The case for cookbooks in a digital age (2024)

When Julia Child first walked into the kitchen and onto the television screen, Americans were captivated by her unpretentious attitude toward cooking. As she effortlessly navigated cooking disasters on air and was adorned by her signature pearl necklace, she became a symbol for home-cooked meals.

Her famous cookbook, “Mastering the Art of French Cooking,” spawned one woman’s blog and a critically-acclaimed movie, “Julie & Julia.”

Child lived in an era before the smartphone. She couldn’t locate dozens of recipes for virtually every dish by asking Siri. She was alive in an age of cookbooks.

When you can access free recipes at any point, is it still worth it to pick up a cookbook?

Right now, desserts are all about subverting expectations

As it turns out, cookbooks in the digital age still have immense value. Here’s why.

For one, as artificial intelligence takes over the internet, knowing that a recipe was vetted by a real person can help ensure you are not spending precious time and ingredients (i.e. money) on a recipe that’s not worth it. As Kate Gibbs wrote for The Guardian, sometimes recipes in cookbooks are tested upward of three times.

They’re tweaked, edited and perfected, so before you try your amateur hand at whipping up a delectable dish, you have some surety that it’ll go well. And when you’re working with a recipe that a real person has tested, they can often give you tips to achieve the best results, such as ricing your boiled potatoes before mashing to produce smoother, silkier and creamier mashed potatoes.

While there are plenty of cooking blogs where the recipes have been tested, it can be difficult to navigate which ones have been tested and which ones haven’t been.

Another reason to invest in a cookbook or two is because there are often general tips in cookbooks that will make you a better cook.

If you follow a bread recipe and constantly end up with gummy bread or bread that doesn’t rise quite right, it might be your technique that needs refining. A cookbook might teach you how to diagnose and correct your technique.

Take, for example, the cookbook “Salt Fat Acid Heat,” which breaks down cooking into the basic elements. Once you understand the way certain elements work together, you can walk away a better cook.

Using cookbooks can also simply be a delight. As Helen Rosner observed in an article for The New Yorker, some cookbook authors write in a conversational tone that can enchant and inspire readers.

A good cookbook is like any good book: it’s written well. If a cookbook is written well, you can step into the author’s world for a moment and catch a glimpse of the sentimentality of a recipe. Recipes are born in particular cultural moments and carry with them tradition and memories with great meaning to the person who developed the recipe.

Plus, recipes evolve over time.

As recipes are tried time and time again, advancing technology and changes in available ingredients can cause a recipe to morph and transform into an aberration of its original form — sometimes resulting in a version of a dish you like more than the original.

A good cookbook can capture this sentiment. It can take you on a journey through the recipe’s evolution and then, you can embark on your own journey with the recipe as well.

So, where should one start with a cookbook?

The first step is procure a cookbook. There are many types. Some are more general like the “Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook” or Child’s “The Joy of Cooking.” These cookbooks are chock full of familiar, classic recipes that you can refine. Other cookbooks are more specific to a particular kind of cuisine, like the Italian cookbook “Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking.” There are some cookbooks that cater to a particular lifestyle, such as “Downshiftology.”

After you’ve picked up the cookbook you want to start with, read it cover to cover. No, really. Read the cookbook like a book.

You’ll be able to pick up on certain trends throughout the book and notice tips the author gives you. Reading it cover to cover also helps you gain familiarity with the varying levels of difficulty.

And that’s the point when you start cooking.

Begin with a recipe that you like or want to try, and taste it along the way. Taste your fresh ingredients (provided that it’s not an ingredient like meat that needs to be cooked to be edible) and learn to pick up on the flavors an ingredient adds to a dish. Think of ingredients like a dimension of a dish, adding flavor and texture and interacting with the other ingredients.

Then, you’ll be on your way to cooking from a cookbook. And who knows? Maybe you’ll take a journey through an entire cookbook.

The case for cookbooks in a digital age (2024)

FAQs

What are the 7 questions of a cookbook reviewer? ›

Here's my questions–who knows, maybe they'll help you the next time you're having brain freeze in the Cookbooks section.
  • Question 1: Is it useful? ...
  • Question 2: Is it thoughtful? ...
  • Question 3: Is it new? ...
  • Question 4: Does it tell a story? ...
  • Question 5: Is it well-designed? ...
  • Question 6: Is it focused?
Nov 14, 2011

Where is the best place to donate cookbooks? ›

Your local library, thrift store, or even prison or high school might be good options — but be sure to call first to see what they're looking for, otherwise they'll end up in the trash.

What is the oldest cookbook still in print? ›

The first recorded cookbook that is still in print today is Of Culinary Matters (originally, De Re Coquinaria), written by Apicius, in fourth century AD Rome. It contains more than 500 recipes, including many with Indian spices.

What is the significance of cookbooks? ›

Introduction. Cookbooks are rich personal and social texts, giving accounts of the whys and hows of our food traditions and, through them, our histories and cultures.

How many recipes should be in a cookbook ebook? ›

The standard expectation is that a cookbook should have between 70 and 100 recipes, but larger compendiums have at least 200. Think carefully about how many you want to include.

What questions to answer in a book review? ›

READING THE BOOK
  • What are the author's viewpoint and purpose?
  • What are the author's main points?
  • What kind of evidence does the author use to prove his or her points? ...
  • How does this book relate to other books on the same topic?
  • Does the author have the necessary expertise to write the book?

Does anyone still buy cookbooks? ›

People buy them for the recipes, but they also buy them for the artwork, photos, and personal stories. According to a survey by the International Association of Culinary Professionals: Most people buy two or three cookbooks each year, and 12% of buyers buy four or more.

What is the most sold cookbook of all time? ›

Betty Crocker's Cookbook (originally called Betty Crocker's Picture Cook Book) by Betty Crocker (1950) – approx. 65 million copies. When the Betty Crocker Picture Cook Book was published by the fictional Betty Crocker in 1950, its sales actually rivaled those of the Bible.

Is there a market for old cookbooks? ›

Investment value: Old cookbooks are sometimes collected as a "financial investment," Sawyer said. The value of a cookbook can go up over time, especially if it's considered rare, has historical significance and is in good condition.

Who is the largest cookbook publisher? ›

The Nation's #1 Cookbook Publisher - Morris Press Cookbooks.

Do people still keep cookbooks? ›

“Cookbook sales in the U.S. grew 8% year-on-year between 2010 and 2020, with sales numbers boosted even further by the pandemic,” wrote Kate Gibbs in a 2022 story in the Guardian. Of course, as Gibbs pointed out, many buyers don't actually use their cookbooks as cookbooks.

What is the first known cookbook? ›

The first recorded cookbook is said to be four clay tablets from 1700 BC in Ancient Mesopotamia, but by the 1300s, cookbooks were a norm for kings and nobles. In 1390, Forme of Cury (The Rules of Cookery) was published for–but not by–King Richard II.

Why do you give a cookbook as a gift? ›

A cookbook is a great way to boost someone else's excitement about a new cooking technique they've discovered or a genre of cooking they want to explore. It's also an easy way to help someone else learn the joy of cooking at home.

How to do a cookbook review? ›

Here are 5 tips on how to ace cookbook reviews:
  1. Describe the author's background and authority. Introduce the author to readers and comment on his or her experience and expertise. ...
  2. Identify the intended audience. ...
  3. Write in the style appropriate to the publication. ...
  4. Be honest in your cookbook reviews.
May 28, 2019

What is expected of a book reviewer? ›

Main responsibilities of a book reviewer include reading books in their entirety, taking detailed notes and writing reviews that highlight both strengths (such as character development and plot) and areas for improvement (such as plot inconsistencies or factual errors).

How do you analyze a cookbook? ›

Your job is to compare the cookbooks in terms of what they discuss, what they don't, tone, style, ingredients, recipes, overall content (many of these books are about way more than cooking). DO NOT SUMMARIZE EACH BOOK!

How do you test recipes for a cookbook? ›

Recipe testing best practices
  1. Test each recipe at least 2-4 times.
  2. For each test, change only one ingredient or step at a time. ...
  3. Write down everything (including observations from the cooking process). ...
  4. Enlist taste testers! ...
  5. Consider having someone else prepare the recipe in their home kitchen.
Oct 13, 2022

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