What cookbook would you have to have if you only could have one?

chrisinhouston • Nov 24, 2006 5:10 pm
The 75th anniversary printing of the Joy of Cookiing is coming out and as it's Holiday season where we are more apt to pick up a classic cookbook for those special annual recipes, it got me wondering; which one would you just have to have if you only could have one? As an aside, I collect cookbooks and have well over 100 including ones belonging to my mother, grandmothers and a few from the GG grandparent generation. My parents were friends with Julia Child so we always had hers handy but my mom always swore by The Fannie Farmer one.

My wife and I are away at a remote ranch in west Texas for a week and I chose to bring Craig Clayborne's NYTimes Cookbook which I find has plenty of variety as well as some real classic recipes and everything from cocktails and starter dishes to desserts.

Any thoughts?
Griff • Nov 24, 2006 5:23 pm
It has to be Joy of Cooking. I think of it as a framework. If you do it this way it will come out okay, then you play with it.
SteveDallas • Nov 24, 2006 8:02 pm
The Betty Crocker cookbook has produced far more "wins" than any other.
MaggieL • Nov 24, 2006 8:12 pm
Griff wrote:
It has to be Joy of Cooking.

Agree. I'm not a good enough cook to use any other book by itself. :-)

If I can add a second book, it would have to be Shirley Corriher's wonderful "Cookwise: The Secrets of Cooking Revealed". She's the food scientist who shows up on Alton Brown's Good Eats with the dykey haircut.
footfootfoot • Nov 24, 2006 10:09 pm
I would say "Joy" with the proviso that it is an older edition. I got a copy for Xmas a while back and it was revised and updated. "Great." I thought. some fresh ideas, maybe a section on tofu or something.

It was diabolical. In a pinch, I needed to make mayonaise one night after stores were closed, we were having a cooking party, etc. I open the book and it says something to the effect of
"In today's modern world no one has the time to prepare everything from scratch so things like mayonaise are best bought ahead of time." End of story.

I checked for a few other basic things which I consider simple building blocks in the kitchen and they too had be expurgated. It's not like a I expected detailed instructions on how to make my own rice wine vinegar from raw rice, these were standard recipe basics.

I threw the book in the woodstove, what a piece of crap. Marion Rombauer Becker must have been turning over inher grave when that epicurean slur was foisted on the world.

Pierre Franey, Craig Clayborne, I have Julia's The way to cook and it is great, though I find her turkey times to be too long by an hour.

I just got "on food and cooking" the science and lore of the kitchen, by Harold McGee. I've jsut started it but his approach is purely scientific and goes into great depths about the whys of cooking. Not so much in terms of recipes, but fantastic if you are of an analytical mind and want to know how things work. For example, he has a section on meat with a chart showing the effect of heat on meat over a range of temperatures.

But all that said, an early copy of JOY would be my 1st choice/
Aliantha • Nov 24, 2006 10:17 pm
I hardly ever use cookbooks except for cakes. Of those, I'd have to choose one of the womans day cakes and slices books. They give you the basics and if you've got a bit of knowledge, you can turn out just about any cake you want from there.
DucksNuts • Nov 24, 2006 10:32 pm
Stephanie Alexander's The Cook's Companion
wolf • Nov 25, 2006 1:56 am
footfootfoot wrote:
I would say "Joy" with the proviso that it is an older edition. I got a copy for Xmas a while back and it was revised and updated.


I second that particular suggestion. Should be plenty available used now that the New and Improved one is available.

I also give high marks to the first Silver Palate Cookbook.
BrianR • Nov 25, 2006 7:03 pm
I always had good luck with Better Homes and Gardens cookbook. The older version with the red and white checkerboard design.

However, right now I would settle for a good tex-mex diabetic Adkins cookbook.
lumberjim • Nov 25, 2006 7:11 pm
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wolf • Nov 26, 2006 1:30 pm
The best parts of the Joy of Cooking, for me, are the About sections. I love those in the same way that I love watching Alton Brown on Good Eats. The hows and whys of food science intrigue me.
footfootfoot • Nov 26, 2006 7:59 pm
wolf wrote:
The best parts of the Joy of Cooking, for me, are the About sections. I love those in the same way that I love watching Alton Brown on Good Eats. The hows and whys of food science intrigue me.

Then you have to get "On Food and Cooking" the science and lore of the kitchen, by Harold McGee.

It rocketh
BigV • Nov 27, 2006 11:03 am
Doesn't the answer to this question depend a great deal on what you want to cook?

No sushi recipes in Betty Crocker. No haggis recipes in JoC. I'm a cookbook fan, and we have several. I don't get the question beyond sparking a conversation. What is the *best* cookbook? Most comprehensive? Easiest to use? Would you similarly limit yourself to a single kitchen utensil?
melidasaur • Nov 27, 2006 3:00 pm
Either the Ultimate Southern Living Cookbook or The Foster's Market Cookbook. Both are wonderful. I like the Ultimate SL Cookbook better than JoC. It has the same facts and such that make food science fun, but it also has wonderful color pictures.
JerryM • Nov 28, 2006 11:06 pm
I would be torn between "The Fannie Farmer Cookbook" I bought in 1971 when I first got serious about cooking and "James Beard's Theory & Practice of Good Cooking".
Of course, for backup, I try to keep at least a couple hundred "specialized" cookbooks on hand. Usually after I read a recipe or two for inspiration, I take off on some weird tangent of my own. Actually, I have been known to skip reading the recipe and just take off on the tangent - that can be fun.
LabRat • Nov 29, 2006 9:47 am
SteveDallas wrote:
The Betty Crocker cookbook has produced far more "wins" than any other.


Hands down I agree. Great starter cookbook. One of my first. Definately the one I refer to the most by far. I have about 20, including a bunch of church group type ones, and "Annual" books put out by cooking mags and Better Homes etc.
rkzenrage • Nov 29, 2006 10:50 am
There is not one, but I would not do without my Larousse Gastronomique (Though not, officially a cookbook, but an encyclopedia).
skysidhe • Dec 14, 2006 2:31 pm
chrisinhouston wrote:
What cookbook would you have to have if you only could have one?


Funny you asked because I am looking for a vegetarian or meatless meal book.

but I don't suggest a cookbook for a weekend away. ( edit -although at the time of this post your weeks been over) How about some panini sandwiches. Lots of cream cheese, sprouts, (vegtables off all kinds)
meats and cheeses and a homemade soup so you can eat leisurely and relax.
Happy Monkey • Dec 14, 2006 2:36 pm
A good vegetarian cookbook is "The Vegitarian Epicure".
skysidhe • Dec 14, 2006 2:39 pm
oohh yay! thanks! :jig:
busterb • Dec 14, 2006 7:55 pm
Just remembered and looked. American Womens Cookbook, think I picked it up in Singapore.
fargon • Dec 15, 2006 3:05 am
Joy of Cooking, the best cook book out there.
warch • Dec 20, 2006 4:39 pm
Mark Bittman's How to cook everything. the original cookbook, not any of the spin off products. its a great go to....for example:
what do you do with kohlrabi? ....
wolf • Dec 20, 2006 7:52 pm
Happy Monkey wrote:
A good vegetarian cookbook is "The Vegitarian Epicure".


Try The Enchanted Broccoli Forest by Mollie Katzen
Cloud • Jun 18, 2007 8:29 pm
I'm going to agree with the others that the "old" Joy of Cooking is the best. Mine's falling apart now, but it's the one I return to again and again.

I happened to get one of my daughters the "revised" Joy of Cooking and it's just not the same. Some of the best recipes and information are missing.

Some of the recipes worth the price of the book:

Chili con carne
peanut butter cookies
Hollaindaise sauce
DanaC • Jun 19, 2007 7:10 am
Madhur Jaffrey's Indian cooking. Love her books.

Actually, the one cookbook I would want if I could only have one, no longer exists. My Gran spent much of her life writing in recipes in a notebook. Some of them were passed down through a couple of generations, some of them were cut out from old magazines (loads from the early forties), some of them were her own inventions (she used to experiment with different spice mixes to make her own masalas). Anyways.....it burned in Dad's house, so it's gone for good now.
Griff • Jun 19, 2007 7:52 am
DanaC;356730 wrote:
... Anyways.....it burned in Dad's house, so it's gone for good now.


That is a bummer. Pete has a recipe notebook with recipes collected from her Mom and Granmas plus cut-outs. It is almost invaluable.
DanaC • Jun 19, 2007 7:59 am
Nothing beats a family recipe book.
glatt • Jun 19, 2007 9:25 am
For Christmas one year, my sister, who wanted to make presents rather than buy them, scanned and burned to CD-ROM my mom's entire box of family recipes cards complete with food stains, etc. She even did a cool index to link up all the recipes, so you can search by different ingredients, etc. It's cool, because now each sibling has a copy now.
DanaC • Jun 19, 2007 9:27 am
What an awesomely inventive pressie!
Cloud • Jun 19, 2007 9:47 am
One year I wrote up a cookbook of favorite and easy "primer" recipes for my daughters and made it up into a nice binder for Christmas. They still use them.
Clodfobble • Jun 19, 2007 1:07 pm
WHERE WERE ALL YOU PEOPLE WHEN I TURNED 18, HMMM???

[size=1]grumblegrumble people who have families who acually cook grumblegrumble...[/size]
Sundae • Jun 19, 2007 1:31 pm
We were here, waiting for you to put your clothes back on ;)
skysidhe • Jun 19, 2007 3:28 pm
very cool idea glatt!
Clodfobble • Jun 19, 2007 5:23 pm
SundaeGirl wrote:
We were here, waiting for you to put your clothes back on


Nice. :)
Cloud • Jun 19, 2007 5:25 pm
Naked chef?
Cloud • Jun 19, 2007 8:23 pm
there are a lot of lovely cookbooks, and I buy too many. But every household should have an all purpose cookbook like Joy, or like the Fannie Farmer Cookbook, so you can look up how long to cook a turkey or how long to soft-boil eggs.
Yznhymr • Jun 27, 2007 11:32 pm
Gotta keep this one close...

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Cloud • Jun 28, 2007 10:02 am
HA! That's great. Needs more recipes.

Do YOU have one to contribute?
Cloud • Jul 4, 2007 9:55 am
I'd also consider "Mastering the Art of French Cooking: Vol. 1" by Julia Child and -- Simone Beck, I think.

This is Julia Child's classic cookbook, and my mother's basic cookbook. Many of the recipes are familiar from my childhood--beef bourganon, rice pilaf, aspic (shudder); pate . . .

Just cut the butter use a bit. I'm going to try some of the vegie recipes--like cold vegetables a la grecque; or braised onions.
kerosene • Jul 4, 2007 2:25 pm
Cloud;356610 wrote:

Some of the recipes worth the price of the book:

Chili con carne
peanut butter cookies
Hollaindaise sauce


Yes! Peanut butter cookies! I won't make them from any other recipe. I also noticed that Joy of Cooking calls for a lot of butter in many of the recipes...is that true of the newer one, too? Have the recipes changed, or have they been deleted and new ones added?
Cloud • Jul 4, 2007 3:27 pm
I haven't compared recipes side by side, but I know that some of the recipes have been deleted and new ones substituted.
Perry Winkle • Jul 12, 2007 4:41 pm
Butter is good. The only substitute (in appropriate recipes) I'd ever consider is farm-fresh lard.