Fall Cookbooks
August 25, 2017 by JennyEarlier this summer, I shared two comprehensive lists – highlighting books released in July and August and then a large breakdown of key cookbooks that will be published from September through November. Today, I wanted to provide you with a more manageable compilation. (Confession: this list was three times as long and I made cuts – then it was twice as long and I made further cuts. It was a painful process.)
As usual at this time of year, all the major food websites have shared their hot picks which usually consist of a list of books far less in number than the the one that follows. We are cookbook obsessed at Eat Your Books and, accordingly, our list will be longer.
If you are planning to purchase any of these books for yourself or as gifts, please use the Buy Book link as we will receive a small affiliate fee that will allow us to index more books. A note: some titles are being released in the UK and then later in the US – but now with sellers like Book Depository (one of our affiliate sellers) you don’t have to wait unless you prefer the US version.
Stay with me, here we go.
Mexico: A Culinary Quest by Hossein Amirsadeghi captures the essence and spirit of Mexican food history as well as a wide range of contemporary cooking styles. The lively texts are accompanied by more than 1000 specially commissioned photographs celebrating not only the cuisine but also the rich culture of which it is part. This book is stunningly epic – I just received it yesterday and am poring through it.
Bäco: Inspired Recipes from the Heart of Los Angeles by Josef Centeno and Betty Hallock is from the chef credited with capturing the myriad tastes of Los Angeles on the plate. Recipes span from simple to show stopping, exploring sauces, soups, mains, salads, and desserts, too.
Hong Kong Diner: Recipes for
Baos, Buns, Hotpots and More by Jeremy Pang is the first
cookbook to explore the east-meets-west diner food crossover of
Hong Kong cuisine which draws on everything from classic Chinese to
America’s west coast to French Vietnamese. This book represents
comfort food at its finest: Beef brisket noodle soup sits alongside
Peanut butter French toast, Claypot rice beside Savoury doughnuts,
Pineapple buns next to Milk tea, and he expertly brings together in
this book the very best dishes that the city has to offer. Hong
Kong Diner is being released in the UK in September and then the US
in October.
Made at
Home by Giorgio Locatelli is a colourful collection of the food
that the world famous chef loves to prepare for family and friends.
With recipes that reflect the places he calls home, from Northern
Italy to North London or the holiday house he and his wife Plaxy
have found in Puglia, this title is a celebration of favourite
vegetables combined in vibrant salads or fresh seasonal stews,
along with generous fish and meat dishes and cakes to
share.
Sweet by Yotam
Ottolenghi and Helen Goh brings fresh, evocative ingredients,
exotic spices and complex flavourings – including fig, rose petal,
saffron, aniseed, orange blossom, pistachio and cardamom – to
indulgent cakes, biscuits, tarts, puddings, cheesecakes and ice
cream in 110 innovative recipes.
Feasts by Sabrina Ghayour is the highly anticipated follow up to the award-winning Persiana and number one bestseller Sirocco. Here Sabrina shares a delicious array of Middle-Eastern dishes from breakfasts to banquets and the simple to the sumptuous. Sabrina is one of those authors whose books I must have and was the subject of my latest Flashback Friday.
Myers + Chang at Home: Recipes from the Beloved
Boston Eatery by Joanne Chang shares recipes that are
bursting with flavor, are meant to be shared, and anyone can make
them at home – try Dan Dan Noodle Salad, Triple Pork Mushu
Stir-fry, or Grilled Corn with Spicy Sriracha Butter from the
popular Boston hotspot.
A Grandfather’s Lessons: In the
Kitchen with Shorey by Jacques Pépin shares recipes that the
world famous chef has taught his most charismatic pupil, his
granddaughter – “food that is plain, but elegant, and more than
anything, fun.” Jacques events are now on our calendar for both signings and
Sur la Table events. This book is absolutely gorgeous with step
by step photographers and the love of a granddaughter and
grandfather shining through in every page.
The Half Baked Harvest Cookbook:
Recipes from My Barn in the Mountains by Tieghan Gerard shares
the popular blogger’s fresh take on comfort food, stunning
photography, and charming life in the mountains. I am really
looking forward to this title as Tieghan has a knack for punching
up the ordinary and transforming it into something special. This
book is absolutely gorgeous – I want to cook the whole book.
At My Table: A Celebration of
Home Cooking by Nigella Lawson is coming to the UK this
September. Nigella says it best: ‘Our lives are formed by memories,
and the focus of mine is the food I’ve cooked and the people I’ve
cooked for, the people who have sat at my table, as well as the
other tables I’ve eaten on, from the blue formica of my childhood,
to the mottled zinc that is the nexus of my life now. This book,
like all the books I’ve written and all the cookery books I’ve
read, is not just a manual, but a collection of stories and a
container of memories.’
Orange Blossom & Honey:
Magical Moroccan Recipes from the Souks to the Sahara by John
Gregory-Smith details the author’s travels into the heart of the
High Atlas Mountains to learn the secrets of traditional lamb
barbecue, then his journey north, through the city of Fes, where
the rich dishes of the Imperial Courts are still prepared in many
homes. From here he continued on to the Rif Mountains, where rustic
recipes are made with the freshest seasonal produce. I am a huge
fan of Gregory and am excited that another book is coming our
way.
Federal Donuts: The (Partially)
True Spectcular Story by Michael Solomonov, Steven Cook, Tom
Henneman, and Bob Logue and Felicia D’Ambrosio shares the story of
how Federal Donuts was created along with recipes. Strawberry
lavender, guava poppy, pomegranate Nutella, and salted tehina are
just a few of the imaginative flavors featured in this book. Also
included are all the tips needed for making foolproof donuts at
home. There is even a bonus recipe for the other specialty of
“Fednuts”: shatteringly crisp Korean-style fried chicken.
The Home Cook: Recipes to Know
by Heart by Alex Guarnaschelli is an all-in-one cooking bible
for a new generation with 300 recipes for everything from simple
vinaigrettes and roast chicken to birthday cake and
cocktails.
JapanEasy: Classic and Modern
Japanese Recipes to (Actually) Cook at Home by Tim Anderson
offers an introduction to the world of Japanese cooking via some of
its most accessible (but authentic) dishes. I am a fan of Anderson
– and love his first book Nanban – this should be great.
My Rice Bowl: Korean Cooking
Outside the Lines by Rachel Yang and Jess Thompson is a
cookbook with 75 recipes based on the author’s deeply comforting
Korean fusion cuisine, inspired by cultures from around the world.
As co-owner of the popular Seattle restaurants, Joule, Trove, and
Revel, and Portland’s Revelry, chef Yang delights with her unique
Korean fusion – think noodles, dumplings, pickles, pancakes, and
barbecue. In the cookbook you’ll find the restaurants’ kimchi
recipe, of course, but there’s so much more – seaweed noodles with
crab and crème fraîche, tahini-garlic grilled pork belly, fried
cauliflower with miso bagna cauda, chipotle-spiked pad thai,
Korean-taco pickles, and the ultimate Korean fried chicken (served
with peanut brittle shards for extra crunch).
Homegrown: Cooking from my New England Roots by
Matthew Jennings honors the traditional foods of New England
while turning them on their head: maple flavors the dressing of a
Little Gem lettuce salad as well as the dipping sauce for
dumplings, molasses and cider are used to marinate chicken wings, a
blueberry sauce accompanies a roasted lamb dish, and Moxie (the
official soft drink of Maine) flavors beans and short ribs. This is
a stunning cookbook that deserves the accolades it will surely
receive.
Zingerman’s Bakehouse: Best-Loved Recipes for Baking People Happy by Amy Emberling and Frank Carollo is the must-have baking book for bakers of all skill levels. Since 1992, Michigan’s renowned artisanal bakery, Zingerman’s Bakehouse in Ann Arbor, has fed a fan base across the United States and beyond with their chewy-sweet brownies and gingersnaps, famous sour cream coffee cake, and fragrant loaves of Jewish rye, challah, and sourdough. It’s no wonder Zingerman’s is a cultural and culinary institution. Now, for the first time, to celebrate their 25th anniversary, the Zingerman’s bakers share 65 meticulously tested, carefully detailed recipes in a beautiful hardcover book featuring more than 50 color photographs and bountiful illustrations.
Smitten Kitchen Every Day: Triumphant and Unfussy New
Favorites by Deb Perelman shares more than 100 new,
easy-to-cook, impossible-to-resist recipes from the beloved blogger
(indexed
here) and New York Times best-selling, award-winning author of
The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook. A perfect gift
for your mom, your friends, your boss, or yourself.
Istanbul and Beyond: Exploring
the Diverse Cuisines of Turkey by Robyn Eckhardt takes readers
on an unforgettable epicurean adventure, beginning in Istanbul,
home to one of the world’s great fusion cuisines. From there, they
journey to the lesser-known provinces, opening a vivid world of
flavors influenced by neighboring Syria, Iran, Iraq, Armenia, and
Georgia. From village home cooks, community bakers, café chefs,
farmers, and fishermen, they have assembled a broad, one-of-a-kind
collection of authentic, easy-to-follow recipes – many of which
have never before been published in English. I tested a few recipes
from this title and they were delicious. Robyn has a number of events
scheduled to celebrate this book.
Sweet by Yotam Ottolenghi
and Helen Goh is coming to the US this month and was released last
month in the UK. The pastry chef turned international cooking
sensation shares this book entirely filled with delicious baked
goods, desserts, and confections starring his signature flavor
profiles and ingredients including fig, rose petal, saffron, orange
blossom, star anise, pistachio, almond, cardamom, and
cinnamon.
Super Tuscan: Heritage Recipes
from Our Italian-American Kitchen by Debi Mazar and Gabriele
Corcos shares over 100 tasty recipes, Debi and Gabriele share
entertaining anecdotes, useful tips, and day-to-day life in their
household with over 125 stunning photographs. Super Tuscan will
inspire you to make cooking a daily experience in your family life
and live la dolce vita wherever you are. I am a huge fan of
Gabriele and Debi – their first book Extra Virgin – is amazingly good. I’ve made
dozens of recipes with no fails and myraid compliments.
Feed the Resistance: Recipes +
Ideas for Getting Involved by Julia Turshen is a practical and
inspiring handbook for political activism – with recipes. As the
millions who marched in January 2017 demonstrated, activism is the
new normal. When people search for ways to resist injustice and
express support for civil rights, environmental protections, and
more, they begin by gathering around the table to talk and plan.
These dishes foster community and provide sustenance for the mind
and soul, including 30 of the healthy, affordable recipes Turshen
is known for, plus 10 recipes from a diverse range of celebrated
chefs.
River Cafe 30 by Ruth Rogers
and Rose Gray is a celebration of an iconic restaurant on its
thirtieth birthday. This bold and beautiful cookbook has over 120
recipes – revisiting favourites from the first iconic River
Cafe blue cookbook, updated for home cooks today, and
introducing 30 new recipes, with new tips and anecdotes.
The Grand Central Market
Cookbook: Cuisine and Culture from Downtown Los Angeles by
Adele Yellin and Kevin West delivers over 85 distinctive recipes,
plus spectacular photography that shows off the food, the people,
and the daily bustle and buzz of the Market. Stories about the
Market’s vibrant history and interviews with its prominent
customers and vendors dot the pages as well.
David Tanis Market Cooking:
Recipes and Revelations, Ingredient by Ingredient by
David Tanis is about seeking out the best ingredient and exploring
the best ways of cooking it, pulling from all the world’s great
cuisines. So whether it’s Louisiana Dirty Rice, Persian Jewel Rice,
Chinese Sticky Rice, Arroz Valenciana, or Italian Risotto, you
learn the qualities of each ingredient (the long and the short of
it!) and the best methods and recipes for showcasing what makes it
special.
The Modern Cook’s Year by
Anna Jones is the long-awaited new cook book from the rising food
star who has authored A Modern Way to Eat and A
Modern Way to Cook. The
Modern Cook’s Year will be filled with hugely-inventive, easy
recipes that will continue to transform vegetarian main meals into
vibrant, energising food that everyone wants to eat.
Kristen Kish Cooking: Recipes
and Techniques by Kristen Kish and Meredith Erickson shares
more than 80 recipes from the Top Chef that celebrate impeccable
technique and bridge her Korean heritage, Michigan upbringing,
Boston cooking years, and more.
The Cherry Bombe Cookbook by Kerry Diamond and
Claudia Wu shares selected recipes from the writers of the
quarterly Cherry Bombe. The Cherry Bombe team asked a list of
influential women for their most meaningful recipes. The result is
a beautifully styled and photographed collection that you will turn
to again and again in the kitchen.
The Juhu Beach Club Cookbook:
Indian Spice, Oakland Soul by Preeti Mistry brings the outsized
opinions and culinary daring of the chef/owner of Oakland’s Juhu
Beach Club, to the page. This collection of street food, comfort
classics, and restaurant favorites blends cuisines from across
India with American influences to create irresistible
combinations.
Guerrilla Tacos: Recipes from
the Streets of L.A. by Wesley Avila and Richard Parks III is
the definitive word on tacos from native Angeleno Wes Avila of
Guerrilla Tacos, who draws on his Mexican heritage as well as his
time in the kitchens of some of the world’s best restaurants to
create taco perfection.
The Artful Baker: Extraordinary
Desserts From an Obsessive Home Baker by Cenk Sonmezsoy is a
collection of more than 100 extraordinary desserts – all with
photos and meticulous instructions – by the creator of the
internationally acclaimed blog Cafe Fernando.
Lidia’s Celebrate Like an
Italian: 220 Foolproof Recipes That Make Every Meal a Party by
Lidia Matticchio Bastianich and Tanya Bastianich Manuali gives us
220 fantastic recipes for entertaining with that distinctly
Bastianich flare. From Pear Bellinis to Carrot and Chickpea Dip,
from Campanelle with Fennel and Shrimp to Berry Tiramisu – these
are dishes your guests will love, no matter the occasion. Here,
too, are Lidia’s suggestions for hosting a BBQ, making pizza for a
group, choosing the perfect wine, setting an inviting table, and
much more.
State Bird Provisions: A
Cookbook by Stuart Brioza and Nicole Krasinski and JJ Goode is
the debut cookbook from one of the country’s most celebrated and
pioneering restaurants, Michelin-starred State Bird Provisions in
San Francisco.
Downtime: Deliciousness at
Home by Nadine Levy Redzepi blurs the lines between everyday
and special occasion cooking, elevating simple comfort food flavors
to elegant new heights. When you’re married to Noma’s Rene Redzepi
you never know who might drop by for dinner…So Nadine Redzepi has
developed a stripped-down repertoire of starters, mains, and
desserts that can always accommodate a few more at the table,
presenting them in a stylish yet relaxed way that makes guests feel
like family – and makes family feel special every single day.
Dinner in an Instant: 75 Modern
Recipes for Your Pressure Cooker, Slow Cooker, and Instant Pot
by Melissa Clark – it’s InstantPot and Melissa Clark and should be
a go-to for all of us under Instant Pot’s spell.
Elizabeth Street Cafe by Tom
Moorman and Larry McGuire and Julia Turshen shares recipes from the
French-inspired Vietnamese restaurant located in the cultural hub
of Austin, Texas – recommended by everyone from locals to Bon
Appetit to The New York Times. Please remember Eat Your Book
members receive 30% off Phaidon titles using the link
provided.
wd~50: A Restaurant by Wylie
Dufresne and Peter Meehan is the first cookbook from one of the
world’s most groundbreaking chefs and a pioneering restaurant on
the Lower East Side – the story of Wylie Dufresne’s wd~50 and the
dishes that made it famous.
Bringing It Home: Favorite
Recipes from a Life of Adventurous Eating by Gail Simmons is
the long-awaited book from the Top Chef judge. From her travels,
where she tries different dishes and keeps detailed notes on them,
to her culinary adventures with the world’s most notable chefs on
Top Chef, she is always thinking: “how can I bring this dish home
to my kitchen?” She then makes the recipe approachable with
accessible ingredients so it can be made in a short time for a
family dinner.
Pok Pok Drinking Food of
Thailandby Andy Ricker and JJ Goode is a cookbook
featuring the rich and varied drinking food of Thailand (and the
drinks it’s consumed with), with 50 recipes and travelogue-like
essays, inspired by Whiskey Soda Lounge, Ricker’s Portland, Oregon,
restaurant. I’ve been waiting for this since Pok Pok
was published.
Night + Market: Delicious Thai
Food to Facilitate Drinking and Fun-Having Amongst Friends by
Kris Yenbamroong shares the author’s brash style of spicy, sharp
Thai party food by stripping down traditional recipes to wring
maximum flavor out of minimum hassle. Whether it’s a scorching hot
crispy rice salad, lush coconut curries, or a wok-seared pad Thai,
it’s all about demystifying the universe of Thai flavors to make
them work in your life.
Autentico: Simply Delicious
Recipes for Authentic Italian Dishes by Rolando Beramendi
details how to make classic dishes from Spaghetti Cacio e Pepe to
Risotto in Bianco and Gran Bollito Misto as they are meant to be –
not the versions that somehow became muddled as they made their way
across the globe. Among the 120 recipes, you’ll find Baked Zucchini
Blossoms filled with sheep’s milk ricotta; Roast Pork Belly with
Wild Fennel; Savoy Cabbage Rolls made with farro and melted
fontina; Orecchiette with Sausage and Broccoli Rabe; Risotto with
Radicchio; and a Lamb Stew with ancient Spice Route flavors that
have roots from the times of Marco Polo and could have been served
to the de’ Medici during the Renaissance. And of course, there are
dolci (desserts): Summer Fruit Caponata, Meringata with Bitter
Chocolate Sauce, and a simple, moist, and succulent Extra Virgin
Olive Oil Cake. Colored by the choicest ingredients from the shores
of Italy and beyond, the pages of Autentico offer a rich taste of
the Italy’s history, brought to life in the modern kitchen.
Modernist Bread: The Art and Science by Francisco Migoya and Nathan Myhrvold is the bread baker’s Disneyland in a five book set. The epic Modernist Cuisine set (that I am still waiting for a fairy godmother to make appear) is still taunting me. I was fortunate enough to see a digital copy of this masterpiece and all I can say is – spectacular.
Eleven Madison Park: The Next Chapter (Deluxe Edition) by Daniel Humm and Will Guidara reflects on the last eleven years at Eleven Madison Park, the period in which this singular team garnered scores of accolades, including four stars from the New York Times, three Michelin stars, seven James Beard Foundation awards, and for Chef Humm, the 2015 chefs’ choice award from a worldwide jury of his peers. In two highly appointed volumes, the authors share more than 100 recipes, stunning photographs, lush watercolor illustrations, and – for the very first time – personal stories from Chef Humm describing his unparalleled culinary journey and inspiration. Only 11,000 copies of this deluxe slipcase collection have been printed, and each edition is numbered and hand signed by the authors.
In October, exclusively through Sur la Table, Jacques Pépin’s My Menus: Remembering Meals with Family and Friends will be available. A beautiful book to share your menus and special meal notations. A perfect gift for the entertainer.
Comfort: Food to Soothe the Soul by John Whaite is a
collection of enticing recipes will have you cooking up a
comforting feast in the kitchen. Chapters are divided by comfort
cravings, including Something Crunchy; Something Spicy; Something
Pillowy; Something Cheesy and, of course, Something Sweet. Recipes
include Breakfast Ramen, Devil Curry, Crab & Sriracha
Mac’n’Cheese, Lemon & Pea Barley Risotto, Peanut Butter
Brownies and Cinnamon Knots.
Tuscany: Simple Meals and Fabulous Feasts from
Italy by Katie and Giancarlo Caldesi – it’s the Caldesis – to
me all their books are must haves. This title takes readers on a
culinary journey through a Tuscan day. The pace of both life and
cooking in Tuscany is slow and calm. Breakfasts are considered,
lunch often eaten at home with family, and weekend dinners a
feast.
Meyer’s Bakery: Bread and baking
in the Nordic kitchen byClaus Meyer teaches us to bake the
perfect baguette or scone, knead our own spelt loaf or create the
New York classic, the bagel. Turn your hand to pretzels and naan
bread, or indulge in sugary churros and madeleines. Alongside the
recipes, Claus gives tips and tricks for achieving best results,
with explanations of the best flour and equipment to use.
Photographed step-by-step instructions explain each baking
technique, while troubleshooting sections provide advice.
Containing 80 foolproof recipes from the man who is taking New York
by storm the Nordic way.
Moto: The Cookbook by Homaro
Cantu represents the decade he the master ran the restaurant – 2004
until 2014 – with ten ground-breaking dishes that were served each
year. In addition to the recipes, the book traces Cantu’s
development from a young chef opening his first restaurant to a
groundbreaking culinary mind at the forefront of high-end
cuisine.
Bread is Gold by
Massimo Bottura is the first book to take a holistic look at the
subject of food waste, presenting recipes for three-course meals
from 45 of the world’s top chefs. These recipes, which number more
than 150, turn everyday ingredients into inspiring dishes that are
delicious, economical, and easy to make. Please remember Eat Your
Book members receive 30% off Phaidon titles when using the
link provided.
The Tivoli Road Baker by Michael James and
Pippa James shares the knowledge that goes into creating standout
bread and pastries. The mission is to make these recipes accessible
for people who are new to the art while also including tips, ideas
and inspiration to challenge more skilled cooks and bakers.
Bourke Street Bakery: All Things
Sweet: Unbeatable Recipes from the Iconic Bakery by Paul Allam
and David McGuinness is the companion to the definitive and
international bestselling bread bible, Bourke Street Bakery. Step-by-step photography
accompanies the triple-tested recipes for the pastries, cakes,
tarts, cookies and confectionary of your dreams. This collection
represents years of testing, adapting and refining of the recipes,
so now readers at home can be sure that they are set to bake the
perfect treat every time. It’s destined to become another instant
classic.
Kachka: A Return to Russian
Cooking by Bonnie Frumkin Morales is the first cookbook from
Portland’s nationally acclaimed Russian restaurant. The author says
it will be “very closely related to what we do at the restaurant,
obviously with the home cook in mind.”
The Sullivan Street Bakery
Cookbook by Jim Lahey introduces home bakers to sourdough
versions of the pugliese, brioche, and multigran for which the
bakery is known. This includes a step-by-step guide to making
sourdough starter (biga) from the bloom that appears on fresh
organic produce. It is a clear, illustrated guide to making
sourdough and the Italian-inspired café dishes from one of
Manhattan’s best bakeries.
Butter (Short Stack) by Dorie Greenspan – it’s Dorie Greenspan and butter – it’s a no brainer.
Paladares: Recipes Inspired by the Private Restaurants of Cuba by Anya Von Bremzen is the first book to tell the story of Cuban cuisine through the lens of the restaurant owners, chefs, farmers, and patrons, while examining the implications of food shortages, tourism, and international influences of a country experiencing a paradigm shift in cooking. Filled with 150 authentic and modern recipes adapted for the home cook, from classics like Ham and Cheese Empanadas to Pumpkin Flan with Spinach and Saffron, and 350 vivid color photographs, Paladares brings the country’s spirited cooking into your own kitchen.
Claridges: The Cookbook by
Meredith Erickson and Martyn Nail shares a collection of over 100
of the best-loved dishes and drinks from The Foyer, The
ReadingRoom, the Bar and The Fumoir. With interludes ranging from
the return of the “drunch” to the magic of Christmas, the
extraordinary experience of dining at Claridge’s is brought to life
in book form. Delve into delectable dishes and drinks for every
time of day: start with Bircher muesli or the Arnold Bennett
omelette. Indulge in a little something from the Donut trolley. Try
the Lobster, langoustine & crab cocktail or the Smoked duck
salad. Treat yourself to a Cheddar Eccles cake or a Raspberry
marshmallow. Sip a Champagne cobbler while you nibble a Gougere.
Savor the prized Claridge’s chicken pie or a slice of Venison
Wellington, with some Truffled macaroni gratin or Pommes château.
Finish with a Roasted stone fruit clafoutis or a tiny piece of
Nougat.
Which titles are you excited about? Please leave a comment to let
me know.
Happy Cookbooktober!
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