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Food for the Body and the Mind

Food for the Body, New Publications

Best Cookbooks 2023

cookbooks 2023

The “food for the body” element of this blog has been a bit overlooked of late, so now that I’ve covered books to read in 2023, let’s have a look at cookbooks to cook by in 2023.

This list is the equivalent of a Jamie Oliver meals in five minutes cookbook. Not because there’s a dearth of material but because brevity has been forced upon me by an over-abundance of obligations. (Whoever said “if you want something done give it to a busy person” wasn’t giving a shout out to busy people, they were trying to get out of doing it themselves.)

Moving on, and with the goal of finding if there was as much consensus in recommendations for cookbooks as there are in other genres of books, I did a quick survey of six sites, as follows:

  1. The Most Anticipated and Best Cookbooks of 2023 by Book Riot
  2. The 12 Best Cookbooks to Look for in 2023 by Delish
  3. The 16 Best New Cookbooks of 2023 by The Spruce Eats
  4. The Thirty-One Best Cookbooks to Buy in 2023 by GQ Magazine
  5. 19 Upcoming Cookbooks We Can’t Wait to Read in 2023 by DiscoverNet
  6.  10 New Cookbooks We Can’t Wait to Get Our (Oven) Mitts on in 2023 by Eat This, Not That

 

Below are titles recommended by two or more websites.

3 WEBSITES

eating from our roots 1

“Eating From Our Roots: 80+ Healthy Home-Cooked Favorites from Cultures Around the World” by Maya Feller, released Jan 24, 2023

From Goodreads: “In Eating from Our Roots, Maya Feller, a registered dietitian and nutritionist known for her approachable, real-food-based solutions, highlights nourishing dishes from around the world with a focus on whole and minimally processed ingredients prepared with spices and flavor-enhancing techniques at home.”

Publisher/link to book: Rodale Books

Recommended by: Book Riot, DiscoverNet, Eat This Not That

 

2 WEBSITES

love is a pink cake

“Love is a Pink Cake: Irresistible Bakes for Morning, Noon and Night” by Claire Ptak, released May 2, 2023

From Goodreads: “Renowned for the wedding cake she created for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle, Claire Ptak knows there’s nothing like a cake when it comes to expressions and celebrations of love.”

Publisher/link to book: W.W. Norton & Co

Recommended by: Eat this Not That, DiscoverNet

mayumu filipino American desserts

“Mayumu: Filipino American Desserts Remixed” by Abi Balingit, released Feb 28, 2023 (not entirely sure about the cover here)

From Goodreads: A sweet baking book of fantastically imaginative remixed Filipino American dessert recipes, plus essays on the Filipino American experience by baker-fundraiser Abi Balingit.

Publisher/link to book: Harvest Publications

Recommended by: DiscoverNet, Book Riot

one simple one pan wonders

“One: Simple One-Pan Wonders” by Jamie Oliver, released Jan 20, 2023

From Goodreads: “Quick and easy meals are even simpler when you cook with just one pot, pan or tray. And with each recipe using eight ingredients or fewer, requiring minimal prep (and washing up), they offer maximum convenience”.

Publisher/link to book: Flatiron Books

Recommended by: Eat This Not That, Delish

sweet enough

“Sweet Enough: a Baking Book” by Alison Roman, released Mar 29, 2023

From Amazon: “Whether you’re a dedicated baker or, better yet, someone who doesn’t think they are a baker, Sweet Enough lets you finish any dinner, any party, or any car ride to a dinner party with a little something wonderful and sweet.”

Publisher/link to book: Penguin Random House

Recommended by: DiscoverNet, Delish

vietnam morning to midnight e1674882835368

“Vietnam Morning to Midnight” by Jerry Mai, released Feb 28, 2023

From Goodreads: “Walking through Vietnam’s cities, you’ll pass a heady array of food. From the north to the south, the streets are lined with some of the country’s greatest cooks serving up fresh salads, crunchy banh mi and spring rolls, comforting pho, refreshing desserts, and so much more”.

Publisher/link to book: Smith Street Books

Recommended by: Delish, DiscoverNet

win son presents

“Win Son Presents: A Taiwanese American Cookbook” by Josh Ku, Trigg Brown with Cathy Erway, released Mar 23, 2023

From Goodreads: “A modern, brashly flavorful guide to cooking Taiwanese-American food, from Brooklyn’s lauded Win Son, Win Son Bakery, and Cathy Erway, celebrated writer and expert on the cuisine.”

Publisher/link to book: Abrams

Recommended by: Delish, DiscoverNet

Some findings from this survey are noteworthy. Firstly, with the exception of Jamie Oliver, there aren’t any celebrity chefs featured. Secondly the books feature a variety of cuisines, and thirdly that out of six sites featuring numerous books, there were only seven recommended by more than one site. This leads me to conclude there’s so much diversity when it comes to cookbooks, for example, in cuisine, course, culture, not to mention culinary fashions, fads and trends (which come and go as often as royal scandals), it’s impossible to pick winners. 

It should be possible to pick quality however, which means there must be unique criteria that apply to cookbooks, as opposed to other books.

An article called “Judging the Top 100 Cookbooks” in Cooking Light magazine proposes that “… a winning book needs to clearly state and deliver on its mission. And recipes have to work. Most important rule: no tinkering with the recipes—they need to stand or fall on their own merits. Also important: The author’s voice needs to persist throughout, like the main flavor of a dish. We were interested in accuracy and appeal to the current cook …”

Sarah Bir sets out some criteria in “What Makes an Award-Winning Cookbook” (a guest post on the website of Dianne Jacob, a food writer of some repute), as follows:

  1. Decide whom your book is for and know why it needs to exist.
  2. It’s not about you. (a rule of life)
  3. Voice matters more than anything.
  4. You can’t write great recipes alone.
  5. Tiny oversights make a big difference. (another rule of life).

Amanda McInerney, on her enduring and consistently engaging food blog Lambs Ears & Honey, proposes these criteria:

  1. Presentation – a good cookbook needs to be well laid out and to tempt the reader. It needs to be an invitation and an inspiration to cook.
  2. Clear, concise instructions set out in an easy-to-follow procedure. 
  3. Recipes that actually work.

Helen Rosner, in an article in the December 21 edition of “The New Yorker”called “The Best Cookbooks of the Year” notes she’s most impressed by cookbooks that inspire her to actually cook from them. She says ” … I’ve found myself most drawn to cookbooks that are written more as conversations than as instruction manuals—those that speak in clear, intimate voices, telling personal stories with openness and grace, with recipes full of generous guidance.” Hear hear!!


award winning cookbooks

I’d like to add one more – originality of title. I don’t know about you but all those “best of” books tend to bring out the subversive in me. Like best according to who? And compared to what? One person’s best might well be another person’s “yucko”. It’s refreshing then to come across an attention-grabbing title. 

Out of the selections I surveyed, I’d have to give these titles gold stars for catchy, engaging titles.

bake me a cat

“Bake Me a Cat: 50 Purrfect Recipes for Edible Kitty Cakes, Cookies and More!” by Kim-Joy.

From Goodreads: “Feline fans will love this collection of 50 a-miaow-zing cat-themed creations. Bake Me a Cat showcases the cutest bakes you will ever see, all celebrating our favorite pet.”

 

 

caught snackin

“Caught Snackin’: 100 Recipes. Simple. Fast. Flavoursome.” by Caught Snackin’ 

From Goodreads: “The debut cookbook from the hit TikTok account with 1.9 million followers, @CaughtSnackin is here! With 100 bangin’ recipes, Caught Snackin’ will leave your tastebuds tingling in an explosion of flavor.”

 

death by burrito

“Death By Burrito: Mexican Street Food to Die For” by Shay Ola

From Goodreads: “Delicious modern Mexican recipes from Death by Burrito at the Catch bar in the heart of Shoreditch.”

 

mind over batter

Mind Over Batter: 75 Recipes for Baking as Therapy” by Jack Hazan

From Goodreads: “A self-care cookbook for using baking as therapy from licensed psycho​therapist and master baker Jack Hazan, with 75 simple, therapeutic recipes.”
 

recipes for murder

“Recipes for Murder: 66 Dishes that Celebrate the Mysteries of Agatha Christie” by Karen Pierce

From Goodreads: “This to-die-for cookbook offers one accessible, easy-to-make dish or drink for each of the Duchess of Death’s 66 novels.”

 

Perhaps another criterion for a great cookbook should be whether it transcends time, which can only be judged in retrospect. Books like Julia Child’s “Mastering the Art of French Cooking“, Stephanie Alexander’s “The Cook’s Companion“, “Larousse Gastronomique” and my personal favourite “The Alice B. Toklas Cookbook” are benchmarks immune to the vagaries of fashion.

 

 

My most anticipated cookbook for 2023 (or for all time) hasn’t been written yet. It’s called “How to Get Your Husband Up Off His Arse and into the Kitchen”. This is a dilemma I share with other wives I suspect. In my case it sprang from that common source of misery, the unspoken assumption. From the very first day of cohabitation it was taken for granted that I, being the one who knew about food, scored the gig of cooking dinner every night. Supposedly compensated for by the fact that he, being the one who knew about other stuff such as important executive work in his study, always urgent at the dinner preparation hour, got that one. Now I do love food, and cooking (the first immoderately and the second on occasion) but as any woman will tell you, cooking dinner every night God sends is not remotely a loving or loveable task. It’s a chore akin to doing the ironing or putting out the garbage. However, attempts to dislodge the status quo, or the arse of said husband from his executive chair haven’t so far worked. Failing another writer taking up the challenge, perhaps I’ll do it myself.

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Anne Green

Anne Green

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