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Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
The first cookbook I used was Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything. It's what taught me how to cook.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
My first was the Better Homes and Gardens Cookbook. I still refer to it all the time when I need a quick and easy idea for dinner.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
a Rumford cookbook from the 1940's that was my Mothers.she was a fantastic cook and seldom used a cookbook ,it was the only one i ever saw her use when i was a kid. i eventualy ended up with my own copy but it was actualy older than hers. it is great for basics ,& sometimes for a laugh. the first i ever bought for myself was The Encyclapedia of American Cooking in 1982. the cover is gone ,i taped it back on a bunch of times,but finally lost it,many pages are stained. i still go to it for lots of things.since then i have bought & been given many others ,i really love old ones.i have a 1927 first edition of Good Meals and How to Prepare Them put out by the Good Housekeeping Institute. Inside it says you can't buy it but you should tell your friends they can get thier own copy by ordering Good Housekeeping for two years for $4.50.what a bargain , i use it fairly often ,some things never change &those that have are quite often very amusing . peticook
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
My first cookbook was Jacque Pepin's La Technique. What a master!
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
I grew up with a copy of THE JOY OF COOKING that my mother left on a hot electric burner, so it had black coil marks on the cover. Eventually, the book split in two, then into six parts which had to be held together with a rubber band. Something prevented us from simply replacing the book. I've never been so attached to a book! I knew every stain by the time I was 15.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
Claudia Roden's and her guide to Middle Eastern Food. Dated as this book may be, I am quite convinced that it remains the most authentic, well researched and user friendly introduction to Arab cuisine available anywhere.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
It would have to be the Joy of Cooking. My husband got it for me as a gift years ago before we were married and it's been a go-to reference book ever since.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
The first cookbook that I used regularly was the Good Housekeeping American Cookbook.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
First Cookbook I used was Silver Palate. I got married in 72 and yes 35 years latter with splattered pages, it still is the best. rattatoulle I love it and so does the hubby.
Sharon
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
It was a church cookbook sold as a fund-raiser out in the country in North Carolina. It has a great coconut custard pie, as well as some classic party snacks that I still make to this day.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
Mine was The New York Times Cookbook, given to me by my parents when in college with the inscription: For best results, recipes should begin with "take a pound of butter". Different times. I also remember growing up with my father's well-splattered Gourmet Cookbook.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
I only started cooking when I moved in to a home with a "proper kitchen" a little over a year ago (I'm 26). So I got started by using foodtv.com, epicurious.com, F&W, Gourmet and Martha Stewart's FOOD magazine. Since then I have collected a few books... I think that the best, or the one I've used most is Everyday Italian by Giada DeLaurentis. I also love F&W's Best of the Best.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
Joy of Cooking for me too, though sometimes the literature on etiquette reads like a stick-in-the-mud finishing school teacher
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
Joy of Cooking--at the time I bought it, I was a total newbie and no idea how good or popular or influential it was. I just lucked out. I still refer back to it all the time, particularly when I need a recipe for something basic.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
The first one I used was the Woman's Day cookbook, believe it or not. I got Better Homes as a gift but found a lot of dud recipes in there. And the WD cookbook provided full nutritional info as well as sections at the back for "cook once, eat twice" and menus for entire holiday meals, which was very helpful when on a budget and first getting started. I still pull it out for a couple of old favorites now and again.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
First cookbook I used regularly was Main Course Salads by Roy Overton.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
My wife and I were married in "69"" and recieved a copy of the Better Homes and Gardens as a gift. We used it quite a bit at first but less so now.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
I'm not sure of the exact version, but it was Betty Crocker and probably came out in the early 70s. For better or for worse, this was my Korean mother's textbook on "how to cook American."
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
the Leith's Cookery Bible! After taking a gourmet cooking class in England and getting my Leith's Basic Certification in Food and Wine. Hilarious. But that book has everything having to do with British cuisine, and therefore a lot of stuff that influenced the history of American cooking as well. Good stuff!
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
Kid's Cooking: A Very Slightly Messy Manual - my mom got it for me for Christmas one year.
I still fondly remember making Ready Spaghetti from it.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
First cookbook I used a lot was Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything.
I than proceeded to acquire the Fifty Cookbooks I'd Rather Not Live Without that he listed in his cookbook. Than things got serious.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
I learned to cook from my dad (who is a chef), whose only recipe was "Leftover Ingredients in Fridge". He doesn't use recipes too often, it was more about technique, technique, technique. As a result, the first cookbook I used regularly was my mom's ramshackle assortment of cookie recipes from chocolate chip bags and newspaper articles.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
Better Homes and Gardens---1967, it was a wedding gift. My Mom who did all the cooking never used a cookbook but she was the greatest cook.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
Paula Wolfert's Cooking of the Eastern Mediterranean.
Cook the Book: 'The Silver Palate Cookbook, 25th Anniversary Edition'
The Peanuts Cookbook..and the first recipe I made was for French Toast.
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The first cookbook I used was Mark Bittman's How to Cook Everything. It's what taught me how to cook.