Cookbook storage ideas

It’s a conundrum all cookbook lovers face eventually – the best location for storing cookbooks is not always the most attractive or most convenient. So what should you do? Tasting Table looked at the problem and came up with fourteen different ways to display cookbooks. They titled their post as “innovative” ways to show off your cookbook collection, but I think calling many of these innovative is a stretch.

Some of the suggestions verge on boring: on open shelving (duh), on a ladder rack, or in an island endcap. However, there are some interesting recommendations. They suggest using a rolling bar car to keep books at hand but easily moved out of the way. A small library cart may be a sturdier option along the same lines for what can be a heavy load. I also like the idea of the acrylic magazine display rack. This would be great for the books you really want to show off, but is not practical for storing significant numbers of books. Similarly, the full length wall rack offers an attractive way to showcase your most precious volumes. It has the added bonus of making use of spare inches that might otherwise go to a filler panel.

Some of the ideas are impractical. The plate rack – at least as shown in the accompanying photo – doesn’t allow you to view the spine of the book. This would mean you would either have to memorize which book was where, or pull out each one to view them. Putting books in the shelf above an over-the-stove microwave is great – that is, if you want them to get greasy and grimy. Placing books in a windowsill will mean that the covers get faded that much faster. Again, not the best way to store books. What do you think of these cookbook storage/display ideas?

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11 Comments

  • FuzzyChef  on  January 21, 2026

    I think that they don’t have nearly as many cookbooks as either of us.

  • FromScratch  on  January 21, 2026

    If I had four dozen cookbooks instead of four hundred, this might be useful.

  • averythingcooks  on  January 21, 2026

    I can’t imagine that they even suggested using “the space above the kitchen cabinets”. We do keep some cookware up there out of necessity which always needs a good scrub in soapy hot water before use to remove that sticky grime that magically floats up and then down onto whatever is waiting for it. Books = ruined.

  • matag  on  January 21, 2026

    Fine for a few but…..

  • BeckyBakes  on  January 21, 2026

    Obviously these people don’t use their cookbooks and treat them as art. Not very practical ideas.

  • Zephyrness  on  January 21, 2026

    these are all adorable. But mostly worthless. If I had room for a bar cart or a ladder shelf I could just add a floor to ceiling bookshelf. The same for crates (crates? really?) But then the title of the article is “display”, not store for easy use. These are cutesey decorating ideas for people who don’t much use their cookbooks.
    The only good answer I have ever found is ebooks. Not as much fun to read, but storage is easy.

  • sanfrannative  on  January 21, 2026

    I have about 250 cookbooks and while I suppose I could add another basket to the one I already have filled with cookbooks, I would never put them above the kitchen cabinets or above the microwave. Besides getting covered with random grease it would be really hard/nearly impossible for me to get them down!

  • Rinshin  on  January 21, 2026

    If available in kindle, I no longer buy them. I just don’t have any more room and currently culling magazines little by little.

  • trudys_person  on  January 22, 2026

    I think most of these suggestions are impractical for anyone with more than a dozen cookbooks. The article is clickbait … The photos are so random–some are just product sales shots with no cookbooks included, some are grabbed from Facebook or TikTok. And some of these ideas would ruin your cookbooks!

  • Hana.Sundet  on  January 24, 2026

    Library carts work really well for some of our book collection! I really want to organize by region of world cuisine, but I finally caved and went alphabetical by last name of author until I get a clearer visual organization. If I’m the only one in the house who knows how to put something away, it’s not a good system haha

  • GenieB  on  January 26, 2026

    I now buy most of my new cookbooks as e-books, cheaper and no storage problems. I do have some paper cookbooks, some over 40 years old. One bookshelf’s worth, although I have had to move a few less used books to the den for space considerations. I should probably just give the excess away since I very rarely use them.

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