Books

Fall Cookbook-Palooza: Our Favorite Titles + A Giveaway

October 14, 2014

You know how some people are obsessed with stamp collections or fantasy football teams? Well, we're obsessed with cookbooks. Here, in Books We Love, we'll talk about our favorites.

Today: A whole slew of cookbooks we're excited about this fall. BONUS: We're giving away cookbook packages to two lucky readers.

In case you hadn’t noticed, we’ve started talking -- and writing -- about cookbooks a little differently recently. We’ve been reviewing them, more or less, writing about the books we love and why we love them. 

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We hope that this will serve you -- home cooks, buyers of cookbooks, lovers of words and pictures and stories and recipes -- better. We want Food52 to be a place where you will come to find out about the latest titles, to share stories of your favorites, and to fill us in on what you love about cookbooks. If nothing else, this column -- Books We Love -- is a scrappy but enthusiastic start.

October is a huge month for cookbooks. Try to keep track of them all and you’ll find yourself with a full-time job and a calendar that’s more ink than paper. So we’ve been trying to fill you in on the ones we’ve clutched most tightly to our chests, the ones that brim with the most post-its. Today, we've compiled a list of of titles that we’re particularly interested in this fall -- so you can take a look yourself, or let us know what we missed, or just straight-up disagree with us completely.

So, herewith, a list of a few of the books we think are most deserving of your shelf space and brain space. (As is our policy, we’ve linked to Amazon for each book here, but we encourage you to swing by your local bookstore, if only for the human interaction and the new book smell.)

Baking Chez Moi  The Baking Bible

  • Baking Chez Moi: How do we love Dorie? Let us count the ways. It’s not just because she’s such a lovely human, so easy to crush on. She’s also a fastidious recipe writer, a gifted storyteller, and a joy to read. And she makes really great food. Her latest book -- which she’s been working on for 5 YEARS! -- is a summation of the things that she serves in her kitchen in France, but that we all can make in our decidedly non-French kitchens, without much fuss.
  • The Baking Bible: As with Dorie, we would trust Rose Levy Beranbaum with our most important cake occasions, if not with our lives. This comprehensive follow-up to her Cake Bible includes definitive guidance like the "Golden Rules of Caking Baking," as well as tips and recipes for everything from cakes to pies to cookies to pastries and yeasted breads.

Death & co  Sherry

  • Death & Co.: Do you love booze? So do we. And so do the people behind Death & Co., one of New York's most influential cocktail bars. Their big, heavy, dark book (it looks ready for Halloween, and it is, if you like getting drunk on Halloween) will walk you through the life of a bar and how to build a cocktail -- starting with some of their favorite recipes, ending with those you'll soon be creating yourself. Read our review here.
  • Sherry: Talia Baiocchi, the lovely Editor-in-Chief of PUNCH, has written a history of the much-maligned Spanish fortified wine, to reclaim it from your grandmother’s cabinet. Baiocchi turns the drink and its history -- a topic that’s often difficult to digest for those not well-versed in wine and spirits -- into the subject of an engaging, interesting story, with plenty of cocktails to put your new bottles to good use.  

Brooks Headley’s Fancy Desserts Ovenly

  • Brooks Headley’s Fancy Desserts: Brooks Headley, the pastry chef at Manhattan's Del Posto (and James Beard Award winner), has created his ideal cookbook, which includes: irreverent but also very Italian, not-too-cheffy desserts; stark, kinda-weird photos; essays on the things he's eaten while touring with punk bands; essays written by writers and artists Headley admires (Robert Sietsema, Sloane Crosley); "Profiles in Courage" of other chefs (Christina Tosi, Claudia Fleming); and so on. His cookbook trailer pretty much says it all.
  • Ovenly: Okay! Okay. There are a lot of dessert cookbooks that we’re excited about right now. But the Ovenly book, as much a story of a small Brooklyn business as a compendium of sweet-salty baked goods, deserves your time, if only for the scones. And the cookies. And the Brooklyn Blackout Cake. Read our review here

 Peter Reinhart’s Bread Revolution  Flavor Flours

  • Peter Reinhart’s Bread Revolution: If you've never watched Peter Reinhart's TED talk, wherein he talks about yeast "burping and sweating" (like a human while eating), you've missed out. Reinhart, an expert on baking, has now tackled sprouted and whole grains and heirloom flours; if you want to get serious about baking your own whole-wheat and whole-grain loaves, he'll start you with a starter and walk you through every detail of the process.
  • Flavor Flours: If you're more into dessert than toast but you still want to experiment with flours other than all-purpose and whole-wheat, this new title from Alice Medrich -- our resident rogue baker and tireless investigator of all things dessert -- is for you.

Heritage  Sweet and Southern

  • Heritage: Sean Brock, chef at Charleston's Husk restaurant, has redefined southern cooking -- his first book does much the same, with beautiful photos and stories to boot.
  • Sweet & Southern: Also in the southern corner is Ben Mims' first book, full of pies and cakes that have been modernized -- a cup of sugar removed, a pinch of salt added -- without straying from their southern roots. Read why we love it here.

 Saveur  The Kitchn 

  • Saveur: To celebrate 20 years in print, Saveur has turned to their archives and come out with over 1,000 “new classics” from around the world. Like the magazine, it's a combination of things you'd find when you travel, things you'd learn from a chef, and lessons you might happen upon in your own kitchen.
  • The Kitchn: Recipes are just one part of this book from the editorial team behind one of our favorite home cooking sites. You also get glimpses into the kitchens of other home cooks, a bit of harmless voyeurism that will help make your kitchen a more efficient and peaceful place. Also, whereas notes on ingredients and sourcing and cleaning and prep tips feel like an obligation in some books, the supporting cast in this book feel like a thorough and valuable resource for home cooks of all experience levels.

Mimi Thorisson  Plenty More 

  • A Kitchen in France: A Year of Cooking in My Farmhouse: If you’ve ever read Mimi Thorisson’s blog, Manger, you know what it is to envy her life, full of long walks through the French countryside with her children and seeming endless brigade of dogs, which end at home with bushels full of produce that she effortlessly turns into feasts, all cassoulets and tarts and roasts and good wine to wash it all down. But if you’re going to buy one aspirational cookbook this fall, it’s Mimi’s -- because you’ll actually take on many of her recipes, and absorb a bit of her style of entertaining in the process. 
  • Plenty More: The answer to your inevtiable question is: Yes, it's as good as you hope it will be, and yes, it will still feel new and exciting and inspiring even if you've already spent the last two years poring over Jerusalem and Plenty. (In fact: Ottolenghi should start hosting launch parties at midnight the way that bookstores did for each new Harry Potter book back in the day. Instead of dressing up as Ron and Hermione, we can dress up as pomegranate molasses, eggplants, figs, and rice salads!)

  A Boat, A Whale, and A Walrus Bitter

  • A Boat, A Whale, and A Walrus: We're smitten with this collection of French-inspired dishes from Renee Erickson’s lovely Seattle restaurants, arranged as a set of dinner parties. Read our review here.
  • Bitter: Jennifer McLagan, a cookbook author who has also penned single-subject books Bones and Fat, is now here to defend what has, historically, been the least popular flavor around. Our brilliant columnist Nicholas Day is a fan of this book -- check out his review here.

 Mexico: The Cookbook  Prune

  • Mexico: The Cookbook:  Given its CALIENTE-pink cover, this book is an excellent choice if you’re looking to diversify your color-coded book shelves. But it’s also a thorough primer on Mexican food, from a native Mexican chef, with bright, beautiful photos of everything from tamales to pozole to Donuts from the Convent of Santa Rosa. It will serve you well both on your coffee table and on taco night. There are no headnotes to be found, though; if you’re looking for a deep dive into basics rather than a visually stunning survey course, turn back to Roberto Santibañez’s Truly Mexican.
  • Prune: It's here! It's here! The Prune cookbook! Gabrielle Hamilton, who put radishes with butter and salt back on the map and continues to serve assertive, unfussy, exciting food after 15 years of running Prune, has given us a book. (Also: She is the only person who can get away with writing radishes with butter and salt into a cookbook.) It is unabashedly pink and full of her smart, bold writing. 
  • The Kitchen Ecosystem  Bar Tartine
  • The Kitchen Ecosystem: Eugenia Bone’s latest book is all about increasing your kitchen’s DIY capacity without, say, expecting yourself to make 30 pints of jam in one sitting. Her plan: Figure out what you buy a lot of; make as much of it as possible; and use up all the bits of your ingredients in ways that will add flavor to your meals. Read our review here.
  • Bar Tartine: Techniques and Recipes: Take Eugenia Bone’s enthusiasm for preserving and making-from-scratch and put it in the hands of a couple of San Francisco chefs who have a thing for fermenting -- the result is bright and colorful and a look behind the curtain of one of San Francisco’s most popular places to get a vegetable plate. This isn’t a first step after buying your first set of ball jars; it’s a trip down the rabbit hole of what can happen when you become obsessed with making every possible pickle and condiment under the sun. There are also helpful tips on nut butters, kefir, and sour cream, if you’re not planning on investing the time to make Sunchoke Custard with Sunflower Greens.

Mrs. Wheelbarrow’s Practical Pantry  Homemade Decadence

More: Start your bread-ucation with these easy and delicious dinner rolls.  

One Pot, Martha Stewart  How To Cook Everything Fast

  • One Pot: For all the nights this winter when you won't want to think about more than one pot, one dish, and maybe one large glass of wine to go along with it, the editors of Martha Stewart Living have your back. Their recipes, as always, are trustworthy and appealing, and will probably pair nicely with the other Martha books on your shelves. They're still around for a reason, people.
  • How to Cook Everything Fast: Also in the category of reliable utility, Bittman's latest builds on his How to Cook Everything empire with an emphasis on speed. As with Martha, we trust Mark's recipes; this book is encyclopedic in its coverage of all the things you can make in less time than it took you to read this article, and it would make a really excellent gift for a first kitchen, or someone with an extremely short attention span.

Hey, readers! We're giving away two cookbook packages, to share some of our favorite new books and get you cooking this fall. To enter, tell us in the comments: What's the cookbook you use the most? We'll choose winners this Friday, October 17th; unfortunately, we can't ship internationally.

Update: Carecooks and Angela Grace Milburn are our winners! We hope you enjoy your fall cookbook packages. 

See what other Food52 readers are saying.

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Marian Bull

Written by: Marian Bull

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502 Comments

ntt2 November 8, 2014
My most oft'used cookbook is 660 Curries. Second favorite is the Splendid Table.
 
Lynn R. November 7, 2014
I use cookbooks from America's Test Kitchen alot but I also have a variety I use, including some old church cookbooks and a folder my mom wrote when I went off to college.
 
Kathleen B. October 28, 2014
Ottolenghi & Tamimi's Jerusalem. Every time I make something from it, I (and whoever else happens to be around) exclaims "This is the best xx I've EVER tried!"
 
Carmen L. October 24, 2014
Where to start... The pastry chef by Bo Friberg has many wonderful desserts that never fail. I also love the Webster books particularly the big book of grilling and way to grill
 
Carmen L. October 24, 2014
F
 
Laurel F. October 23, 2014
I love to bake and Nigella Lawson's How to be a domestic Goddess is still the one I turn to again and again. For cooking meals- Jerusalem.
 
Kathleen October 22, 2014
I don't really have a cookbook I rely on. I like to gather different recipes from the web.
 
Shannon829 October 22, 2014
The book (s) I continue to use over and over are Plenty, MS Cookies and New Best Recipe from Cook's Illustrated
 
Linda October 22, 2014
Linda Simmons Griffin
 
Linda October 22, 2014
Linda
 
Xocolatl October 22, 2014
Rick Bayless's Mexican Kitchen is one of my favorites. But really, how can I choose? Depends on my mood and the occasion.
 
wl110 October 22, 2014
Craig Claiborne's NY Times Cookbook.
 
Sandra M. October 22, 2014
I really love Ina's cookbooks and enjoy her recipes.
[email protected]
 
Catherine S. October 22, 2014
If Rose Levy Barenbaum's name isn't on the book, I just don't cook it. You know someone truly knows about cooking when they create a thesis on the differences between sifted and unsifted flour and the chemical differences that occur when baking each. For dinner, I am going through Julia Child's books!
 
erynmarch October 22, 2014
Lately I've been working on going back to learn the foundations, so Jacques Pepin's "Complete Techniques"
 
Pennie D. October 22, 2014
Baking with Julia and Debbie Macomber ' cookbooks.
 
Emily W. October 22, 2014
I absolutely love this silly little spiral bound cookbook I bought from a school fundraiser called Cooking in the 90's. *So* it's slightly dated, but I love the simple recipes that I can tweak and have fun with. If I need a "real" recipe, I refer to old faithful: The Joy of Cooking.
 
Hannah October 22, 2014
I look at lot of different places, but my favorite is smitten kitchen
 
Terese E. October 22, 2014
I use cookbook recipes from The Pioneer Woman but I do mix it up with lots of other cookbooks. I love variety.
 
Susan B. October 22, 2014
How to Cook Everything changed my life! And I considered myself a competent cook when I bought it. My favorite "old reliable" is Pierre Franey's Cuisine Rapide. Good, unfussy food that's flavorful and quick!
 
Mary B. October 21, 2014
Frankly, I use anything from America's Test Kitchen. I trust their recipes. Other cookbooks, I just hoard and read. :)
 
Picot October 20, 2014
The cookbook I use the most is the good ol' Joy of Cooking. It has everything and then some. Also, not one recipe has ever failed me.
 
ducksandbooks October 20, 2014
The cookbooks I use the most are Madhur Jaffrey's World-of-the-East Vegetarian Cooking, How to Cook Everything Vegetarian, and every Kosher meat recipe I can find on Pintrest ;)
 
[email protected] October 20, 2014
I make recipes from cookbooks at a farm market which also has a bookstore Farleys in New Hope Pa. We sell alot of books doing this, but I would like to have my own books, I will use the books you mentioned at the market, thanks girls
love dawn
 
Yvonne October 20, 2014
Plenty, by Ottolenghi. And the Vegetarian Epicure, by Anna Thomas.
 
chefbruja13 October 19, 2014
Barefoot Contessa Family Style is my go to!
 
sparkplug October 18, 2014
Around my French Table by Dorie Greenspan
 
AFrank October 17, 2014
My favorite recipes are the ones my grandmother gave me, which we especially use during holidays. But for everyday, I often turn to Cook's Illustrated for reliable, easy recipes that the family will eat.
 
spoon October 17, 2014
The one my mom gave me when I left home :)
 
Jill C. October 17, 2014
Any book by Ina. Her recipes are simple and always turn out delicious.
 
Sara C. October 17, 2014
Ina Garten's cook books.
 
amy.bentley.35 October 17, 2014
Sheila Lukins USA CookBook
 
Eliza L. October 17, 2014
Any of Cookʻs Illustrated "Best Recipe" books-- they are my go to again and again and again.
 
Rita October 17, 2014
Jamie Oliver's Italy. I've never unabashedly loved every single recipe from a cookbook before I bought it. I use it at least 3 times a week
 
mobloom October 17, 2014
Heidi Swanson's Super Natural Everyday. Easy, delicious recipes for week nights!
 
natalie October 17, 2014
I use my Cook's Illustrated 20th Anniversary most - It has just about anything you can think of in there!
 
StevenHB October 17, 2014
Cookbook I use most? I love my cookbook collection and I review things in it frequently. But the one that I use most is an oddball: Pizza, Focaccia, Flat and Filled Breads For Your Bread Machine: Perfect Every Time. I'm a weekend-warrior, generally cooking for special occasions and parties. Brody's "Rustic Sourdough Focaccia" topped with caramelized onions is my signature dish. I don't seem to be able to memorize the ingredient volumes, so I'm opening it frequently.
 
Helena October 17, 2014
I probably use the Cooks Illustrated cookbook the most, but it's a close run thing.
 
amysarah October 17, 2014
I guess most consulted is Patricia Wells' Bistro Cooking. Also Marcella Hazan, Classic Italian Cooking. And for everyday reference, Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything and Julia Child's How to Cook. And several more, but I'll stop there.
 
Jennifer P. October 17, 2014
I use The Cake Bible and the 1997 version of Joy of Cooking more than most cookbooks.
 
Angela G. October 17, 2014
The Smitten Kitchen cookbook is probably my favorite. Deb's writings are so entertaining, you want to cook her dishes just to have as much fun as she did!
 
Devon H. October 17, 2014
I use Ina Garten's Barefoot Contessa cookbooks the most, especially the first one. The recipes are fabulous, aren't overly fussy, and always turn out well. Thanks for the giveaway!
 
Nosherium October 17, 2014
I love Bittman's How to Cook Everything as a reference guide. But my favorite cookbook for pleasure is the 1973 edition of the Jocasta Innes's The Pauper's Cookbook. Her story telling is so delicious!
 
lightning B. October 17, 2014
I use Cook's Illustrated Cookbook most often, but we love cookbooks in our house, so they all get pretty regular use!
 
pretty_pathetic October 17, 2014
I use Super Natural Every Day not every day, but very often.
 
Smw2170 October 17, 2014
Favorite has to be Jerusalem by Ottolenghi. The recipes are very simple and down to earth but so incredibly flavorful and good for so many occasions. The book itself is beautiful and the food is a lot of fun to make :)
 
EllenQ October 17, 2014
My favorite is actually a tiny little soup cookbook I picked up at Tanya's Soup Kitchen in Wichita, KS. Her pumpkin bisque will be on my Thanksgiving table.
 
Brittany October 17, 2014
I probably use Gourmet the most... It's huge cookbook. But it has a lot of great ideas.... Some a little more challenging, and some super easy for a quick supper!
 
Mr. V. October 17, 2014
There are so many to choose from in our house, but I always love "Whole Grains Every Day, Every Way."
 
Jenna S. October 17, 2014
As the weather gets cooler, I turn to a trusty favorite: Roasting, Barbara Kafka.
 
annakarenina October 17, 2014
Lately I've been reading for Whole Grains for a New Generation (Liana Krisoff) most often, because I've got a full pantry I need to work through. The salted rye cookies are amazing.
 
Jessica M. October 17, 2014
The flavor bible is well.... Errrr my bible? Haha well I do consult it often! Beyond that Thomas Keller's cookbooks provide an abundance of inspiration to be better than I am! If I'm choosen for this awesome giveaway I'd hope to recieve the prune book, death & co, how to cook everything fast!, and of course plenty more!! Ahh just in time for holiday cook offs!
 
gluttonforlife October 17, 2014
The cookbook I use most is Hot Sour Salty Sweet, but the one I most look forward o using is Amy Chaplin's new At Home in the Whole Food Kitchen - it needs to be on your list!!
 
Emily K. October 17, 2014
My vegan family cookbook for basic vegan recipes. And Pinterest. SO MUCH PINTEREST.
 
Jonathan E. October 17, 2014
Momofuku
 
christina October 17, 2014
Martha Stewart's Baking Handbook and Smitten Kitchen!
 
caseyelizabeth October 17, 2014
It's a tie between the smitten kitchen cookbook and how to cook everything
 
Sophia F. October 17, 2014
I use all the Ina Garten cookbooks the most.
 
Amanda E. October 17, 2014
Irene Kuo's Key to Chinese Cooking
 
dinaofdoom October 17, 2014
joy of cooking
 
Audrey October 17, 2014
I turn to the Cook's Illustrated Cookbook most often. It never fails me and it always inspires me. (To be honest, I usually hit Food52.com first when I'm looking for something to cook, since I have so many favorite recipes and recipe authors at my disposal on this site-- but we're talking cookbooks here!)
 
Molly W. October 17, 2014
I use Martha Stewarts Baking Handbook constantly!
 
Nicole W. October 16, 2014
Marcella Hazan's Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking. So much goodness, so little time.
 
Candy J. October 16, 2014
Right now, River Cottage Veg.
 
hobbit2nd October 16, 2014
The Best Recipe from Cooks Illustrated
 
Sarah S. October 16, 2014
Just now it's the Cooks Illustrated Family Cookbook. But also, when I'm in a bread mood, I keep coming back to Field's The Italian Baker.
 
Kim B. October 16, 2014
Definitely New York Times cookbook! Craig Claiborne signed it for me many birthdays ago and it has been well loved and used through the years. I've bought countless copies to share my good fortune with others.
 
FrenchWench October 16, 2014
My name is Trina and I'm a cookbook-aholic. It's true. I get so much inspiration from cookbooks and love to find new ways to combine healthy with delicious. The cookbook I reach for the most is Creative Coastal Cooking - Recipes from a dozen contemporary Maine Restaurants. As a fresh transplant to the glorious state of Maine, I've discovered it to be a haven for foodies and frequenters of farmers markets, such as myself. My family thinks I moved here for them. The truth is, I moved here for the fresh seafood!
 
Joan B. October 16, 2014
I have to say, Everyday Food - Fresh Food Fast, a Martha Stewart creation, has gotten me through many a weeknight meal plan. Encouraging us to keep it simple, it is often my go-to cookbook when we get home from an exhausting day at work!
 
Hillary M. October 16, 2014
I reach for the 30 Minute Meals book by America's Test Kitchen often. That, and the Smitten Kitchen Cookbook!
 
rrcooks October 16, 2014
Nigel Slater's Kitchen Diaries is great all year round - good ideas and lovely to read too.
 
eos October 16, 2014
I've been using Marion Cunningham's update of the Fanny Farmer Cookbook for decades.
 
Jakki October 16, 2014
Sarabeth's Bakery by Sarabeth Levine is one of my favorites.
 
jo October 16, 2014
diana henry's "a change of appetite." she writes of healthful recipes with none of the sanctimonious dirge that others of the genre contain; more a reckless abandon of food and flavour. i have cooked through a large chunk of the book and have yet to come across a clunker.
 
Sam October 16, 2014
Is Pinterest a cookbook? The internet's cookbook. I'm all over that.
 
Rust October 16, 2014
Talk About Good, my cajun cookin' bible. :)
 
annemax October 16, 2014
I go back to Julia's Art of French Cooking when I want to make the classics. Still nothing better. David Lebovitz, My Paris Kitchen is a great new book and Rick Bayliss' Mexican Everyday is probably the most used-to the point that the pages are falling out.
 
Sarah I. October 16, 2014
Cook's Illustrated Cookbook!
 
Anne October 16, 2014
Love me some Sticky, Chewy, Messy, Gooey and Smitten Kitchen!
 
Teri.stein October 16, 2014
In the kitchen with a good appetite by Melissa Clark. Delicious, seasonal, up fussy food and great writing!
 
Erin S. October 16, 2014
I am also a self-professed "cookbook junkie." I can't help myself. I recently got back from a trip to Israel and in order to try my best to keep those amazing flavors alive, I've been heavily using Yotam Ottolenghi's "Jerusalem." Prior to my trip (and forever, really), it was all about Dorie's "Around My French Table." I got to see her speak in CT a couple months ago and she is as warm and wonderful in person as she comes across in her books. Thanks for the opportunity to add to my collection and for cluing me in on some awesome sounding books to add to my Christmas list! :)
 
Lindsey A. October 16, 2014
Veganomicon. So. Awesome.
 
Melody P. October 16, 2014
I use The Green Kitchen by David Frenkiel and Luise Vindahl Andersen. They are so creative in spinning out healthy food that tastes good!
 
Kelly October 16, 2014
When I need a classic recipe: The Joy of Cooking or How to Cook Everything. When I want to try something new: Plenty (since I just got it). When I want to experiment with some ingredients that I happen to have: any/all 100 of them as a reference for ratios, then I put it all together with my own touch.
 
Alexis N. October 16, 2014
How to Cook Everything, by Mark Bittman
 
sexyLAMBCHOPx October 16, 2014
Everyday Food - Fresh Food Fast by Martha Stewart Magazines. It's simplicity guides me through week-long meal planning ideas, recipes and food shopping lists - seasonally. Also, offers inspiration and reminds me other recipes from other books that I may want to go to.
 
Wendy R. October 16, 2014
Barefoot Contessa Family Style
 
Julie October 16, 2014
Ahhh - Just realized I wrote "Cook the Jamie Oliver"! Ooops - Meant "Cook with Jamie Oliver" ha
 
Julie October 16, 2014
"Cook the Jamie Oliver" has been great for some delicious basics and Todd Porter & Diane Cu's "Bountiful" is my new inspiration.
 
Teresa @. October 16, 2014
Dorie Greenspan's Around My French Table has been a weekly companion for me, and all the French Fridays crew, for more than four years, now. Absorbing her techniques and recipes has upped my cooking game in ways I never imagined when I joined the group. Other books on heavy rotation in my kitchen are Plenty, River Cottage Veg, and Gourmet Today.
 
Dtoy October 16, 2014
Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Actually need to buy another copy since my original is falling apart from being so loved.
 
JenniiAG October 16, 2014
I've been spending a lot of time lately with Dorie Greenspan's Baking and Rosie Daykin's Butter Baked Goods. Which explains why the kids keep asking for pie for breakfast...
 
Barbara R. October 16, 2014
First cookbook I bought when I was sixteen-Mastering the Art of French Cooking. I still have it. Depending on cravings, my present go to cookbooks are The Greens Cookbook, Sunday Suppers at Lucques, The June Platt Cookbook, Lidia's Italy, or Dinner Against the Clock. I have at least one favorite recipe from each cookbook. Writing this is making me crave some Chicken Marbella from The Silver Palate.
 
V. H. October 16, 2014
I would Authentic Mexican (Regional Cooking from the Heart of Mexico) my most used cookbook. It was the first cookbook I ever bought (not inherited), still my favorite to this day!
 
Annette P. October 16, 2014
I'm a fan of one pot meals, so I know I'd like the, "One Pot," book.
 
Denise A. October 16, 2014
Right now I am loving the Jerusalem cook book. Everything I have made has been incredibly delicious!
 
wwarren31 October 16, 2014
It would be a toss up between Heidi Swanson's books, Ottolenghi's Plenty and Fuschia Dunlop's Land of Plenty.
 
Kara L. October 16, 2014
The original _How to Cook Everything_ is my go to go to. Couldn't live without it!
 
Delia T. October 16, 2014
Heidi Swanson's books!
 
mei55 October 16, 2014
I'm from Hawaii so I tend to use a lot of local cookbooks from there.
 
Patricia R. October 16, 2014
I refer to Get Saucy by Grace Parisi for finishing touches. I also use How to Cook Without a Book by Pam Anderson for the same reason. When I'm searching for new recipe ideas, I usually check The Cook's Illustrated Cookbook for suggestions. I've collected cookbooks for years so it's hard to pick a favorite.
 
Jane October 16, 2014
Everyday Food - Great Food Fast and Creme de Colorado
 
Nancy October 16, 2014
I use Craig Claiborne's 1970s New York Times Cookbook often -- maybe old fashioned but it never lets me down.
 
Carecooks October 16, 2014
I have many, many cookbooks. I am an omnivore but my most used cookbook is Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone by Deborah Madison. I was excited to find the most recent update New Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone which I promptly gave to my-newly-engaged and finely-ready-to-cook niece. It's a wonderful resource.
 
Tami W. October 16, 2014
I love Baking & Paris Sweets by Dorie Greenspan!
 
Emily B. October 16, 2014
Supernatural Everyday and community cookbooks from my childhood and relatives...such as Pirates Pantry.
 
Jennifer S. October 16, 2014
The best recipe cookbook by cooks illustrated magazine editors.
 
sharon October 16, 2014
america test kitchen and meta given encylopedia of cooking. just picked silver palate and looking to venture outside my comfort zone and explore my collection of cookbooks more fully.
 
Sandra L. October 16, 2014
I have a number of cookbooks that I use in different ways. For reference, The Joy of Cooking remains indispensable. For recipes, the two I'm using at the moment are Jerusalem and Around My French Table but that's because I've practically memorized Essentials of Italian Cooking. Blessings upon the heads of Yotam, Dorie and Marcella and everyone who has ever worked on the Joy.
 
Nivedita C. October 16, 2014
The Pioneer Woman cooks by Ree Drummond and Dorie Greenspan's Baking.
 
Andrea October 16, 2014
Sunday Suppers at Lucques is my favorite for entertaining. Anything from Ottolenghi for week nights!
 
marissa October 16, 2014
We use Twenty-Dollar, Twenty-Minute Meals and the newly released Thug Kitchen cookbooks for most nights of the week.
 
Carly D. October 16, 2014
Ottolenghi is my absolute favorite recipe writer, but I think the cookbook I return to most often for cooking ideas is the Bocca cookbook. Wonderful inspiration for everyday rustic dishes.
 
Angelique N. October 16, 2014
Baking Illustrated by America's Test Kitchen.
 
culinaryartist October 16, 2014
Being a cookbook collector/hoarder the one I cook from the most changes with much regularity. That being said I suppose I always research recipes from classic books I refer to as Reference Cookbooks. The more recent ones being: The Essential New York Times, A New Way to Cook, Gourmet Today, Bon Appetit Fast & Fresh. All Lidia B's and Barefoot Contessa's. Older Classics: James Beard's American Cookery, Mastering The Art of French Cooking, Anything Julia, The New Doubleday Cookbook (inherited) and anything Silver Palate!
 
Tracy October 16, 2014
Lately the cookbooks I have been using the most are the Ina Garten Barefoot Contessa cookbooks. The recipes are foolproof for the most part.
 
Meredith S. October 16, 2014
Currently I use Yotam Ottenlenghi´s Plenty book, for scrumptious vegetarian dishes and Rick Bayless´Mexican Kitchen for new salsas and traditional cooking techniques.
 
lakagi October 16, 2014
I absolutely love Dorie Greenspan's around my french table. I feel like I'm in Paris when I use it!
 
arishell October 16, 2014
Americas test kitchen probably gets used the most.
 
Celeste D. October 16, 2014
Greens by Deborah Madison, The New Basics by Sheila Lukins and Julie Rosso, Tartine by Elisabeth Prueitt and Chad Robertson and many more.
 
Alison M. October 16, 2014
My Joy of Cooking is my go to reference. I have a tendency to read around a recipe and then create from there.
 
Vandana T. October 16, 2014
I use Grace Young's Stir-Frying to the Sky's Edge the most. Second most is Ottolenghi's Jerusalem!
 
Jenny October 16, 2014
About 10 years ago while in Boston, I stopped at Rosie's bakery and purchased her "All Butter, Fresh Cream, Sugar-Packed, No Holds Barred Baking Book" and I have loved every recipe!
 
chefdianetx October 16, 2014
When I'm in the mood for Indian which I am alot Easy Indian Cooking by Suneeta Vaswani - otherwise Melissa's Clarks In the Kitchen with a Good Appetite
 
Carolyn A. October 16, 2014
Around My French Table stays on my counter. Love that book.
 
Hazel B. October 16, 2014
I use a lot of cookbooks but over time I'd have to say that Joy of Cooking has had the most use for basics and advice.
 
Amy W. October 16, 2014
Flour by Joanne Chang is wonderful!
 
lilliwill October 16, 2014
America's test Kitchen Family Cookbook!
 
annenapolitano October 16, 2014
The New York Times Cookbook from a couple of years ago; it's got everything in it. From fancy to the old standbys!
 
Cassady October 16, 2014
Sunday Suppers at Lucques by Suzanne Goin is what I turn to every time - I know the flavors will be delicious and a little effort will go a long way.
 
Mary A. October 16, 2014
Betty Crocker--old school!
 
Myra O. October 16, 2014
Anything Ottolenghi -- Jerusalem, especially. I love so many of the recipes -- the roasted butternut squash with red onions - tahini -zatar; the tahini cookies; the mejadra; and on and on and on.
 
ashley October 16, 2014
The Joy of Cooking is bar the biggest (and now, dirtiest) reference in my kitchen. It really has the answers to everything.
 
Natalie October 16, 2014
My perennial go-to when I have an ingredient that needs to be used--or just need to makes something simple for dinner--is Mark Bittman's "How to Cook Everything". When I'm feeling a little more inspired, lately I've been turning to the Smitten Kitchen Cookbook, David Lebovitz' newest, and Dorie Greenspan's "Around my French Table."
 
CarlaCooks October 16, 2014
I turn to two different cookbooks quite often, both of which I purchased because of their reviews in the Piglet competition: Roots by Diane Morgan and A Girl and Her Pig by April Bloomfield. Roots is a god send to anyone who has a CSA box in a cold-climate country/area. I pull it out almost every Wednesday when faced with yet another delivery of celery root/rutabaga/etc. I turn to A Girl and Her Pig often because it's one of the first cookbooks I've had that includes the actual amount of salt, butter, and seasonings that I use in my cooking (thank goodness for the gym!) and is full of chefy approaches to some common ingredients.

I love the Piglet for introducing me to so many great cookbooks, and now I love this article for the same reason!
 
Heidi M. October 16, 2014
My Joy of Cooking gets the most use as a reference. For go to fail proof absolutely delicious cooking anything by Melissa Clark or Ina Garten.
 
nosher October 16, 2014
Moosewood
 
gabsimonelouise October 16, 2014
I am on a mission to cook every recipe from Good to the Grain by Kim Boyce!
 
Chris October 16, 2014
To be honest, the copy of Joy of Cooking I received when I got married.
 
Denise October 16, 2014
How to Cook Everything
 
Mimi October 16, 2014
Nearly impossible to pick just one but if forced to do so I usually rely on Julia Child.
 
Jenny L. October 16, 2014
Veganomicon!
 
JoJoKoKo October 16, 2014
i find myself turning to nigel slater's kitchen diaries regularly for inspiration. his recipes, much like his prose, are inspired yet unfussy.
 
belovedgreen October 16, 2014
I adore "Vegetable Literacy" by Deborah Madison. There are delightful recipes, but also lovely nuggets of knowledge that I continue to pull from its pages every time I open it up!
 
angeline October 16, 2014
How to cook everything!
 
Michael M. October 16, 2014
I use Ruhlman's Charcuterie as a regular reference. It probably gets more use than any other single book in my kitchen.
 
Lauren October 16, 2014
I use Ina Garten's "How Easy is That" cookbook the most.
 
Katie October 16, 2014
Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook, as well as anything that Molly Wizenberg of Orangette writes!
 
kendra October 16, 2014
My dad gave me a copy of the joy of cooking for Christmas years ago, its been my go to book for almost anything- techniques, cooking times, etc it really is a wealth of information.
 
Mario T. October 16, 2014
Nigel Slater's Ripe and Tender. Hands down. Every recipe is unlike the others and his prose on fruits and vegetables is simply stunning. I feel alive when I read those books. And every recipe in that book is pure gold.
 
mcs3000 October 16, 2014
Good to the Grain by Kim Boyce. Game changer. The baking book I use the most. So stoked to see it win the Piglet + Beard.

On another note, so excited for Cathy Barrow's book. Discovered her thanks to Food52. Made hackers like me believe you could make bacon and can. Thrilled for her and Food52!
 
Claire T. October 16, 2014
I use "How to Cook Everything Vegetarian" a lot these days.
 
Aaleen C. October 16, 2014
I love Aran Goyoaga's "Small Plates and Sweet Treats: My Family's Journey to Gluten Free Cooking" --- I really enjoy learning and experiencing something new from a cookbook, and whenever I attempt something from her collection of recipes, it's a mini adventure in my kitchen.
 
Marsha G. October 16, 2014
That's a real toughie for me. But if a gun were held to my head and I had to choose JUST ONE, I would say "Joy of Cooking." And immediately second-guess it.
 
Genna October 16, 2014
I won't lie, I spend much of my time perusing the Smitten Kitchen Cookbook. Even when I'm not looking for something to cook I love salivating over all of Deb's amazing recipes.
 
Kary S. October 15, 2014
Brooks Headley's Fancy Desserts. He is one of inspirations for me becoming a pastry chef.
 
John October 15, 2014
Jamie at Home: Cook Your Way to the Good Life. - Jamie Oliver
 
Tamsyn October 15, 2014
Smitten Kitchen :)
 
Kim R. October 15, 2014
Since I had to let go of all of my huge cookbook collection (over 50, including some rare ones) 2 months ago when I moved 2400 miles away....I recently bought my first one here in Santa Fe, New Mexico at the public library sale ($2 !) and am enjoying it immensely ! It is Cucina Rustica by Viana La Place & Evan Kleiman. It is food I have always wanted to try more of. Simple, (delicious), Italian.
 
Jaime L. October 15, 2014
Veganomicon - i find something new evertime i open it!
 
Shannon C. October 15, 2014
Mark Bittman's original "How to Cook Everything" is my most used reference!
 
Radhika October 15, 2014
5 ingredient fix - makes weeknight cooking that much easier!
 
Hillary October 15, 2014
I use Advanced Bread and Pastry by Michel Suas. I went through the SFBI professional program and it is my bible for formulas!
 
Joni October 15, 2014
My Mom's 1949 "green cookbook" - Culinary Arts Institute Encyclopedic Cookbook. Everything one could ever need - oh, and squirrel recipes.
 
Sarah October 15, 2014
Lately I've been using Put Em Up which has helped me figure out what to do with my extra produce.
 
GretchenB October 15, 2014
The Joy of Cooking and since I moved to New Mexico and needed to learn high-altitude baking, Pie in the Sky. Thanks for the great list of new books!
 
Carolsue October 15, 2014
I use 250 Best Meals in a Mug cookbook a lot because it has some great recipes for single servings. I also like Pillsbury's Fix It Fast cause I like quickie meals!
 
hlcadieux October 15, 2014
I use Love Soup so much! And Heidi Swanson's books always seem to help pull a meal or treat together from my fridge and pantry.
 
Maryanne M. October 15, 2014
Any Julia Child cookbook. She was so meticulous in her testing and her recipes are clearly written and easy to follow. And of course delicious!
 
Vickie M. October 15, 2014
Loving the new World Spice At Home - New Flavors for 75 Favorite Dishes!!!
 
Tiffani H. October 15, 2014
To be honest, I really haven't developed a cookbook collection. I have not many cookbooks to refer. However, I have many subscriptions to cooking magazines. My favorite being Cooking Light.
 
rnb October 15, 2014
Cook's Illustrated How To Cook Library, Edna Lewis' In Pursuit Of Flavor, The Joy Of Cooking, Ma Chance's French Caribbean Creole Cooking.
 
Lorrie October 15, 2014
I just got The Kitchn cookbook and read it cover to cover in 2 days flat. I've already cooked 2 dishes. Otherwise- my go-to is usually Jaime Oliver or The New York Times...:-) awesome food ideas.
 
Daisy October 15, 2014
I would probably say the America's Test Kitchen cookbook. Though to be honest, the pile of recipes compiled by my mom for Christmas 2010 are what I refer to most.
 
Amanda D. October 15, 2014
Currently using Thug Kitchen and One Pan, Two Plates
 
Allyson Q. October 15, 2014
Currently cooking out of Momofuku by David Chang, Plenty by Yotam Ottolenghi and Toro Bravo by John Gorham and Liz Crain.
 
Yayasmama October 15, 2014
Mollie Katzen's Sunlight Cafe
 
angrychanny October 15, 2014
The cookbook I use most often is probably the Smitten Kitchen cookbook
 
Stefie October 15, 2014
Love Michael White's Classico e Moderno and Bi-RIte's Good Food!
 
Chau T. October 15, 2014
charleston recipes
 
Stephanie L. October 15, 2014
My most used cookbooks exist at opposite ends of the spectrum: at one, momofuku milk bar (those cakes!!!) and at the other resides tamar adler's an everlasting meal (such luscious prose, and she gives the green light to boiling, which has been revelatory indeed).
 
Sara S. October 15, 2014
The cookbook I use the most is definitely Marcella Hazan's Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking.
 
Sarah October 15, 2014
In cooler weather I frequently reach for All About Braising by Molly Stevens and Arabesque by Claudia Roden.
 
Camille17 October 15, 2014
It is perhaps a bit clichéd, but I go back time and time again to Joy of Cooking when I need a solid recipe
 
Annemarie S. October 15, 2014
I probably use the Americas Test Kitchen cookbook the most but there are a lot of close runner ups
 
courtney October 15, 2014
I reach for the giant America's Test Kitchen most often. My selection does need a boost, I love cookbooks but since they can be pricey I rely on the interweb.
 
Chris October 15, 2014
I really enjoy what ever happened to sunday dinner? it reminds me of my sunday dinners at my grandparents house.
 
Susan M. October 15, 2014
Momofuku Milk Bar. I like sweets....
 
KayLizzie October 15, 2014
Heidi Swanson's Supernatural Cooking books. Also Deborah Madison's books are in regular use.
 
Ms. T. October 15, 2014
Vegetable Literacy by D. Madison.
 
Emily K. October 15, 2014
Charlie Trotter cooks at home! I have used it so much over the last 10 years that the covers have actually fallen off. It's a great book.
 
Reets October 15, 2014
Nigel Slater's The Kitchen Diaries.
 
PieceOfLayerCake October 15, 2014
Funny you mention the Cake Bible....because if I need a cake, of any kind, for any occasion, I reach for it. Its SO comprehensive and has never failed me.
 
Kathy G. October 15, 2014
After eating at Bar Tartine in San Francisco and Prune in New York, I would love to try and duplicate some of their wonderful dishes.
 
jmorris11 October 15, 2014
One book that I love is The Way We Coook by Sheryl Julian and Jule Riven. These recipes were once in the Boston Globe and they never fail me. Several of the recipes are in my permanent repertoire.
 
Annabelle L. October 15, 2014
Marc Bittman anything + Joy of Cooking is never far!
 
Alexandra H. October 15, 2014
Humph-- that's a tough one! I'll often reference 4 to 5 books for inspiration, but lately, I'm loving David Lebovitz's "My Life In France" and Zoe Nathan's "Huckleberry." And the Contessa (Ina) is always a winner!
 
jhuguet October 15, 2014
The Ottolenghi cookbooks! While most of my books come from used bookstores, I always preorder his new releases.
 
Corcoran D. October 15, 2014
I love all my cook books but smitten Kitchen and Cooking Lights Fast East Fresh are always my go to books!
 
Kristi October 15, 2014
Ooo, that is a tough question. I suppose most recently it would be King Arthur's Whole Grain Baking. But there are many others that are regularly pulled from our wall of cookbooks.
 
haven October 15, 2014
Pretty much anything yotam ottolenghi or mark bittman!
 
Aoife October 15, 2014
Darina Allen's 'Forgotten Skills of Cooking' offers a fantastic approach to cooking and baking (700 recipes in total!). An approachable read including seasonal cooking with familiar and not-so familiar ingredients and tips on foraging! Here it is: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Forgotten-Skills-Cooking-time-honoured-recipes/dp/1856267881/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1413405491&sr=8-1&keywords=darina+allen
 
LauraGGamble October 15, 2014
Smitten Kitchen and Jerusalem.
 
Margo H. October 15, 2014
Smitten Kitchen cookbook!
 
mirabelle October 15, 2014
The Smitten Kitchen cookbook!
 
Reeshiez October 15, 2014
I'm Middle Eastern so I'm completely reliant on the Arab Table by May Bsisu.
 
Bridgette G. October 15, 2014
My absolute favorite cookbook is the Flavor Bible. I'm bad at following recipes, but love to make up my own. It is so helpful when I'm trying to come up with something for dinner with 'nothing to eat.'
 
K_Squared October 15, 2014
I cook a lot from The Italian Table, by Marc Vetri
 
Meg M. October 15, 2014
I've been focusing on beans and whole grains so I can keep my cholesterol levels falling...so I've been using Mark Bittman's "How to Cook Everything Vegetarian".
 
Rachael S. October 15, 2014
I love love love Heidi Swansons cookbooks - Super Natural Cooking and Super Natural Cooking Everyday. I have the main recurring recipes from each book and there are more I need to make because everything I have tried was fantastic. Plus they pushed me to experiment with unfamiliar ingredients. They basically turned going to the grocery store into a treasure hunt!
 
calendargirl October 15, 2014
The place I most often start is The Joy of Cooking, an edition from the late 60's which was a gift from my mother. I love Irma Rombauer's voice more than anything else, and even when I go on to consult another beloved source (Beard, Bittman, Cunningham, Claiborne, Franey...) I am energized, cheered and inspired by the good old Joy.
 
MGibson October 15, 2014
I have a busy schedule working 60 hours per week, so to unwind and indulge, I make ice creams using the recipes in Jeni's Splendid Ice Creams at Home because they're quick and easy to prep, cook, and freeze, and there's a lot of room for alterations. Ice cream cookbooks count, right? Catherine Lamb said it best (per tweet by Posie Harwood): "how @food52 delegates workday tasks: "There ain't no party like an ice cream party cause an ice cream party is MANDATORY" -@catandlamb"
 
Elizabeth B. October 15, 2014
Plenty has been my most recent go-to. I'm excited for Plenty More!
 
Mimi October 15, 2014
The Joy of Cooking - I use as a jumping off place...
 
Julie October 15, 2014
I love Urban Pantry - it's little and unassuming, but has some great recipes.
 
Sarah N. October 15, 2014
I love the old Moosewood cookbook-- always good ideas for something different!
 
Amy A. October 15, 2014
Oh man, I wish I could have a full library dedicated to only cookbooks. I've been cooking through Marcella Hazan's Classic Italian Cookbook most recently in anticipation of my trip to Italy in a month!
 
Marilyn D. October 15, 2014
McCall's Cookbook - sadly no longer in print.
 
Jessica O. October 15, 2014
Rosy's Pie and Pastry Bible is my latest go to for recipes. Amy Traverso's Apple Lover's Cookbook is also a very nice read. I have a lot of favorites from there.
 
Jana October 15, 2014
I keep coming back to the Sprouted Kitchen
 
Mari October 15, 2014
Big fan of Mimmo Corcione. He's an Italian home cook based in the Campania region of Italy. Not a cook "book" per se, but he provides a lovely and continuously growing collection of home cooking videos. Meraviglioso!

https://www.youtube.com/user/mimmocorcione
 
sjc_atx October 15, 2014
Ruhlman's Twenty, Better Homes New Cook Book (my first and still often used), and years of Saveur and Cooks Illustrated back issues.
 
Tiffany October 15, 2014
I frequent The Joy of Cooking the most, then any Nigel Slater book.
 
LM October 15, 2014
The book I pull out most frequently is Mark Bittman's How To Cook Everything -he really does cover pretty much anything one might need advice about. Great gift for someone with their first kitchen!
 
heyjude October 15, 2014
One of my first cookbooks, bought when it was published, The New York Times Cookbook by Craig Claiborne
 
Sarah October 15, 2014
My enormous old Cook's Illustrated hardcover. Its pages are stained and dogeared but it's my standby.
 
Nicole October 15, 2014
Dorie Greenspan's Baking From My Home to Yours and Danielle Walker's Against All Grain; yes, what a contradiction, no?! :)
 
Bubbys C. October 15, 2014
only 2? I'd have to say Paul Prudhomme's Louisiana cooking and Charcuterie by Ruhlman & Polcyn are my 2 go to's right now
 
Yeojin October 15, 2014
My favorite (and most used for inspiration as well as recipes) is "Ripailles" by Stephane Reynaud. My French host sister was the one who'd, originally, shown me her copy. I don't think that I'd ever coveted anything so much. It's this beautifully rustic book, both in recipes and photography, and I can't help but fall in love with every single page.
 
Dineindiva October 15, 2014
Plenty - I love everything in there. Just got Plenty More yesterday.
 
Laura G. October 15, 2014
Plenty, definitely. Honestly, it surprises me sometimes just how many of the recipes I make on a regular basis.
 
Lindsay F. October 15, 2014
Hard to choose just one, but Jacques Pepin's Fast Food My Way has been a mainstay for several years.
 
melissa October 15, 2014
A 1950 copy of Betty Crocker has always been a great place to get a fast base recipe and I can't do without The Flavor Bible for more challenging combinations (although that's a reference rather than a traditional cookbook)
 
Taylor L. October 15, 2014
My mom's old red and white checkered Better Homes cookbook has been my favorite since I was a child. The pancakes recipe page is especially "well loved."
 
Olivia M. October 15, 2014
The complete Bocuse cookbook. It has just about everything you could want!
 
Verene October 15, 2014
My go-to cookbook is Peter Berley's "Fresh Food Fast". The recipes are vegetarian, creative, and taste like they took much more time to prepare than they actually did.
 
Francesca M. October 15, 2014
How to cook everything by Mark bittman. A true God send.
 
LeeLeeBee October 15, 2014
The Essential New York Times cookbook. It's the first cookbook I bought when I graduated from college and started cooking, and it's never steered me wrong.
 
MJ October 15, 2014
I enjoy using cookbooks like Plenty and Jerusalem for the thoughtful flavor combinations, beautiful food photography, and most importantly - inspiration for how I can create my own tasty dishes.
 
Jenali October 15, 2014
The cookbook that I use most happens to be a 20th anniversary edition of Cook's Illustrated All-Time Best Recipes. I constantly refer to it for some of my favorite recipes. I used it yesterday to make corn bread and it turned out great.
 
Veronica F. October 15, 2014
Hands down, my go-to "cookbook has to be the The Flavor Bible. It's not a traditional cookbook per se, but it rarely makes it back to the bookshelf! Few meals get prepared without me referencing it and going, "I wonder if this might work with that." I've created so many inspiring and delicious dishes thanks to this tome. :)
 
Ashley S. October 15, 2014
I have this awesome off the wall cookbook that combines soup and art. Really neat old school recipes. I also love any America's Test Kitchen book, and the Complete Vegetarian Cookbook has some fun recipes to push me out of my comfort zone in a fun way!
 
Kate C. October 15, 2014
Hmm... that's a tough one. It's probably an old vegetarian cookbook without pictures even, that I can't remember the name of now. But if we called the internet a set of cookbooks, I would probably use smittenkitchen.com the most. I love her cookbook too, but still use more of her recipes from online - since there are so many more of them there!
 
Emily T. October 15, 2014
Super Natural Every Day by Heidi Swanson
 
Traci October 15, 2014
Grand Central Bakery!
 
Mona D. October 15, 2014
I use the original King Arthur book all the time.
 
Elise October 15, 2014
Jon Shook+Vinny Dotolo's 'Two Dudes One Pan' is essential in our home. I honestly haven't made anything from this book that I didn't like! Every recipe is easy to follow and the results are always delicious, never mind the fact that Jon and Vinny tuck in cute anecdotes throughout. It's also full of great tips for beginners!
 
kathleen October 15, 2014
I am a baker in CT and the cookbook "Flour," by Joanne Chang was given to me for inspiration. Needless to say, it has been my go-to. Whimsical, imaginative and very informative! Joanne draws inspiration from other recipes and chefs. She sifts in early experiences and childhood memories. The science backing up methods and ingredients never fails to amaze me and her knowledge and expertise definetly shows before and after execution! I may need another copy soon. Mine is now covered in flour and has been very "loved." ;) ( Her home made OREO recipe makes me feel like a kid again!)
 
Brooke October 15, 2014
I have a few favorites, but the one I refer to the most is the Cook's Illustrated Cookbook.
 
Nancy S. October 15, 2014
I use How to Cook Everything Vegetarian all the time!
 
Elana October 15, 2014
Yotam Ottolenghi's Jerusalem - never been disappointed
 
Cynthia M. October 15, 2014
I think I use Vegetarin Cooking for Everyone the most--but still need to get the newest addition--it'll be my third.
 
Shelley M. October 15, 2014
"Cooking From an Italian Garden.", especially in the summer.
 
YvonneF October 15, 2014
I love Bouchon Bakery! It's super challenging but the rewards are so good!!! (and it makes me look super sophisticated to all my friends)
 
gidget October 15, 2014
I use my Baked cookbooks every other week and Super Natural Everyday for soups all the time. Both give me great ideas for improvization, plus tasty dishes.
 
Amanda W. October 15, 2014
Plenty -- So I'm super excited for plenty more!
 
Alison M. October 15, 2014
My all time favorite cook book is Learning How to Cook with Marion Cunningham. I know It's a cookbook about how to learn to cook, but they are great simple recipes with a few ingredients that make incredible tasting meals. If you are tired in the evening don't reach for Rachel Ray's 30 meal cookbook reach for Marion Cunningham, you will feel much better about yourself and your meal.
 
cheese1227 October 15, 2014
The River Cottage Fish Book!
 
Klem-Mari C. October 15, 2014
I use Joy the Baker's first cookbook often. I often refer to Cake Ladies, a book about Southern Cake Ladies, for a beautiful Almond Cake recipe. The pages are sticky and everything.
 
lauren October 15, 2014
I love Baking Illustrated!
 
Meghan October 15, 2014
I'm a sucker for Nigel Slater's style. He brings all of food, story, family, history, fact, season, and beauty to the table, and has led me to appreciate what I cook and eat on a higher level than just 'food.' With that being said, my two favorites would have to be his "Tender" & "Ripe." They've taught me the joys of seasonal eating and the ephemeral beauty of how the earth nourishes us.
 
Evan October 15, 2014
Radically Simple by Rozanne Gold
 
Ginny M. October 15, 2014
New Southern Garden Cookbook by Sheri Castle. It gave me a whole new outlook on everyday cooking with vegetables.
 
pgraham October 15, 2014
Anna Olsen's Back to Baking
 
Lois October 15, 2014
I like to change it up...Canal House Cookbooks and the Food52 both volumes
 
Elizabeth G. October 15, 2014
Definitely Tartine Bread
 
Anne L. October 15, 2014
I can't name just one!
Super Natural Cooking by Heidi Swanson
China Moon Cookbook by Barbara Tropp
The Art of Mexican Cooking by Diana Kennedy
 
Nina E. October 15, 2014
McCalls Cooking School - an old cookbook, but one I use recipes from frequently.
 
Alison M. October 15, 2014
The book I woud use most would be the Bread Revolution. I have been experimenting with baking bread and more insight from bakers and more recipes makes everything better. Also the alt flour book looks awesome.
 
Katharine October 15, 2014
I use How to Cook Everything for reference, but more often search online!
 
Beth I. October 15, 2014
Without a doubt, How to Cook Everything Vegetarian by Mark Bittman. I love how he takes one base recipe and gives you 20 variations/suggestions. His recipes encourage the reader to feel confident in their cooking as he makes suggestions and often uses phrases like "to your liking."
 
Patrick Z. October 15, 2014
Hmm. Most used is probably Deborah Madison's "Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone." Even though I eat meat, her techniques and flavor combinations work *really* well.
 
Sarah B. October 15, 2014
I have been pretty obsessed with Mastering the Art of French Cooking for the past 3-4 years. My Grandma was raised by her French stepmother & Julia has taught me how to recreate the flavors my Grandma created but never wrote down
 
Ruth P. October 15, 2014
Graham Kerr
 
kmac343 October 15, 2014
A tie between The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook and Dinner: A Love Story. The former for weekends when I have time to whip up apple cider caramels and fancy scones, the latter for its easy (and often freezable!) meals.
 
weebok327 October 15, 2014
My absolute most-used cookbook is The Flavor Bible. When I'm looking at a kitchen full of ingredients, it helps me pick things that will work well together without feeling like I'm doing something "wrong."
 
emily October 15, 2014
Oh she glows!
 
Johanne M. October 15, 2014
Currently, the go to cookbook is My Paris Kitchen by David Lebovitz. So many great recipes, pretty pictures and sometimes laugh out loud funny
 
Linda October 15, 2014
Southern Living Our Best Five-Star Recipes
 
Mei K. October 15, 2014
Well, it is actually nomnompaleo although I'm not strictly paleo
 
KC H. October 15, 2014
I rely mostly on recipes that my Dad and I have curated over the years - a mix of our own and a few tried and trues copied from classic cookbooks and, of course, community cookbooks from our grandparents. But I would love to get my hands on Ben Mims' new Sweet and Southern cookbook!
 
ShawnieKelley October 15, 2014
It's a toss up lately between Patricia Wells' "Salad as a Meal" and David Lebovitz's "My Paris Kitchen"
 
Kara H. October 15, 2014
Sticky, Chewy, Messy, Gooey by Jill O'Connor. My go to for any dessert!
 
Monica S. October 15, 2014
When I was a Peace Corps volunteer in Ukraine, I used our cookbook (Babushka's Kitchen - a compilation from former volunteers and host country nationals) to make as many close approximations of American food as I could! Now that I've been home for some years, I turn to it for the recipes of Ukrainian dishes that take me back to wonderful memories: varenyky, cabbage rolls, borscht. Fall is a wonderful season to remember Ukraine!
 
eizelle October 15, 2014
The cookbook I use the most is What to Cook and How to Cook It by Jane Hornby.
 
Gina G. October 15, 2014
I use Danielle Walker's Meals Made Simple cookbook almost weekly! It has a ton of simple and healthy meals that are easy to make on busy weeknights. I also am a cookbook (and design book) hoarder.
 
Jhoanna October 15, 2014
Cook This Now. It helped a newbie cook like me get interested in and excited about seasonal cooking.
 
Natsu K. October 15, 2014
"The Joy of Cooking,"
 
rinamay October 15, 2014
Laurel's Kitchen
 
Rachel J. October 15, 2014
Currently, I'm obsessed with Joy the Baker's Homemade Decadence, but I've always turned to Heidi Swanson's 'Super Natural Every Day' and my mom always tells me to turn to the Joy of Cooking! Anything by Martha, as well... Basically I'm obsessed with cookbooks.
 
Hannah B. October 15, 2014
Bountiful! Or Sprouted Kitchen
 
Lauren October 15, 2014
In the SWEET Kitchen.
 
Matt October 15, 2014
Mexican Everyday!
 
Jackie P. October 15, 2014
I turn most often to Ina Garten's books. Classics already.
 
Ella H. October 15, 2014
The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook. It's the closest to my normal cooking.
 
Maja L. October 15, 2014
Ottolenghi's Plenty and Deborah Madison's Vegetable Literacy.
 
Sean D. October 15, 2014
Canal House Cooking
 
nedjed October 15, 2014
my favorite cook book is the joy of cooking and how to cook everything
 
Amanda P. October 15, 2014
my copy of Heidi Swanson's "Super Natural Every Day" has so many stains and dog ears from the amount that i have used it. it was what began my journey into exploring less-processed, seasonal cooking. i fell in love with these vegetarian recipes that can be adapted to what is in your pantry, and here way of making cooking do-able for everyone.
 
Stephanie C. October 15, 2014
Plenty - great for veggie dishes and I add some fish occasionally.
 
Kim H. October 15, 2014
The Picky Palate Cookbook is my go-to!!
 
Wendy S. October 15, 2014
The Joy of Cooking for basics, Smitten Kitchen for fresh takes on daily food, and Bouchon Bakery for inspiration.
 
alexia S. October 15, 2014
I turn most often to "The Joy of Cooking," several recipes are earmarked, dogeared and well-worn. In fact, it flips open on its own to the buttermilk pancake page.
 
Ordinary B. October 15, 2014
Lately my go-to cookbook is Ripe. But it varies by the month! :)
 
Martin M. October 15, 2014
David Chang's Momofuku cookbook is my go-to source for cooking inspiration!
 
Kathleen October 15, 2014
Julia Turshen and Gwyneth Paltrow's "It's All Good" and Bittman's "How to Cook Everything: the Basics."
 
Janet I. October 15, 2014
Also Jamie Oliver cookbook fan, for meals, technique, fun!
 
Emily October 15, 2014
Plenty by Ottolenghi! I got into a vegetable kick last year and have tried so many recipes out of this book! It's great!
 
CrepesofWrath October 15, 2014
So many awesome books! It's going to be hard to pick. I use Tom Colicchio's Think Like a Chef quite a bit - it's my go-to for how to cook something the best, most simple way possible. I also love Baked Expectations or the Mile End Deli cookbook for inspiration!
 
Sjm1988 October 15, 2014
There's food specked on almost every other page of my copy of Anne Willan's, The Country Cooking of France. Fantastic tarts and classic french fare, with all the basics broken down in the appendix. This book taught me how to cook.
 
Stephanie K. October 15, 2014
Oh She Glows Cookbook by Angela Liddon. I use it weekly!
 
Mandy A. October 15, 2014
The 1996 paperback version of Better Homes and Gardens cookbook is my most used because they have good, basic recipes that can be altered into a lot of different things. The second after that would be the Kuche Kochen and then the Real Thai. While the BH&G is my bread and butter, there's room for the others because sometimes I just want German, Russian, Italian, Thai/Asian, etc. rather than just normal stuff.
 
Ada F. October 15, 2014
I love Bittman's How to Cook Everything, and am cooking my way through April Bloomfield's A Girl and Her Pig.
 
Ileana M. October 15, 2014
How to Cook Everything!
 
Angela D. October 15, 2014
Carla Hall's Cooking With Love!
 
Melanie October 15, 2014
My most used cookbook is probably the very first red binder better homes and gardens classic (though a bit dated). If you could expand to include blog, then Smitten Kitchen is my go-to - never fails.
 
Panfusine October 15, 2014
Its a toss up since each and every one of these books is a treasure in itself.. but my vote would be for the baking books, by Rose Levy Beranbaum, Peter Reinhart & Dorie Greenspan.
 
aobermeyer October 15, 2014
I always turn to either Smitten Kitchen or The Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking, but I can't wait to get my hands on one of Ottolenghi's!
 
Allison H. October 15, 2014
It's a toss up between the America's Test Kitchen Cookbook and the True Food Kitchen Cookbook. Love them both!
 
alison October 15, 2014
The Joy of Cooking, which is falling apart after 40+ years.
 
Sarah D. October 15, 2014
I always look to Giada's cookbooks since she is a classic, Italian chef and I love pasta!
 
Rachel B. October 15, 2014
Bittman's classic How To Cook Everything is my most used and abused cookbook. I bought it my first year of marriage and still turn to it for guidance. He taught me to cook and I will always love him for that. I'm definitely going to be adding his HTCE Fast book son.
 
A K. October 15, 2014
i consistently turn to heidi swanson's super natural every day and ottolenghi's jerusalem, for inspiration and recipes.
 
laura October 15, 2014
Well Fed has been a go to lately. Paleo cookbooks have some delicious, delicious recipes even if you don't follow the diet!
 
Christine October 15, 2014
I have a ton of cookbooks but I would say the Cooks Illustrated cookbook that has all the recipes.
 
tjioe_chi October 15, 2014
I had to do a cook book purge, but the one I kept was Claudia Roden's Middle Eastern Cook Book.
 
Angie October 15, 2014
The Smitten Kitchen cookbook is the one we most frequently grab off the shelf. We also really enjoy Kim Boyce's Good to the Grain.
 
Cailin K. October 15, 2014
Whenever I'm looking to do some homey fall baking, my go-to is an old Betty Crocker cookbook. A classic apple pie recipe that brings me back to flouring and rolling pie crusts on the kitchen table with my mom.
 
Dee October 15, 2014
The cookbook I use the most is a super old classsic Betty Crocker cookbook I got from my mom.
 
eloise October 15, 2014
I am admittedly a bit of a cook book addict but probably the one I return to the most is Lorraine Pascale's "Fast, Fresh and Easy", the peri peri roast is AMAZING!
xxx
 
Erika P. October 15, 2014
How to Cook Everything -- it just seems to have the best basic recipes for everything under the sun.
 
Becky C. October 15, 2014
When I moved to the USA I couldn't bring many cookbooks with me. But the one that was not being left at home was Indian Every Day by Anjum Anand. Beautifully multi-layered recipes with an emphasis on simple preparation. Love it!
 
Wendy October 15, 2014
Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything is my first go to but Patricia Wells' Bistro Cookbook is a close second
 
maddiegeegs October 15, 2014
Smitten Kitchen or Super Natural Everyday - I think it's a tie!
 
Wendy October 15, 2014
Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything is my first go-to but Patricia Wells is a close second.
 
rose M. October 15, 2014
I find myself looking at James Beards American Cookery a lot lately.
 
BananaBoat October 15, 2014
I currently own one cookbook, so that's the one I use most! It's the Smitten Kitchen cookbook--one of my best Christmas gifts in a long time.
 
Melanie L. October 15, 2014
I love Real Simple for weeknight dinners - fast and easy with very few ingredients, usually what I have on hand already!
 
Maya M. October 15, 2014
It's so hard to say, because I flit around for recipes so often, but my most oft used in the past year is Vegetable Literacy, Veganomicon, and Jerusalem.
 
leslou October 15, 2014
Tender, Chez Panisse Vegetables, and (somewhat surprisingly) Melia Marden's Modern Mediterranean
 
ladyearl October 15, 2014
I am never disappointed when I turn to Art of Simple Food.
 
lich October 15, 2014
Gran Cocina Latina by Maricel Presilla. She's a historian, and a storyteller that acknowledges the influences of Europe, Africa, and Asia in what is now called "Latin cuisine". This is definitely a foodie's cookbook.
 
Cristina S. October 15, 2014
Tender + Ripe
 
sarabclever October 15, 2014
I use Ottolenghi and Tamimi's Jerusalem!
 
ladywild October 15, 2014
Joy of Cooking is still my go-to.
 
chiaralucia October 15, 2014
An Everlasting Meal! Also Amanda's New York Time Essential is riddled with little bookmarks. The River Cottage Series as well...
 
Somia October 15, 2014
I use the cookbook Jerusalem the most of all the cookbooks I possess. For baking, I freaking love Essentials of Baking by Williams-Sonoma (every recipe is a no-fail)
 
Maryanne October 15, 2014
The cookbook I still use the most is my Fanny Farmer. In fact, I'm on my 2nd copy because the first one wore out. These recipes may be basic, but I think they're a great starting point.
 
sweetlolo October 15, 2014
Lately, Ottolenghi's Jerusalem is the book I use most - every dish has been wonderful. But Joy of Cooking is still my old standby for all of the basics.
 
Chris K. October 15, 2014
This year, if not the internet and its many sites , I rely on The Joy of Cooking for basics and my favorite Around My French Table by Dorie Greenspan for its great style and easily achievable recipes, in fact I'm giddily awaiting her newest in a couple of weeks to complete the set.
 
LLStone October 15, 2014
A Girl and her Pig and Jerusalem.
 
Lauren October 15, 2014
My two favorite cookbooks that I use all the time are True Food Kitchen and Momofuku Milk Bar. What can I say I love to eat healthy most of the time but sweets are my weakness.
 
Stephanie October 15, 2014
The new Skinnytaste Cookbook and Thug Kitchen cookbook have been in use at my house constantly since they came out this month!
 
summersavory October 15, 2014
Does Tamar Adler's An Everlasting Meal count as a cookbook? It doesn't have many recipes, to be sure, but its philosophy, so to speak, is one that I try to put into practice in my kitchen all the time (and the recipe for root and stem pesto is also quite excellent, just saying).
 
chiaralucia October 15, 2014
Me too, me too! I teach at a tiny boarding school and having my students in 'Kitchen Workshop' read it, they love it too.
 
Barb I. October 15, 2014
Lately, it's been Jerusalem and My Paris Kitchen.
 
Liz October 15, 2014
The Art of Simple Food is one I return to over and over again, but often don't even need to look at because I have the recipes memorized :)
 
velvetdirt October 15, 2014
Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone by Deborah Madison is one of my favorite cookbooks.
 
Leize M. October 15, 2014
The Home Made series from Yvette van Boven
 
velvetdirt October 15, 2014
Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone by Deborah Madison is one of my favorite cookbooks.
 
Carly October 15, 2014
smitten kitchen
 
Alice October 15, 2014
I've been using "Vegetarian Dinner Parties" a lot recently, actually! The recipes are simple but really interesting, which is just the combination I want from a cookbook.
 
Lilliane October 15, 2014
Definitely the Re-bar cookbook which hails from the most talented restaurant in Victoria, Canada. Every recipe burst with imagination and flavour. It is my dirtiest and most disheveled cookbook if that's proof of anything. You must check it out!!
 
Miss H. October 15, 2014
i'm in love with Ottolenghi's Jerusalem. Recipes just make ingredients shine!
 
MS October 15, 2014
In the past year - Frannys: Simple, Seasonal Italian. Pasta technique, genius salads and gold standard pizza dough (and crostata dough!) recipes.
 
Avidan October 15, 2014
Toss up between Joy of Cooking and How to Cook Everything.
 
Kimster64 October 15, 2014
Hmm, the cookbook I use the most is usually my most recently purchased. But when I'm looking for tried and true, standard recipes I most frequently reach for Mark Bittman's "How to Cook Everything" because it covers, well everything!
 
tripletree October 15, 2014
I usually turn to a cookbook when I'm stumped for ideas at the last minute. Here are my go-to faves: Patricia Wells's Trattoria and Bistro Cooking, At Home with Madhur Jaffrey, and and the genius Paula Wolfert's Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean. I can always find something simple and delicious that doesn't overwhelm me.
 
GretaG October 15, 2014
I have to be honest and list my tried-and-true, the old Gourmet Cookbook. It was the first cookbook I ever purchased, and at the time, I couldn't think of a more comprehensive tome for my kitchen. To this day, it's the first book I reach for, regardless of whether I need inspiration for my next meal, or a classic recipe to impress.
 
Céline October 15, 2014
Great selection! Unfortunetely few of those books will be translated in French, so I can share my enthousiasm with my compatriots.
I use a lot Jerusalem lately.
 
scolere October 15, 2014
Nice selection, thanks for sharing! Recently I have been using Jerusalem a lot (duh) but always come back to Marion Cunningham's Good Eating. Oh her rules for "breakfast table civility and deportment" !
 
Maya October 15, 2014
Plenty. Can't wait for my copy of Plenty More to arrive :-)
 
Caroline October 15, 2014
While I have several cookbooks, I don't really use one more often than the other. If I have something basic that I never cooked before, I always turn to my trusty ATK cookbook. But most of the time I am using recipes right off the internet and/or magazines.
 
Michael R. October 15, 2014
The cookbook that I refer to the most is How to Cook Everything.
 
Fletch October 15, 2014
I'm currently in bed reading both Super Natural Everyday & Smitten Kitchen for ideas/inspiration. Love cookbooks with engaging stories & anecdotes!
 
isela October 15, 2014
I frequently turn to Rosa Mexicano by Josefina Howard.
 
DocLsk15 October 15, 2014
My two favorites sources of awe and inspiration at the moment are Buvette and Plenty.
 
striped B. October 15, 2014
super natural everyday:)
 
anw64681 October 15, 2014
Zomg. I am so excited about plenty more but I also live the kitchn! All of the above?
 
Fairmount_market October 15, 2014
Lately I've been cooking a lot from Fuchsia Dunlop's Every Grain of Rice. There are so many delicious and simply recipes and no duds.
 
Ayarir October 15, 2014
I love to use pinterest, but my favorite cookbooks are The Smitten kitchen, The family meal and Better homes :D
 
Daniel T. October 15, 2014
My old standby for Chinese food, Joyce Chen Cook Book
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
I met Joyce Chen when she was doing a cooking demonstration at Kitchen Bazaar in the D.C. area. Her daughter, Helen, has written several books, too. Lately I've been craving Helen's Cantonese Sweet & Sour Pork. It's very old school and I just have to have it at least once a year. It turns out perfectly every time. It's better than I've ever had in any restaurant. What are some of you favorite Joyce Chen recipes? I also like the Irene Kuo book, Mai Leung's book, Craig Claiborne's Chinese Cookbook, and most anything by Nina Simonds. Love her recipe for Beef Jantaboon Noodles.
 
AntoniaJames October 15, 2014
Ruhlman's "Ratio" gets regular use. I know, it's not a cookbook. I leaf through cookbooks for ideas, borrowing dozens of cookbooks each year from the library. (I prefer thoroughly researched, well-written older books with no photos, and in which any stories are about the recipes, not the author. Please, spare me the "me-me-me-ness" so popular for the past 15 years.) I "collect" recipes like crazy here on Food52. But seriously, there simply isn't a cookbook that I use "most. ;o)
 
Jenny October 15, 2014
Tough pick. Lately my favorite has been Moosewood's Low Fat Favorites.
 
Barbara H. October 15, 2014
The Canal House books.
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
I find Canal House hit-or-miss. The Cold Borscht in Vol. 1 is an absolute knockout (and I usually don't like beets). But the Curried Chicken Salad was a total dud. Their "Buttered Potato Salad" and their version of Bolognese meat sauce were nice for a change, but not my favorite versions of either of those dishes. What are some of your favorite recipes from Canal House? I'd like to try a few more from Canal House. I have volumes 1, 4, 6, and 7. Sometimes Canal House books show up heavily discounted at the Crate & Barrel Outlet store.
 
Hannah R. October 15, 2014
I like to use different cookbooks for different arenas of cookery- but I adore the Super Natural Cooking books by Heidi Swanson and the Sprouted Kitchen Cookbook by Sara and Hugh Forte!
 
Cindy L. October 15, 2014
Ina's books remain a favorite along with Martha Stewart's/ Love, love. love reading cookbooks, also, and the collections this fall seem very intriguing.
 
Sbro October 15, 2014
Currently, I'm addicted to Entice with Spice but I would gladly take Ina Garten as a sister wife, if I had the chance.
 
Bradley M. October 15, 2014
As a semi-pro baker, I've been constantly looking and re-looking through Tartine Book No. 3 for inspiration, ratios, and general bread know-how. And brilliance aside, the photography is jaw-dropping.
 
Freddurf October 14, 2014
I recently discovered Heidi Swanson's Super Natural Cooking and love it! Fast, easy recipies with ingredients I usually have on hand and the whole family enjoys.
 
labingha October 14, 2014
I use How to Cook Everything Vegetarian and when I need something more than Everything, I usually turn to the Smitten Kitchen's cookbook.
 
deucemom October 14, 2014
How to Cook Everything has the most post it notes. However, with soup season just starting, James Peterson's Splendid Soups has been on the counter each week.
 
Zombidanse October 14, 2014
I'm Heritage NOW. I use How to Cook Everything as a base for all sorts of things. An excellent resource.
 
Elise A. October 14, 2014
Elise

Melissa Clark's cookbooks are great, full of wonderful stories along with great recipes
 
sarahepardee October 14, 2014
Wow, I want every single one! Great roundup! Right now I'm cooking a lot out of Sarah Copeland's "Feast," it's great!
 
favouritewaitress October 14, 2014
I used to use Bittman's How to Cook Everything Vegetarian the most, but these days I've found myself grabbing Marcella Hazan's Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking more than anything.
 
JessieL October 14, 2014
Mexican Everyday, by Rick Bayless!
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
I tried one of his recipes for some sauce he was raving about made from dried smoked peppers that were kind of hard to find, and the recipe was rather involved, and didn't turn out tasting like anything I would ever make again. It wasn't really anything to write home about IMO. What have you liked a lot by Rick Bayliss that wasn't too involved/time-consuming? I'd like to try more of his recipes, but after that experience, I laid his book aside and moved on! I have his Mexican Kitchen book and possibly one other. I enjoy cooking from Penelope Casa's "Tapas" book. Her shrimp in almond sauce is so subtle and so Spanish and so good I've made it a number of times (the almonds are raw and ground up so the dish doesn't taste like what you might expect). It's subtly flavored with cinnamon and thyme and white wine.
 
Iman F. October 14, 2014
I've been using Ottolenghi's Jerusalem a lot lately!
 
Laura October 14, 2014
Jamie Oliver, Nigella, Ina , Pillsbury for oldies but goodies.
New Saviors in the kitchen are Ottolenghi, Deb Perlman , and anything to do with bread.
 
BakerK October 14, 2014
Holy cow! What a fantastic lineup of tantalizing new cookbooks. I don't even know where to begin. Of my ever-growing collection, I tend to turn to the veggie-focused Plenty (Ottolenghi) and Super Natural Everyday (Heidi Swanson) most often. They rarely lead me astray.
 
Amanda S. October 14, 2014
I have Alejandro Junger's Clean Eats which gets good use, but most of the time I use pinterest to find recipes. The only book that gets use year after year is an old Pilsbury cookbook from the late 60s. Best chocolate chip cookies ever.
 
reale October 14, 2014
Not since discovering the work of Marcella Hasan's some twenty-five years ago has a series of cookbooks had as big an impact on the the way I cook or eat as the cookbooks of Ottolenghi
 
Sam October 14, 2014
My go-to cookbook for anything from sweet to savory is the America's Test Kitchen Cooking School Cookbook. It provides fantastic direction on both the basics and more advanced techniques!
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
I think their recipe for Tiramisu is the best I've ever had. The creamy layers are flavored with dark rum, and it just turns out perfect every time. But unfortunately, I've had a number of duds from their magazine. Their version of Chinese Orange Beef that was featured on the cover of their magazine a few yrs ago was dreadful. Eileen Yin-Fei-Lo's version in her Chinese Banquet Cookbook is WAY better, as is the recipe in the Shun Lee Cookbook (the recipe that the New York restaurant invented back in the 1970s).
 
MBobinski October 14, 2014
Prune, of course.
 
sdschutz93 October 14, 2014
Plenty... I've made every recipe in that book and, as a vegetarian, I love it!
 
dali S. October 14, 2014
the best of america's test kitchen probably
 
EmilyC October 14, 2014
Lately, it's been Huckleberry. Actually, I'm surprised to not see it on this list! Love this new column, which will be both a blessing and a curse to those of us with cookbook addictions.
 
jamcook October 14, 2014
Oldies like Fanny Farmer, and Beard on Bread ,and Maida Heatter's baking Books. Not so Oldies , The Silver Palate Books, and new ones ...love Dorie Greenspan's Around My French Table, and all the Ottolenghis.
 
Mike October 14, 2014
Thai Food by David Thompson.
 
Bridgit C. October 14, 2014
It's difficult to say, but likely Healthy bread in five minutes a day. Cinnamon rolls AND pizza...
 
Linn October 14, 2014
Probably Baked: New Frontiers in Baking and Anne Burrell's Cook Like a Rockstar!
 
Shanny October 14, 2014
I always use my Joy of Cooking. In fact it is so well-used that it is falling apart.
 
miamineymo October 14, 2014
I have WAY too many cookbooks, but I just love Canal House Cooks Everyday.
 
Jenny October 14, 2014
My absolute "go to" and favorite cookbook is Dorie Greenspan's "Baking From My Home to Yours". It has never failed me!
 
Nikki P. October 14, 2014
I am a big baker, so I often reach for King Arthur Flour's Baking Companion. I also regularly use Deb Perelman's Smitten Kitchen Cookbook. Both are fantastic!
 
cathy October 14, 2014
Lately I've been turning to Jerusalem: A Cookbook. The flavors are all so fresh and authentic tasting, and the stories that accompany the recipes are worth reading even if you don't care for middle eastern cuisine.
 
Kiran October 14, 2014
I love Madhur Jaffrey's World Vegetarian; it seems like it has a recipe for everything and all the recipes I've tried have been great!
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
Almost every recipe I've tried by Madhur Jaffrey has written is a winner. I love her books. The cover photo recipe on the Quick & Easy Indian Cookbook for Chicken breasts and Chiles in a creamy sauce is out of this world.
 
chez_mere October 14, 2014
When I'm stumped about what to make, I turn to Mark Bittman's "How to Cook Everything." I sincerely believe it is one of the few cooking tombs that actually contains 100% useful information. Moreover, 3 years and many dinner parties later, I have yet to find a recipe that doesn't work.
 
JadeTree October 14, 2014
Because it's fall, Anna Thomas's Love Soup! The Spicy Lentil and Butternut Squash Soup, the pesto and goat cheese grilled cheese sandwiches, the Irish Soda Bread with orange and fennel, the rice salad thick with Greek yoghurt, fresh herbs and toasted nuts...love it!
Love this column, too! Marian is my fav writer and this is just catnip to cookbook lovers like me. And reminds me that the Piglet will be coming up in the new year...
 
Brenny October 14, 2014
Like many others who have responded to this question, I rely on food blogs for inspiration, but I do enjoy the recipes in The Essential Vegetarian Cookbook.
 
Vinni October 14, 2014
I use many books as guides but I most often return to "Izakaya: The Japanese Pub Cookbook" because it embodies the kind of cooking I like to do the most: variety of small plates with flair cooked in enticing, eye and mouth-grabbing ways. I use it as a guide to alter recipes and plate them in a novel manner.
 
missmertz October 14, 2014
I look at cookbooks everyday, but when it comes time to actually cook, I rarely use a recipe...the cookbook I use most is the amalgam of cookbooks I've looked at over the years, stored away in my brain! But Mangoes and Curry Leaves is a cookbook I cooked from quite a bit, to learn how to make authentic Indian food.
 
KathyPrice October 14, 2014
dinner a love story!!
 
magproctor October 14, 2014
660 Curries -- I've got a while before I hit my six hundred and sixtieth curry, but I'm making progress!
 
EmFraiche October 14, 2014
Lately it's been Marcella Hazan's Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking
 
Cori October 14, 2014
joy of cooking
 
tkcrossley October 14, 2014
Tartine #3 and all that whole grain goodness.
 
shabtastic October 14, 2014
Currently, it's Super Natural Cooking by Heidi Swanson. Also use Flour by Joanne Chang quite a lot.
 
JackieG October 14, 2014
I love thumbing through the Ottolenghi-Tamimi cookbooks. Even after many, many views, something new always catches my eye and inspires me. So excited for Plenty More!
 
Michael October 14, 2014
I'm Just Here for More Food, The Zuni Cafe Cookbook, and Country Cooking of France.
 
s October 14, 2014
I love all the Ottolenghi's, so overall his books are my most used. But the single book I use the most is Around My French Table...love that book!
 
Annette R. October 14, 2014
I'm on a do-it-yourself kick, so DIY by America's Test Kitchen, Make the Bread Buy the Butter by Jennifer Reese, and Making Artisan Pasta.
 
SuzannahJane October 14, 2014
New York Times Cookbook (the red one), Around My French Table and America's Test Kitchen
 
healthierkitchen October 14, 2014
Thank you for this Marian! Love the image of waiting in line in costumes for Ottolenghis books! I have to say that Jerusalem is the one I use the most lately. Maybe Plenty More will surpass...
 
jayaymeye October 14, 2014
I use Plenty quite a bit.
 
Dana N. October 14, 2014
Jerusalem is definitely the most well-loved on my shelf, but I still turn to Cook's Illustrated The New Best Recipe for basics.
 
Amy M. October 14, 2014
An older Betty Crocker. You can learn how to cook almost anything!
 
bching October 14, 2014
I've got 3 books in my kitchen and the other 200 or so tucked away on shelves in the guest room. In my kitchen are Barbara Kafka's Roasting, Barbara Kafka's Microwave Gourmet, and Rose Levy Beranbaum's Pie and Pastry Bible. I think Roasting is the one I use the very most not only because roast birds and beasts make a wonderful dinner, but because all of Kafka's lucid instructions for roasting fruits and vegetables make wonderful side dishes or all vegetable meals.
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
I have made Kafka's eggplant and tomato and ricotta napoleons from her microwave book a bunch of times. Once you get the timing down from your microwave its easy and delicious. I remember when the book review for her Roasting book ran in The Washington Post, it was kind of trashed because apparently everything tested turned out literally burnt because the instructions were for too much time at 500 degrees! What are your favorites from the microwave book?
 
TM October 14, 2014
I don't actually own any cookbooks. I find most of my recipes online or make up my own, but would LOVE to start a cookbook collection!!
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
If you have a Goodwill or a Salvation Army Family Store in your area, they are absolute goldmines for cookbooks, many of them brand new, and often just a dollar or two. And at Salvation Army, each Wednesday everything is 25% off the already rock bottom price! Salvation Army also has fabulous finds in hight quality cookware, if you recognize the good stuff. But you need to stop by these stores regularly because you never know what you're going to find and a lot of the people who shop there don't seem to recognize the French porcelain baking dishes and the enameled cast iron cookware as desirable. It's often an amazing shopping experience. Many lovely vintage items, too.
 
clara October 14, 2014
anything nigel slater.. "ripe," "tender." i have them all. but i'm partial to "the kitchen diaries." i also love molly wizenberg's "a homemade life."
 
Katherine October 14, 2014
The Joy of Cooking.
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
I remember my mother used to cook Sherried Chicken Breasts for us from the original Joy of Cooking. The recipe was hard to find in the index, but if you locate the recipe, its delicious, tender, creamy and crusty and boozy from sherry and brandy.
 
Jess G. October 14, 2014
I can never have enough cookbooks I'd have to say the cookbook(s) I use the most are "Joy of Cooking" and Bittman's "How to Cook Everything: The Basics" so I'm SUPER happy to see his newest cookbook in this roundup!
 
nikkipolani October 14, 2014
Recently, I've been digging into Nom Nom Paleo.
 
Katherine October 14, 2014
Marion Cunningham's Fannie Farmer Baking Book
 
WHB October 14, 2014
Love Jerusalem. Maybe I love it the most. Often turn to Deborah Madison (Vegetarian Cooking for Everyone, but have a few others).
 
Jamie Y. October 14, 2014
Barefoot Contessa's cookbooks have been my source of repeated favorite recipes!
 
katiethisdell October 14, 2014
Oh good question! Lately I've been picking up Cook Without a Book: Meatless Meals for some easy recipe formulas for all times of the day. I've found it to be a great resource. Deborah Madison's Vegetable Literacy has also come off the shelf quite a bit lately! There's several in your list that I hope to pick up this fall too :)
 
Emily S. October 14, 2014
Ever since it was gifted to me, the Smitten Kitchen Cookbook has been my go to. I feel as if Deb Perelman really gets me and always knows exactly what I'm in the mood to eat. The book now has its fair share of stains and I'm pretty sure that there are crumbs in the folds of every page. If you ever read Diana Noonan's "Best-Loved Bear" when you were a kid, you can see how this is my 'best-loved' cookbook. I don't have a kitchen right now (dorm rooms are the worst), but I still find myself wishing that I brought Deb's book with me to school just to read. Her delicious and innovative recipes are only rivaled by her storytelling.
 
Betty October 14, 2014
I have an extensive cookbook collection nearing 2k volumes and rarely repeat a recipe. However if I am in a hurry and want a very reliable result I mostly turn to any of Ina Garten's books. I find that when cooking for a crowd books by former caterers result in solid recipes and garner rave reviews. I also love my mother's old cookbooks (think Mastering...by Child and Buy it and Try it a book for Americans cooking in Japan) as she wrote comments in her cookbooks and it is like still hearing her voice after all of these years.
Betty B
 
kpeck October 14, 2014
oh my..how to choose! i would have to say Green Kitchen Stories...the recipes make us happy and healthy :)
 
FJT October 14, 2014
Lately I've been cooking a lot from Jamie's America but I also love Nigella Lawson's "How to Eat' and Nigel Slater's 'Appetite'
 
RachelG October 14, 2014
Jerusalem is my current go-to. The recipes are amazing!
 
Victoria S. October 14, 2014
Lately I've been using Keepers every week for my dinner planning!
 
Christine C. October 14, 2014
The cookbooks I use the most are The Oh She Glows Cookbook, and Super Natural Everyday.
 
Jane D. October 14, 2014
Every recipe I've ever cooked out of the original Barefoot Contessa Cookbook has been flawless. Ina forever.
 
tanager October 14, 2014
The cookbook I use the most: Bittman's How to Cook Everything.
 
Cindy C. October 14, 2014
king arthur flour baker's companion cookbook!
 
Susan B. October 14, 2014
I have so many it's hard to name one go-to favorite. If I'm baking, it's Dorie's Baking From My Home to Yours. If it's Italian, it's Marcella Hazan. If it's French, it's Julia Child. Middle Eastern, one of Ottolenghi's. I am moving out of my house for renevations for 6 months and I had to pack up my collection. I have 4 boxes in storage and one box (okay, plus a few more) going with me to my temporary housing. It was hard to decide which ones to take!
 
Aimee October 14, 2014
Bittman's How to Cook Everything
 
Andrew K. October 14, 2014
My tattered an spattered collection of Paula Wolfert cookbooks, especially Mediterranean Cooking, get most of my love (although Jerusalem is definitely coming up with a bullet).
 
Jessica O. October 14, 2014
Joy of Cooking is my go to :)
 
Joanne October 14, 2014
Recently, Mark Bittman's How To Cook Everything Vegetarian has been in heavy rotation.
 
aargersi October 14, 2014
The New Persian Kitchen, and Plenty, and Preservation Kitchen, and I am diving into Yucatan ..
to name a few

and apparently I can't count
 
dana October 14, 2014
Jerusalem is my most often used cookbook
 
merm October 14, 2014
And... I got the title wrong of course. Every Grain of Rice.
 
lwk October 14, 2014
Jerusalem, and still Maida Heatter's book of Great Chocolate Desserts!
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
I used to make the Chocolate Boule d'Neige recipe that Maida Heatter put in one of her books--I think she credits the recipe to Abby Mandel (I could be mistaken) but it takes all of one minute to blend it up in a food processor, then its baked in a small round bottom mixing bowl, and ultimately piped with whipped cream rosettes. I think she said it was Abby's "most favorite" chocolate dessert. Abby Mandel has a number of killer recipes that I still make, one being a shrimp and succotash salad with bacon and orange juice and buttermilk I think, that is off the charts good. I think it was in her Midwestern cookbook. I was so sad to discover recently that she had passed away. She devoted much of her career to developing books and recipes for the Cuisinarts company. I also got a killer smoked trout spread from one of her books that is so easy to whiz up in the food processor and its out of this world. She was a wonderful talent and I love the way her food tastes.
 
merm October 14, 2014
I've been cooking a lot from Fuchsia Dunlop's A Single Grain of Rice. Besides the recipes and the stories behind them being fantastic, I was surprised at the relatively small rotation of pantry ingredients needed. So, while learning to cook a cuisine that is not entirely familiar to me, I'm also continually getting a lesson in how just a few basics can be transformed into a seemingly endless variety of dishes. It's made me a better cook.
 
MikeJSmith October 14, 2014
Cookwise, Ratio, Around My French Table
 
skenny89 October 14, 2014
Since receiving The Hooiser Mama cookbook for Christmas, it has been my go to cookbook. I have yet to be let down by any of the recipes I have tried yet. I am definitely on team pie. A few Years ago it was the baking beautiful cookbook, Miette. The Toffee Recipe in that book has become legend among family and friends. I always make a huge batch as gifts for Christmas. When I first became a vegetarian at 14 and had to start cooking for myself a family friend gave me Quick Vegetarian Pleasures that was so handy I still make dozens of those creations to this day when I need a quick meal. As i write this I am craving the "Greek Pizza" recipe which is a pita bread topped with thinly slice onions rings, scatter with feta, sprinkle with oregano, crack on some black pepper, and finish with a drizzle of olive oil. place the pita under the oven broiler for a few mins keeping a close eye on it until the tops of the cheese start to brown and the thin onion slightly caramelizes. One of the best go to snacks I can think of. I could talk about cookbooks for days but I'll leave it there. p.s. has anybody tried Fried and True? how does it stack up?
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
Ooh that Greek Pizza sounds terrific. Do you split the pita in half? Do you ever use Bulgarian feta? It's wonderfully creamy and I like it heated in an adaptation of a Catalan dish I make---its just Bulgarian feta placed in a little cazuela dish, drizzled with Acacia honey (or whatever you have on hand), then topped with chopped walnuts and baked until it warms up. Killer as an appetizer to scoop onto toasted pita.
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
I dedicated myself to perfecting my technique on the Maple Walnut Fudge recipe in the old "Gourmet's Sweets" cookbook. It has always been my favorite fudge, but the store-bought stuff is a huge disappointment compared to the real thing. I first had this fudge when I lived in St Louis as a child; there was a store, I think it was Stix Baer & Fuller that had a lunch counter area. And they had the best hamburgers in the world (the BEST!). And Maple Nut Fudge. My mother would buy us a tiny little box that maybe had 8 little squares of fudge and I remember is was like $2 in 1964 and we thought it was off the charts expensive. But there was nothing else in the world quite like it. Once you get the knack of making it yourself, it's a wonderful feeling of accomplishment. I don't know anybody who can make fudge like this anymore. I feel like I'm the only one left. And it makes a lot (2 lbs) its great for holiday gift giving. People go wild for it.
 
jessmarsden October 14, 2014
Ottolenghi's Plenty!
 
Suzanne October 14, 2014
I use Bon Appetit's Fast Easy Fresh cookbook the most after my grandmother's community cookbook.
 
Bee October 14, 2014
I still refer to the Joy of Cooking every now and then. For Thai cooking, Simple Thai Food by Leela P. is becoming a favorite.
 
Megan October 14, 2014
Baking From My Home to Yours, by Dorie Greenspan. Love her, and all her books. She's so affable, and it really comes across in her writing.
 
Sean October 14, 2014
I usually search online since I don't have a cook book which I feel confident enough in to choose any old recipe from.
 
linzarella October 14, 2014
Well, not counting the Food52 cookbook, of course, I am a big fan of Marcella Hazan's Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking. Her recipes thorough and delicious, but more than that, I love the way she pushes readers to cook with all their senses, looking for cues of color, listening for a certain sizzle, smelling for caramelization, etc. I carry her admonishments with me in all my cooking, Italian and otherwise.
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
Has anyone made Marcella's fry batter from the Marcella Says book? She said it was the best crispiest batter in the world and its nothing but flour and water--no kidding. I never got the recipe to turn out at all, and I tried more than once. Can't figure out what I'm doing wrong.
 
nannydeb October 14, 2014
Does the Flavor Bible count? Besides that I have been using Plenty a lot and sometimes I just look at the pictures...
 
Pam K. October 14, 2014
Ottolenghi's Plenty - I use it all the time for new recipe inspiration, whether it's just for me or for a whole dinner party!
 
Ellen October 14, 2014
Appetite For Reduce, Isa Chandra Moskowitz.
 
Sue October 14, 2014
Wow, I'm addicted to cooking off the blogs on the internet now.....but the cookbook I use the most would probably be Heidi Swanson's, super natural every day.
 
Dawn S. October 14, 2014
The Fannie Farmer cookbook.
 
Joy H. October 14, 2014
I use Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything the most; it's an awesome reference!
 
GenevaK October 14, 2014
Currently it's Secrets of the Best Chefs.
 
cblanchard October 14, 2014
We have two Tyler Florence cookbooks that we like because they provide very simple basic recipes to use as a springboard for experimentation. I think their names are Tyler Florence's Ultimate, and Family Meal.
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
The chicken wings with curry paste, lime, and cilantro in Florence's Ultimate book are my absolute favorite wings dish in the world. But his timing for baking the wings was way off. I just fry them, but if you have that book, I can't recommend that wing dish highly enough. His mother-in-law's potato salad is nothing to sneeze at, either. It's isn't my very favorite recipe, but its definitely one of my best potato salad recipes. I think its called Tolan's Mother's Potato Salad. So good and rich, just the way I like it.
 
Abby S. October 14, 2014
I'd say it's a tie between Jerusalem, the Bon Appetit Cookbook, and the Smitten Kitchen cookbook. These look amazing!
 
Alicia October 14, 2014
Vegetables Every Day by Jack Bishop - simple recipes to incorporate more vegetables into every meal.
 
georgina October 14, 2014
How to Cook Everything by Mark Bittman. I'm not an experienced cook and this book covers the basics but allows me to experiment :)
 
StaceyMoreno October 14, 2014
Vegetable Literacy by Deborah Madison is my go to when I don't know what to do with my CSA goodies.
 
Cindy October 14, 2014
I love, love, love cookbooks! The one cookbook I have gone back to most often is probably Radically Simple by Rozanne Gold. Though I would love to spend my days in the kitchen cooking up wonders, I don't have much time during the week and this cookbook has delivered many tasty dinners in no time! A great book to have on hand for those of us who like to eat well but are pressed for time most days.
 
JohnL October 15, 2014
I have not been a fan of her 3-ingredient books. But she does have one book that has a number of super delicious "regular" recipes, I forget the name of the book but if anyone is interested, I'll get it. She has an amazing sandwich called RRBBLT (I think it stands for rare roast beef bacon lettuce & tomato) which is a huge triple decker on rye with a dressing made with mayo mixed with barbecue sauce, and there are French's fried onions from the can in this sandwich--don't laugh. It is one of my very favorite roast beef sandwiches. And it's actually not that heavy. Everybody I've served it to has loved it. She also has a Crab Louis Drambuie that is a knockout. And several other wonderful little recipes in that book. I think she is very talented, I just wish somebody would recommend some of her 3-ingredient recipes to me, and I 'd try some of them.