommunal shrine to the shared culinary histories of the African diasporaâ is crammed with extraordinary recipes by dozens of Black contributors (including quite possibly the greatest potato salad ever created) organized around themes ranging from Food Justice to Radical Self-Care. Published alongside ingredients lists for the likes of Green Banana Chowder and Baobab Panko Salmon? Both essays and verse by celebrated writers and poetsâa nod to Toni Morrisonâs â70s anthology, The Black Book. âHM
Whole Food Cooking Every Day by Amy Chaplin
The best cookbook for⦠becoming a whole foods evangelist.
The concept behind Amy Chaplinâs *Whole Food Cooking Every Dayâ*vegetarian recipes that are free from gluten, dairy, and sugarâmight sound punishingly boring, but itâs anything but. One chapter will teach you how to make dressings from vegetablesâwinter beets, summer zucchiniâthat taste genuinely creamy; another takes you through the process of making your own nut- and seed-based drinks, including rose almond milk and adaptogenic dandelion lattes. âHM
To Asia, With Love by Hetty McKinnon
The best cookbook for⦠anyone whoâs vegan-curious.
Hetty McKinnonâs To Asia, With Love might have single-handedly rehabilitated the word âpan-Asianâ in the world of cuisine. As the Brooklyn-based chef notes at the beginning of the volume, âThe recipes are Asian in origin, but modern in spirit; they are inspired by tradition, with a global interpretation.â A wonderfully personal cookbookâMcKinnon even photographed the dishes herself on 35mm filmâit represents an ode to her Chinese motherâs kitchen, and highlights the wealth of plant-based Asian dishes largely absent from restaurant menus in the West. Beyond including healthy, make-forever recipes, To Asia also teaches you culinary skills that I can only describe as game-changing, from making a âperfectly jammy eggâ to top noodles or rice to choosing the best replacements for hard-to-find Asian produce (think Granny Smiths for green papaya). âHM
How to Eat a Peach by Diana Henry
The best cookbook for⦠readymade hosting menus.
If there is a more deliciously evocative cookbook than How To Eat A Peach, I have yet to come across it. Instead of recipes, it comprises menus inspired by different experiences, seasons, and places. (âComposing a menu is still my favorite bit of cooking,â Henry writes in the introduction. âI donât invite people round and then wonder what Iâll cook. I come up with a menu and then consider who would like to eat it.â) Among the lyrically named chapters? âBefore The Passeggiata,â a formula for a southern Italian dinner that progresses from fennel taralli to ricotta, candied lemon, and pistachio ice cream; âSmoky Days,â an homage to the first days of autumn with a feast that ends in cider jellies and brandy syllabub; âIn My Own Backyard,â Henryâs take on the perfect Sunday lunch, complete with Guinness bread; and âMissing New York,â an oyster-filled gastronomical paean to Manhattan. âHM
In Bibiâs Kitchen by Hawa Hassan and Julia Turshen
The best cookbook for⦠discovering the wonders of east African cuisine.
Samin Nosrat is among the many, many fans of Hawa Hassan and Julia Turschenâs In Bibiâs Kitchen, a joyful compilation of recipes from bibisâor grandmothersâacross a range of African countries that âtouch the Indian Ocean,â including Eritrea, Somalia, Kenya, Tanzania, Mozambique, South Africa, Madagascar, and Comoros. Each nation is afforded its own chapter, where details about its history and traditions sit alongside intimate conversations with bibis in their own kitchens. Many recipes are attributed to their creatorsâMa Gehhenetâs Shiro, Ma Mariaâs Ximaâand accompanied by wanderlust-inducing photographs of lush mountains, rugged coastlines, and beautiful dishes. An extremely welcome (and long overdue) contribution to the problematically Eurocentric world of food publishing in the West. âHM
A Modern Cookâs Year by Anna Jones
The best cookbook for⦠attuning yourself to the seasons.
All of Anna Jonesâs cookbooks are genuinely useful and beautifully photographedâstay tuned for her next volume, One, in early 2022âbut A Modern Cookâs Year is her best. With more than 250 adaptable, vegetarian recipes grouped by micro-seasons (including âStart of the Year,â âHerald of Spring,â and âFirst Warm Daysâ), itâs an essential guide to making the most of seasonal British produce. âHM
Food From Across Africa: Recipes to Share by Timothy Duval, Folayemi Brown, and Jacob Fodio Todd
The best cookbook for⦠a whirlwind visit to Africa.
Written by a trio of Londoners with family and connections across West and East Africa, Food From Across Africa is a joyful introduction to African dishes ranging from jollof rice to hibiscus tea, groundnut stew to tea bread. The majority of ingredients are available in your usual greengrocerâbut itâs more than worth taking the excuse to visit the markets in Deptford and Brixton that the Groundnut team personally favor. âHM
My Mexico City Kitchen by Gabriela Cámara and Malena Watrous
The best cookbook for⦠keeping taco cravings at bay.
As Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat makes clear, Mexican cuisine is a masterclass in the power of acids, and Gabriela Cámaraâs My Mexico City Kitchen is a colorful introduction to the magic of salsasâamong countless other wonders: tostadas, agua frescas, ceviches, frijoles refritos⦠âHM
River Cafe London by Ruth Rogers, Rose Gray, Sian Wyn Owen, and Joseph Trivelli
The best cookbook for⦠whenever a trip to the River Cafe is out of budget.
Released in honor of three decades of the River Cafe, River Cafe 30 is visually stunning, reprinting the 1996 New Yorker article that put the Hammersmith restaurant on the map as well as individual menus scribbled on by famous customers such as Damien Hirst. Master their pappa al pomodoro, salsa verde, and cannellini, and you will always be well fed. âHM
La Grotta: Ice Creams and Sorbets by Kitty Travers
The best cookbook for⦠shifting your entire perception of dessert.
In publishing La Grotta, Kitty Travers single-handedly made it acceptable for a home chef to decide to whip up a Montmorency Cherry Sherbet, Amalfi Lemon Jelly, or Leafy Blackcurrant Custard. A former pastry chef at St Johns, the frozen treat evangelist has traveled everywhere from Iceland to Brazil to study ice cream makingâand while some of her flavor combinations are more unusual than your average Madagascan vanilla, just put yourself in her expert hands and follow each recipe precisely. âHM
How to Eat by Nigella Lawson
The best cookbook for⦠anyone who needs culinary handholding.
The prose in Nigella Lawsonâs revolutionary How to Eat is evocative enough that you will be tempted to read it like a novel. Fortunately, Vintage released a smaller paperback edition in honor of its 20th anniversary. Also more than worth having at your disposal: the newly released Cook, Eat, Repeat, featuring Lawsonâs meditations on everything from the power of anchovies to a loving defense of âbrownâ food with accompanying recipes. âHM
The Violet Bakery Cookbook by Claire Ptak
The best cookbook for⦠making treats worthy of The Great British Bake Off.
Like Samin Nosrat, Claire Ptak trained at Chez Panisseâtranslating Alice Watersâs culinary philosophy to the baking world when she launched the Violet Bakery in London (and, yes, she later made the Duke and Duchess of Sussexâs wedding cake). There are sweet treats here for every occasion: raspberry and star anise muffins for breakfast; sweet corn and roasted tomato quiche for lunch; honey and rose water madeleines for tea⦠The recipes for homemade preserves and jams are also a game-changer. âHM
Dishoom: From Bombay With Love by Shamil Thakrar, Kavi Thakrar, and Naved Nasir
The best cookbook for⦠spectacularly good dahl.
Anyone whoâs witnessed the queues snaking through Soho for a table at Dishoom will testify that it has an almost comically devoted followingâand anyone whoâs actually tried the dahl will tell you that itâs more than justified. The restaurantâs first cookbook is as much a lovingly illustrated paean to Bombay as it is a compilation of moreish recipes for everything from gunpowder potatoes to ruby chicken. If there is a more comforting beverage than their masala chai, I have yet to try it. âHM
The Ballymaloe Cookbook by Myrtle Allen
The best cookbook for⦠a real taste of Irish food.
The Ballymaloe Cookery School is a fabled place. Today under the guidance of Irelandâs best known cook, Darina Allen, the County Cork-set farm and retreat has produced contemporary chefs like Stevie Parle and Clodagh McKenna. The Ballymaloe Cookbook, first published in 1977, underscores the schoolâs humble philosophy, formed by Allenâs mother, Myrtle: The use of fresh, high-quality ingredients negates the need for complicated or fancy techniques. Recipes range from variations on Ballymaloe restaurant classics to updated versions of traditional Irish dishes, all with Allenâs charming tone of voice. The Carrageen moss pudding is my party piece and taste of home. âAnna Cafolla
Real Cooking by Nigel Slater
The best cookbook for⦠flavor without the fuss.
âThis is real cooking,â writes Nigel Slater. âThe roast potato that sticks to the roasting tin; the crouton from the salad that has soaked up the mustardy dressing⦠these are the things that make something worth eating. And worth cooking.â The English cook and writerâs 2006 book is a heartfelt hymn for wonderful food and flavors, without hours spent toiling in the kitchen or overly formal settings. (The lamb and haricot bean casserole in particular raises pulses.) And it is so sensually writtenâdonât worry about keeping it nice, the pages should be slick with sticky toffee fingerprints and globules of oil. âAC
Motherland: A Jamaican Cookbook by Melissa Thompson
The best cookbook for⦠a gastronomical Jamaican odyssey.
Melissa Thompson has written not just a cookbook, but a multisensory cultural, political, and social document of Jamaica through the prism of feeding and being fed. As Thompson writes herself, itâs âa history of the people, influences, and ingredients that uniquely united to create the wonderful patchwork cuisine that is Jamaican food today.â Colonial history cannot be detached from such cuisine-making, and Thompson approaches it with directness and clarity. But the book teems with joy and pleasure, too. Return for the classics like saltfish fritters, curried goat, and showstoppers like the crispy ginger beer pork belly and Guinness punch pie. âAC
Penang Recipes & Wanderings Around an Island in Malaysia by Belmond and Apartamento
The best cookbook for⦠a culinary tour of Malaysia.
The second book in the series by Apartamento and Belmond, Penang is an expansive journey through island life, by way of durian farms, jungle-thick hilltops, and nutmeg plantations. The book, both a vibrant visual portfolio as well as a culinary document, invites the likes of Chef André Chiang, culinary director of the Eastern & Oriental Express, as well as chefs Malcolm Lee and Abby Lee, to feature 23 Malaysian dishesâfrom the aromatic assam laksa to a sweet three-layer rice pudding and a dark, rich roast duck curry. âAC
For the Love of Food by Paul Ainsworth
The best cookbook for⦠comfort recipes that deserve a Michelin star.
In award-winning British chef Paul Ainsworthâs debut cookbook, he distills his years working for heavyweights like Gary Rhodes, Gordon Ramsay, and Marcus Wareing; pride in regional Cornish cuisine; and the work of his stylish but understated restaurant No6 into friendly, flavorful recipes. Woven together with Ainsworthâs cheeky musings, traditional home cooking meets restaurant-quality dishes: Ainsworth-style toad in the hole, Ramsay-approved brown butter pumpkin tortelli, and barbecued mackerel bruschetta, as well as whole chapter on custard to dive into. A total joy for any home cook. âAC
Complete Chinese Cookbook by Ken Hom
The best cookbook for⦠investing in Chinese cooking.
Set aside takeout for the beloved chef Ken Homâs seminal collection of over 250 province-trotting recipes, all celebrating the diversities and details of Chinese cooking. Alongside clear cooking techniques, necessary equipment, ingredients, and pantry lists, Hom offers up accessible classics like chicken fried rice (based on a street food stall he would visit in China), Sichuan dumplings, and lesser-known styles from the likes of Yunna. The plant-based dishes are particularly fireâthe aubergine with sesame sauce, inspired by Beijing street food, is an easy dinner party favorite. âAC
Rick Steinâs Simple Suppers by Rick Stein
The best cookbook for⦠easy but not-boring midweek dinners.
A simple yet stylish go-to for midweek (or weekend!) dishes by the English celebrity chef Rick Stein. While I adore his Coast to Coast and Secret France books, Simple Suppers is a kitchen counter mainstay, delightful for its informal, straight-talking style. Among its highlights? A one-pot supper like a coconut prawn curry, speedy suppers like baked portobello mushrooms with dolcelatte and walnuts, suppers to share with others like puff pastry fish pie, and a cheffy cheat tiramisu. Do as Rick does, and get to cooking in your jeans with a glass of vinho verde on the worktop. âAC
Bethlehem: A Celebration of Palestinian Food by Fadi Kattan
The best cookbook for⦠generations of food knowledge from Palestine.
Fadi Kattan, the Franco-Palestinian chef and proprietor of Londonâs celebrated Akub restaurant, serves up a rich tapestry of Palestinian food and culture. The flavors are bright, bold, and generations-deep: a fluffy mistaka brioche that recalls Easter in Bethlehem makes for a decadent breakfast, stuffed pittas (arayes shrak) are delicious with a tahini-garlic sauce, and please consider the hulking kofta sandwich. (The recipes are woven between vignettes of life in Bethlehem, beautifully profiling the food artisans that cultivate the local grapes, wheat, and olive oil.) The striking cover alone makes it one youâll want to display proudly. âAC