Awesome! I love everything that I’ve ever tried from J. Kenji Lopez-Alt. In particular Food Lab has taught me a lot of fundamentals and I just reviewed his bbq chicken ahead of Father’s Day grill out!
Food and Cooking
All things culinary and cooking related. Share food! Share recipes! Share stuff about food, etc.
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Have his wok book but honestly I find other Asian cookbooks to be more appealing. He is very clinical at times.
Sally's Baking Addiction - really enjoy the pumpkin bread. might make it again once pumpkin is in season once more. Budget Bytes Many of the recipes are adaptable to Southern Ontario prices. Add a few dollars for estimation and you're golden. Cooking On a Bootstrap - I really like the concept of it, but I haven't quite made any recipes just yet.
Sally’s baking addiction is the BEST!
Sally's Scone Recipe is fantastic. During the pandemic, I made several different kinds of scones based on her recipe. Also agreeing with Budget bytes, which is where I get most of my daily recipes these days.
I've been really enjoying Dessert Person. Every recipe I've tried so far has gone well, and she's actually honest about how long the steps will take.
The Food Lab is my other favorite. It's incredibly nerdy and I'm getting through it extremely slowly.
BBC good food is pretty good for me, can be at little hit and miss but more than makes up for it with having a massive catalog
Great thread, thanks all for sharing.
I personally use Tea for Turmeric quite a bit for Pakistani/South Asian cooking!
Thanks for that! I would love more Indian and Pakistani blogs.
Great thread - bookmarked! I find BBC Good Food has good recipes which tend to turn into my favs.
That's at the top of my mind, but there's a few so I will come back tomorrow and add more!
Just one cookbook is my go to. I take tidbits from recipes to mix I not o my recipes for Miso Ramen / Stock and trying new Asian dishes I just learn about.
Bon Apetit for variations on recipes. I use the cooked butter Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe lost from here. I used to grab Brad Leone recipe sheet before me busted out (get his cookbook if you can.)
Budget Bytes for when you want to make meals for an entire week or empty your pantry.
Just one cookbooks nikujaga is a great, light beef stew.
Love that Just One Cookbook has already been recommended. I really enjoyed her baked versions of chicken katsu and tonkatsu (frying in oil makes me so nervous).
For Korean dishes, I really like Maangchi's blog. Her bibimbap recipe is tasty.
Moosewood Simple Suppers and Weeknight One-Pot Vegan Cooking are two books I use regularly, and I swear by Cookie and Kate as well.
My favorite is Gregory Gourdet’s [https://gregorygourdet.com/book](Everyone’s Table). His Haitian restaurant in Portland is amazing, and the global recipes in his book are delicious. Most of them are Paleo and Gluten-free.
Now that might make my list. I’m low key hoping they choose him as the next judge of top chef.
Haven't seen anyone mention chef John from food wishes He has a YouTube and all his recipes are also on Allrecipes.com
I really wish I could get over his cadence in videos. The recipes look good, but I can’t stand his way of talking.
I have a hoarding problem with cookbooks, especially the decades-old local spiral bound ones. I list the three I most recently acquired:
- Vij's at Home: Relax, Honey I have never prepared Indian food in my life outside of heating frozen Trader Joe's Butter Chicken, but this might widen my palate's experience
- Pol Martin's Easy Cooking for Today My second Pol Martin cookbook. These recipes are not only simple, but the ingredients are common. I've enjoyed every result from the recipes I've tried, and use them repeatedly
- The Joy of Cooking, 75th Anniversary Edition I've had older editions of this, they've been abused and stained from my frequent use. Maybe I'll get a clear bookstand/guard to protect this from my culinary messes.
Dittoing Budget Bytes and BBC Good Food for thrifty comfort meals.
The Garlic Lovers Cookbook, Tra Vigne Cookbook, the Moosewood and Authentic Mexican by Bayless are my go tos on my shelf.
I get a lot of ideas from Recipe Tin Eats. Great selection, and always a lot of variations/substitutions in the recipe.
Cooking on a Bootstrap got me through uni on a low income. Would recommend to anyone as the recipes are easy to follow.
Thanks for sharing! These look very interesting. I've been looking into Chinese food for a while, but I'm also interested in Japanese and Korean.
My favorite place for Chinese recipes is Chinese Cooking Demystified . The Mapo tofu and Dan Dan noodles recipes are now two of my monthly meals.
I added a kimchi recipe I keep for giving out to friends and family when they request it.
Just One Cookbook is great! For some fun cooking instructions check out Kitchen Overlord they have cool recipes inspired by popular media.
George Motz’s newest edition of The Great American Burger Book is absolutely worth grabbing. Wild recipes and plenty of history and method.
Currently cooking one every other week for my neighbors, and I gotta make a cheese sauce!
- America's Test Kitchen - I pay for the subscription. It is technically 3 websites in 1 and includes recipes from all of their print books.
- Cooking for Two - ATK's physical cookbook as been great for making enough for one person, plus leftovers for later. Or just enough for me and my partner.
It's hard to pick favourites because I love cookbooks and have far too many, but "Gran Cucina Latina" by Maricel Presilla is an amazing compendium (in English!) of South American recipes. I've just bought "Vegetarian Tagines and Couscous" by Ghillie Basan, which has some interesting variations on traditional dishes.
For blogs, I'll also second Woks of Life - we use those recipes a lot!