Best european cooking, food & wine books according to redditors

We found 462 Reddit comments discussing the best european cooking, food & wine books. We ranked the 161 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Subcategories:

British cookbooks
Eastern european regrional cooking books
French cooking, food & wine books
German cooking, food & wine books
Greek cooking, food & wine books
Hungarian cooking, food & wine books
Irish cooking, food & wine books
Mediterranean cooking, food & wine books
Polish cooking, food & wine books
Portuguese cooking, food & wine books
Russian cooking, food & wine books
Scandinavian cooking, food & wine books
Spanish cooking, food & wine books
Turkish cooking, food & wine books

Top Reddit comments about European Cooking, Food & Wine:

u/kleinbl00 · 91 pointsr/AskReddit

Get a slow-cooker at the thrift store. Slow-cooked pintos require very little prep but a lot of time - get a bag for $nothing$, wash and soak the night before, set to low when you leave and come home and there's lots. They also freeze very well.

Whole chickens are infinitely cheaper than boneless skinless and easy to cook. You can feed two people for three days on a chicken; take the plastic off, wash it, pat it down, stuff some veggies in it for flavor (celery, half an onion, an apple) and bake it in the toaster oven (uses less juice than your range). The bones and such will make stock, but I find that I never really need "stock." That may change...

Rice cookers make rice trivial and cheep. You can get a 10lb bag of rice for 12 bux. 10 lbs of rice will last you and a friend months.

Ground turkey in bulk (5+lb) is very cheap. Buy it, take the plastic off, cut it into 1/2lb chunks, pick them up in ziploc baggies like dog poop, push out all the air and huck 'em in the freezer. Try and keep them ball-shaped if you intend to thaw them in the microwave or thin and flat if you intend to thaw them on the counter.

Any vegetables you buy at your local farmer's market will be fresher, healthier and cheaper than what you get at the supermarket. Not only that, chicks dig farmers' markets. Go every week. Find your local farmer's markets here.

Successful cooking is a blend of two important things: good ingredients and careful, light-handed preparation. Chances are you're naturally inclined to over-season the crap out of things; most people are. You will find, however, that a good cut of meat with a little salt and pepper will beat the shit out of a mediocre cut of meat slathered in K.C. Masterpiece. I recommend Edouard de Pomaine's 1930 classic French cooking in Ten Minutes not so much for the recipes but for the philosophy. Most every preparation in it is "take something, do something to it and eat it." Pomaine demystifies cooking in ways Erma Bombeck and Betty Crocker never could.


Ask at your local nursery what herbs grow easiest where you are and try and cultivate them yourself. That chicken? A sprig of fresh rosemary will make it awesome. But maybe bay or dill or rosemary or something will grow better near you. I guarantee you can grow mint where you are. Mint makes any savory dish better.

Finally, learn to appreciate the art of cooking and eating in and of itself. It's always cheaper to cook for four or six than it is for one or two if everybody chips in; inviting friends over to cook and eat makes for a cheaper meal as well as an evening of entertainment. Always seek out especially good produce, poultry, fish or meat and make it a focus of your cooking. Believe it or not, you can entertain a houseful of people for an evening over the simple fact that the raspberry harvest is in.

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(...and if that fails, you can do what my uncle did in college - he went down to the feed store and sampled. If it was palatable, he'd buy 50 lbs of it, pick the rocks out of it and chow down. If I recall correctly, there's a certain type of buffalo feed that's mostly rolled oats, molasses and vitamins. And rocks.)

(Be sure to pick out the rocks.)

u/flat_top · 40 pointsr/Cooking

My basic sauce is Marcella Hazan's recipe:

Ingredients:

2 pounds fresh plum tomatoes, peeled, chopped (Ok I cheat and I just buy a 28oz can of whole peeled San Marzano tomatoes and throw them in a blender)

5 tablespoons unsalted butter

1 medium onion, peeled and cut in half

salt, to taste

(I also add black pepper and crushed red pepper to taste




Directions:
Dump all of it in your pot/saucepan, simmer over low-medium heat for about 45 minutes, stirring occasionally until the butter is completely melted and the fat floats to the surface, salt, pepper, red pepper to taste.

Discard the onion. (Or dice it and keep it in the sauce, personal preference)

Enjoy

u/satanmat2 · 32 pointsr/Cooking
u/redditreader1972 · 30 pointsr/Norway

You don't write where you are from or price range so it is a bit difficult to answer your question.

Juhls in Bergen is an internationally acclaimed and excellent jeweller and designer. This is where I got my wife something for our 10yrs anniversary a while back. See http://www.juhls.no

For something more tasty but not as lasting... good quality smoked trout or salmon, or dried cod for bacalao (klippfisk). Specialties like cheeses ("brunost", "gamalost"), or meats like smoked cured lamb (fenalår) or reindeer are also an option. Artisan quality jams, flours etc are an option too. Meny, Mega, Ultra are three of the higher end grocery chains that typically have a broader selection of foods.

Cheese slicer, for hard cheese? We like to think it is unique... http://www.bjorklund-1925.no/index.php/en/

Waffle iron? Just kidding. But do try waffles with sour cream and jam. Or Svele with butter and sugar. Or flatbreads. And fårikål, lapskaus, grandiosa (uh, no, skip that last one), well prepared fresh fish at a high end restaurant, traditional rice porridge, Skillingsbolle (mandatory in Bergen, it is a spiral bun with cinnamon).

We have a couple of michelin star restaurants that are worth a visit. And some that are close. See the slightly more inclusive http://www.whiteguide-nordic.com/ Look up the place you are going to before eating, Norway has just too many crappy restaurants.

Not sure about what to recommend regarding bread, as too many bakeries in Norway are crap, but if you get to Lom, there is some really nice eating to be done...

The Nordic Cook Book, or something by Andreas Viestad, Ingrid Espelid Hovig or Eyvind Hellstrøm om Norwegian or Nordic cuisine should be available in English.

High quality woolen mittens, caps, sweaters. Wool underwear/longs are probably the best you can get anywhere, but get them where the locals go (sporting stores). Dale, Oleana, Devold, Aclima are some brands of various quality and purpose.. ("Pierre Robert" on the other hand is supermarket imported stuff.)

All weather and rain gear ... in Loen, Olden and Stryn and a couple of other places you have factory outlets of major Norwegian brands for outdoor apparel. Skogstad for example have outlets that have some good deals (e.g. minor defects major discounts). Look up factory outlets (fabrikkutsalg) on google.

There are a few Norwegian artists of international acclaim, like painters, illustrators and such.

Most of all do try to get the experiences, the nature and sights are our best "goods" to offer.

u/Lucretian · 29 pointsr/Cooking

it's not turkish only, but claudia roden's arabesque is excellent.

u/Nistlerooy18 · 19 pointsr/Cooking
  • Taste of Home Best Loved - A great down-to-earth cookbook with homestyle meals that mom and grandma used to make.
  • The Silver Spoon - Originally in Italian, hundreds of awesome, authentic Italian dishes using a massive array of ingredients.
  • Gourmet Magazine Cookbook - I got my copy at a brick and mortar bookstore many years ago, and it may be out of print now. But it is full of elevated dishes that are easily obtainable at home.
  • Dinner for Two - For years it was just my wife and I. This was the perfect little cookbook for us. Additionally, ATK has a similar cookbook. This isn't the one we have, but one like it. It's basically their recipes scaled down for two people.
  • Bocuse Gastronomique - It's like an awesome cooking class on paper from the master himself.
  • Bocuse - An awesome collection of recipes from Paul Bocuse.
  • ATK Cookbook. I probably cook more from here than any other. I used to buy the new version every year with the newest recipes, but now I have the online subscription.
  • The Flavor Bible that someone else linked.


    I could keep going but I should stop. So many great ones out there.
u/bajaja · 12 pointsr/Cooking

ok eastern european here. hard to admit, folks around shout that this is central europe, not some balcans .... balcans has better food though...

I have czech and slovak cookbooks in native language, can photo and send some pages. I have a great russian cookbook already mentioned - Please to the table

http://www.amazon.com/Please-Table-Anya-von-Bremzen/dp/0894807536/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1417795677&sr=8-1&keywords=please+to+the+table

it is in English and I can make photos of couple pages if you wish.

next - I have a great Hungarian and Russian food encyclopedia - Culinaria Hungary resp Culinaria Russia. there are good recipes + pictures + lot of other info.

http://www.amazon.com/Culinaria-Hungary-Anik%C3%93-Gergely/dp/3848003872/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1417795778&sr=8-1&keywords=culinaria+hungary

http://www.amazon.com/Culinaria-Russia-Ukraine-Georgia-Azerbaijan/dp/383314081X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1417795757&sr=8-1&keywords=culinaria+russia

and Europe exists too it's just not available on amazon.

http://www.amazon.com/Culinaria-European-Specialties-Andre-Domine/dp/3895082341/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1417795794&sr=8-1&keywords=culinaria+europe

but there was some better website for cookbooks, but hard to remember.

if I can propose something, just order these three. one for great authentic recipes, the others based on great writing and photos.

also I just remembered, there is a nice edition of foreign cookbook in English in PDF on every country, it's called "Cooking the ... way" and it's available on various bays, if you know what I mean... I also recommend these even though not sure if they have Christmas section.

u/wlll · 11 pointsr/Cooking

Madhur Jaffrey's Indian Cookery if they like Indian food. My parents own this, as does my sister and I. I'll buy my kids a copy when they leave home.

The Silver Spoon and/or The Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking if they're into Italian. Jamie's Italy if they're looking for something more approachable or casual.

Salt Fat Acid Heat is apparently very good, I own it, but I've not read it yet.

u/claycle · 11 pointsr/Cooking

I recently donated away about 100 cookbooks I had collected over the years (I organize virtually everything digitally now) but I kept these 5:

Child et al, Mastering the Art of French Cooking (well-used, next to the stove)

Hazan, Essentials of Italian Cooking (carried to Italy and used there twice)

Lewis, The Taste of Country Cooking (such a good read)

Rombauer. An older than I am edition (with how-to-skin-a-squirrel recipes) of the Joy of Cooking (falling apart, kept for sentimental reasons)

Fox, On Vegetables: Modern Recipes for the Home Kitchen (for the porn)

u/Ercarret · 10 pointsr/AskEurope

"The Nordic Cookbook" by esteemed Swedish chef Magnus Nilsson seems pretty definitive. It's a massive tome with 700 recipes from all over the Nordic countries. I haven't read it myself so I can't vouch for it personally, but it's the first book that comes to my mind when I think of Swedish and/or Nordic cooking. I've seen a few documentaries about Nilsson and he's...let's call it devoted to his craft. Opened a Michelin 2-star restaurant in northern Sweden, far away from the bigger cities that normally house our Michelin star restaurants, just to be close to the produce he uses in his cooking. He's a bit of an odd duck, but one who does seem to know what he's doing in the kitchen.

u/apbagwel · 8 pointsr/Cooking

A read a cookbook called Mamushka, that I really liked:

https://www.amazon.com/Mamushka-Recipes-Ukraine-Eastern-Europe/dp/1616289619

​

There seem to be some classic Russian dishes, like borsht and stroganoff and olivier salad, but it Russian cuisine as a whole has a lot of influences, due to it's proximity to so many different countries and the effects of the former Russian Empire and USSR. There's a lot of crossover with Central Asian cuisine, and Russian cuisine is almost like a mix of Northern/Eastern European and Central Asian.

u/Pg21_SubsecD_Pgrph12 · 8 pointsr/AskCulinary

Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking by Marcella Hazan.

I've enjoyed this book immensely, it has great reviews on Amazon, and Alton Brown considers this one of the 'best' cook books to own.

u/Atmosph3rik · 8 pointsr/AskCulinary

A lot of famous restaurants and chefs have cookbooks that feature recipes from their restaurants.

It can be pretty hard to replicate a restaurant dish at home. I cook for a living and you have a lot of advantages in a professional kitchen. Hotter ovens and burners and all kinds of other toys.

So the recipes in restaurant cookbooks aren't always the most reliable when you do them at home. And the cookbooks are pricey. But they have pretty pictures.

If you want to get really crazy try one of these,


Mugaritz: A Natural Science of Cooking

or

Alinea

or

Noma: Time and Place in Nordic Cuisine

u/KiwiLicker · 8 pointsr/Cooking

So, when you heat food up- meat especially- it has a tendency to dry out. This is very true if you're cooking past medium temps.

A reduction is a sauce made by simmering or boiling down a liquid into a strong, thick concentration, yielding an intense taste. Because there are different components in liquids, when you apply heat they can evaporate or clump together.

Reductions (and other sauces) add another layer of flavor to the dish. If a meat or veggie is bland, not well seasoned enough, or too gamey, the sauce will tend to help liven it up.

I'm a huge fan of red wine and shallots, and bourbon-honey-butter reductions. Anthony Bourdain's Les Halles Cookbook is a wonderful reference to have in the kitchen and living room.

Tons of cooking videos on yourtube! Here's one with sprouts: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3LhZpTqWCMc

You should also check out mother sauces. Your taste buds will thank you.

u/mmarin5193 · 8 pointsr/KitchenConfidential

The Silver Spoon is a massive Italian cookbook with pretty easy to read instructions and big fancy pictures. I got one as a gift its has some pretty good recipes in it that range from easier to harder recipes. Its about 30 bucks on amazon

http://www.amazon.com/Silver-Spoon-New-Kitchen/dp/0714862568/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1450126627&sr=8-1&keywords=the+silver+spoon+cookbook

u/egg1st · 8 pointsr/Cooking

Delih Smith's cookery course takes you from boiling an egg to Christmas dinner. She is like royalty among UK chefs.
http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/aw/d/0563362499?cache=03c8641b604c6aaa6e40eb9a4b2b346f&pi=SY200_QL40&qid=1412539261&sr=8-1#ref=mp_s_a_1_1

u/wip30ut · 7 pointsr/Cooking

Essential's of Italian Classic Cooking by Marcella Hazan--the late dean of Italian cooking in the US. She helped revolutionize Italian cuisine in the 1970's and 80's by prodding eaters to look beyond garlic & red marinara, which she felt were bastardizations of real cucina italiana.

u/skahunter831 · 7 pointsr/AskCulinary

One of the most interesting and classic Italian cookbooks is "Science in the Kitchen and the Art of Eating Well", written by Pellegrino Artusi in 1891. It's huge, a fascinating read, incredibly comprehensive, and literally laugh-out-loud funny. EDIT: another good one is "Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking" by Marcella Hazan.

u/pyriku · 7 pointsr/Cooking

Spaniard here. I can tell you that everyone in Spain has this book: http://www.amazon.com/1080-Recipes-Simone-Ortega/dp/0714848360/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1425910272&sr=8-1&keywords=1080+recipes

I am not sure if the translation is any good, but that's what I'd call the "bible" of spanish food. Shit loads of recipes, anything you can imagine it is in there, and very authentic.

Not a book but, if you understand spanish: http://javirecetas.hola.com/ this guy has some seriously nice stuff.

u/[deleted] · 6 pointsr/Paleo

There are several sauce recipes in this old school French cooking book. A lot list flour as a thickener, but of course we could try almond flour or potato starch instead.

http://www.amazon.com/French-Cooking-Ten-Minutes-Adapting/dp/086547480X

u/TheBraveTart · 6 pointsr/AskCulinary

Ahhhh, my condolences, how tragic!

I'm something of a cookbook minimalist, and keep my personal collection pretty concise; I'm quick to give away books if they've been on my shelf too long without much use. I used to be a cookbook hoarder, but I don't have the space for it anymore, lol.

The cookbooks I have on the shelf rn are Season, The Palestinian Table, Arabesque, Afro-Vegan, Donabe, and several Japanese-language cookbooks.

For dessert-related things, I have Baking and Pastry: Mastering the Art and Craft, Chocolates and Confections: Formula, Theory, and Technique, SUQAR, and the Flavor Thesaurus.

u/amazon-converter-bot · 6 pointsr/FreeEBOOKS

Here are all the local Amazon links I could find.


amazon.co.uk

amazon.ca

amazon.com.au

amazon.in

amazon.com.mx

Beep bloop. I'm a bot to convert Amazon ebook links to local Amazon sites.
I currently look here: amazon.com, amazon.co.uk, amazon.ca, amazon.com.au, amazon.in, amazon.com.mx, if you would like your local version of Amazon adding please contact my creator.

u/Shanbo88 · 6 pointsr/Cooking

The Silver Spoon is a mammoth of a book. around 2000 pages if I remember right. I had it recommended to me countless times but didn't realise just how amazing of a deal it was until it landed on my doorstep and I found out you could believably beat someone to death with it.

Huge book, categories for EVERYTHING. My only criticism is that sometimes it uses terminology that might not be the best for beginners and there's not many guide pictures. But that's nothing a bit of googling around can't sort out. I'd definitely recommend getting it for your collection.

u/boogie9ign · 6 pointsr/AskCulinary

In terms of personal experience, my mother has referred to the original Spanish version of this book ever since I could remember. The amount of recipes can't be beat and it can be found in most Spanish homes. If you need it in English, there's some used copies there for about $5. She also released this book on tapas but I can't personally comment on how good it is; if it's anything like the '1080 Recetas...' then it should be a good purchase as well.

Also have a look through this list, there might be some others you find interesting; the first choice looks like a decent book on basics. I actually borrowed José Andrés' Tapas: A Taste of Spain in America book from my chef last night and though I haven't been able to give it a proper read, I saw a bunch of delicious-sounding recipes just thumbing through the pages.

u/istara · 5 pointsr/52weeksofcooking

This list is interesting but very much outside my experience of the 1980s, being from the UK. Nearly all those foods are very American.

Delia Smith's Complete Cookery Course came out in 1978 and that had a significant influence on the 1980s.

For UK suggestions:

  1. Findus Crispy Pancakes
  2. Chicken Kiev
  3. Deep Pan Pizzas
  4. Boil-in-the-bag
  5. Slush Puppies/Sodastream
  6. Ryvita
  7. Viennetta
  8. Nescafé Gold Blend
  9. Frosties
  10. Ferrero Rocher

    If this list looks 1970s or earlier to US redditors, it's because trends took longer to reach Europe in those days. Today, due to the internet and perhaps more international travel, we access stuff much faster. I remember in the 80s how all our mothers avidly tried out this amazing recipe for chewy "Toll House Cookies" from the single American family in our town.
u/RexStardust · 5 pointsr/Cooking

Marcella Hazan
Marcella Hazan
Marcella Hazan

Also, Marcella Hazan.

http://www.amazon.com/Essentials-Classic-Italian-Cooking-Marcella/dp/039458404X

u/DondeT · 5 pointsr/AskCulinary

‘Nose to tail eating’ has become more popular recently and there are several cook books on the subject. It’s about using the whole animal when you do cook meat so you’ll get some recipes with typical meat ingredients and some with the offal and bits you might not expect. Here is Fergus’ book of the same title.

u/lordbathos · 5 pointsr/books

Cook books are a great idea. I did just pick up the new English translation of 'I Know How To Cook!', the most comprehensive and, quite frankly, incredible cookbook I've found.

It'll do me well for a long time - highly recommended!

u/sn0wdizzle · 5 pointsr/ArtisanVideos

His cookbook is written in a similar manner as well.

u/DeusMortus · 5 pointsr/Cooking

Get Fergus Henderson's Nose to Tail Eating, it's a cookbook that will blow your flippin' mind (a personal favorite is marrow and parsley salad), another good cookbooks about offal is Odd Bits by Jennifer McLagan.

Once you start eating offal, you'll never go back, a quickly fried up liver or kidney is a precious treat and while a lot of offal is increasingly hard to get, once you have a good supplier, you'll never go back.

u/davedachef · 4 pointsr/AskCulinary

The Silver Spoon is like the Italian food bible - it is more like an encyclopedia than a cookbook.

But the one that I think you must have on your shelf is Giorgio Locatelli's Made In Italy. It's as much for the recipes as it is for the stories - you get such a sense of what food means to Italians and what a massive part of its culture food is. It's a cookbook you can happily read in bed. I love it.

I also picked up this on a recent trip to Bocca di Lupo and it's pretty special as well.

u/ETAOIN_SHRDLU · 4 pointsr/vegan

I lived as a vegan in a small town with limited grocery options for 3.5 years and it can definitely be done. As far as meat substitutes go: they're mostly over-processed, over-priced, and (in my opinion) they're often not particularly tasty. Rather than trying to substitute other things for meat, start getting adventurous with cooking vegetables. Use beans and grains for protein (they form the backbones of most of my meals). When you find spices in the store (or online) that you've never heard of, buy a small quantity and learn how to cook with them. If you're flipping through a vegetarian cookbook and it seems like the recipes are constantly trying to recreate meat dishes, it is (again, in my opinion) probably not going to be a particularly satisfying cookbook. One of my favorites is The Mediterranean Vegan Kitchen Amazon link which has recipes that just happen to be vegan, not recipes that are adapted to be so.

u/retailguypdx · 4 pointsr/Chefit

I'm a bit of a cookbook junkie, so I have a bunch to recommend. I'm interpreting this as "good cookbooks from cuisines in Asia" so there are some that are native and others that are from specific restaurants in the US, but I would consider these legit both in terms of the food and the recipes/techniques. Here are a few of my favorites:


Pan-Asian

u/Anikunapeu · 4 pointsr/Cooking

A few from different regions:

Yucatán: Recipes from a Culinary Expedition for Yucatecan / Mayan food. It is the best one for this, period.

Sicilian Food

The Nordic Cookbook for Scandinavian food.

Cuisine of Hungary.

Churrasco: Grilling the Brazilian Way

u/FoxRedYellaJack · 4 pointsr/Cooking

Marcella Hazan is to Italian food as Julia Child is to French food. Start with Hazan's Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking; you can't go wrong!

u/Skodbil · 4 pointsr/Denmark

Nå folkens, der er snart gået et år siden Skodbil sidst mæskede sig i fødselsdagskage, og det betyder at successen skal gentages. Fødselsdagsgaver er for lang tid siden gået fra at være Lego og våben, til at være sokker og bøger.

Derfor skal der nu nogle gode kogebøger på listen. Jeg er ikke så meget på udkig efter opskriftsbøger, men mere ude i at ville have kogebøger som jeg rent faktisk kan lære noget af. Jeg har allerede følgende på listen, men hvis DU kender en helt vildt god bog jeg bør læse, så sig til.

Sølvskeen

The Food Lab, Kenji Lopez

Chocolate at Home

Paul Bocuse Institut Gastronomique

The Professional Chef

The Flavour Bible

Mastering Cheese

Der er med vilje ingen vinbøger på listen, for det gør jeg mig ikke specielt meget i - endnu.

u/obvioustricycle · 3 pointsr/recipes

I have mixed feelings about celebrity cookbooks, but nevertheless I'm a big fan of Anthony Bourdain's Les Halles Cookbook. It's fairly unpretentious French bistro fare, but a lot of the recipes require a decent amount of prep, a lot of trial and error, and sometimes recipes stages that span multiple days. Not all of the recipes are tough, but as an intermediate cook myself I really think that some of these will be a pleasant challenge. Plus it's a very aesthetically pleasing book imo.

u/SilentBlizzard1 · 3 pointsr/mead

This one is more just baked goods, but Magnus does have a Nordic Cookbook that's also worth a look through.

If you're a gamer at all, the book that brought me to this sub to learn more about mead was The Elder Scrolls Cookbook. Fun recipes, even if you're not trying to recreate something from the game world.

u/sauteslut · 3 pointsr/Cooking

Silver Spoon is the best for basics/reference. I've got a copy in both English and the original Italian. It's the modern bible while larousse gastronomique is outdated imo.

Cooking by Hand was a big inspiration early in my career

Recently I like cookbooks that are entertaining beyond just pretty pictures of food.

The Dirt Candy cookbook. The graphic novel style is awesome and the recipes are good.

Also, A Super Upsetting Book about Sandwiches

And of course Thug Kitchen

u/vandaalen · 3 pointsr/asktrp

I am a professional chef and while watching people prepare food is entertaining and sometimes also educating I actually recommend you to buy books and learn the basics first.

You can then use youtube pretty well in order to watch how to do specific things, like i.e. deboning a whole chicken for a gallantine, or how to trim certain pieces of meat.

Start with french cuisine. Once you have understood how things are connected you'll actually understand everything else.

If you want something simple and entertaining for the start I'd choose Anthony Bourdaine's Les Halles Cookbook. It's amusingly written and the recipes are fairly easy and they are all legit.

Then there is Paul Bocus. Living legend with three long-term girlfriends.

And of course you want to have Escoffier at your home. Doesn't get much more classic than that.

If you want to get a sense of what drives a top notch chef, watch In Search of Perfection by Heston Blumethal. Very very good stuff.

And finally, if you want to learn something about culinary history I highly highly recommend Heat: An Amateur's Adventures as Kitchen Slave, Line Cook, Pasta-Maker, and Apprentice to a Dante-Quoting Butcher in Tuscany and to learn about our lifes as a chef you need to read the (admittedly exaggerated) autobiographicly Kitchen Confidential by Bourdain.

All this provided, you won't learn cooking without actually doing it.

Edit: Depending on your budget, I also heavily recommend Alain Ducasse's Grand Livre de Cuisine.

u/starsintoxicated · 3 pointsr/Hidradenitis

I started a modified Paleo diet a year ago and I've seen a dramatic improvement. I'd say 95% improvement. There are days and weeks where I forget I even have HS. The diet change is difficult--I would get depressed at the thought of food--but I adapted to it after 6 months.

Castaway Kitchen (Cristina Curp) and Curious Coconut (Amanda Torres) have very good AIP/Paleo recipes. They both have HS and have put it into remission using diet.I've tried their recipes and they taste very good. I've made the chicken more times that I can count.

https://thecastawaykitchen.com/2018/01/crispy-ginger-lime-baked-wings-whole30-keto-aip/

https://thecuriouscoconut.com/blog/paleo-plantain-flour-pancakes

Also, this is a great book - Mickey Trescott's Autoimmune Paleo Cookbook
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0578135213/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i0
I use the winter squash soup recipe quite often.

Cristina Curp's book 'Made Whole' is excellent.
https://www.amazon.com/Made-Whole-Anti-lnflammatory-Keto-Paleo-Recipes/dp/1628602945


u/girlchef · 3 pointsr/Cooking

Claudia Roden has a great recipe for Moroccan tagine in here. A great book that's been around for some time- if you don't want to buy it, I'd bet your local library has a copy.

u/proman3 · 3 pointsr/cookingcollaboration

Investing in culinary texts rather than cookbooks really helped me. These books provide very basic recipes along with relevant techniques/information. Once you get these down, it's a heck of a lot easier to be creative with your dishes (e.g. knowing the 5 mother sauces of French cuisine leads to literally thousands of other recipes).


Suggested reading material:

Sauces: Classical and Contemporary Sauce Making
One of my absolute favorites, I refer to this book pretty much every time I'm in the mood for something new. The author does a great job at keeping things simple while providing great information on traditional applications (along with how to flavor things to your own tastes) for dishes ranging from Mornay sauce to Ganache.


On Cooking: A Textbook of Culinary Fundamentals
This was my required text for intro culinary classes, which makes it expensive. I'm sure finding older/used versions will be much cheaper and just as useful. This is a great resource for techniques such as deboning poultry, ideal use for various potato species, the different cuts of beef and pork, the best cooking methods for said cuts, culinary terms, etc.


The Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking
My god do I love Marcella Hazan. She's the Italian Julia Child, and does a fantastic job at making intimidating dishes much more approachable. While this is more of a classic cookbook than the previous two, Hazan provides info on produce selection, basic kitchen techniques, ideal tools to have, and, of course, hundreds of traditional Italian recipes with notes on altering flavor profiles.


YMMV, depending on how deep into the cooking world you'd like to get. Sometimes it's just easier for me to look through google results of a specific dish for inspiration. Good luck!

u/rboymtj · 3 pointsr/Cooking

I Know How To Cook is my kitchen bible.

u/rkoloeg · 2 pointsr/Cooking

Once you have some basics down, you might look around for a copy of this cookbook. It's sort of the bible of Italian cooking in Italy, and while it has some complicated recipes, there are also plenty of simple but classic dishes, especially in the appetizers. soups and salad sections.

u/beso_negro · 2 pointsr/AskCulinary

These were cookbooks I found continually helpful while working at a fine-dining Italian place:

La Cucina: The Regional Cooking of Italy - 900 pages with a background on each recipe. Very helpful for research and creating dishes.

Encyclopedia of Pasta - Invaluable if you're doing fresh pasta. Provides a thorough explanation of each shape.

The Silver Spoon - a monster with 2000 recipes, but a great reference book. I think it claims to be Italy's oldest cookbook(?)...

I think these are a great starting point if you're in a serious kitchen - best of luck!

u/throwaway500k · 2 pointsr/vegan

Ok, sure - I've listed a pretty typical day below, including supplements.

Breakfast

u/RajBandar · 2 pointsr/meat

Hi op, this was one of Anthony Bourdain's favourite cookbooks by one of his favourite cooks-if you've not read it I'd suggest that it's right up your alley.
Nose to Tail Eating: A Kind of British Cooking https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/0747572577/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_tai_k0.xCbC4CVBKA

I love his 'trotter gear' It's a rich & flavourful stock-type substance, highly versatile & hugely delicious.
http://wellhungfood.com/home/recipes/trotter-gear-recipe/

u/CreightonWAbrams · 2 pointsr/PurplePillDebate

Last night I made farfalle Alfredo, which is Thing 2's absolute favorite. Thing 1 can take it or leave it. Thing 3 ate four bowlsful and immediately lapsed into a carb coma.

Marcella Hazan's pork loin in red wine vinegar tonight. You salt and pepper a pork loin roast, brown it on both sides in a snugly-fitting saucepan with a little butter and olive oil and then, while it's still hot, pour in red wine vinegar to come up about halfway. (Stand back, the steam will make your eyes sting.) Throw a bay leaf in, clamp the lid on, and turn the heat down to low. Simmer until the pork reaches an internal temperature of 150 or so. DO NOT OVERCOOK OR IT WILL BE DRY LIKE SAWDUST.

This was one of the first recipes I cooked out of this book, way back when I was first learning to cook, in the late 1990s. I had just started dating Mr. Arthur and didn't know a thing about cooking because my mother never cared much about food and my dad only wanted to eat the same five dinners in a rotation. Mr. Arthur's family cares about food A LOT and I knew I had to raise my game. This is the single best cookbook I own, and I own hundreds, and opened my eyes to so many concepts: technique, simplicity of ingredients, et al et al.

This recipe is only three ingredients, not counting the oil and butter and salt and pepper, but it's one of the best things I have ever eaten.

Edit: A lot of recipes tell you to cook your pork to 160 or 170 degrees, lest you poison yourself with trichinosis, which is rubbish. At least in the US, there hasn't been a trich outbreak in decades, and you can actually see trich with the naked eye. If your pork is covered in swarming creepy-crawlies, throw it out and don't cook it at all. Trich is also killed at 137F. So if you're cooking pork loin or tenderloin, which does not benefit from long cooking the way that shoulder or belly does, cook it to 150 degrees and call it a day.

u/super_starmie · 2 pointsr/AskUK

I also recommend a Delia book. I started learning to cook from my dad's old copy of Delia's Complete Cookery Course which I think was from the 70s or early 80s (had a picture of her holding an egg on the front lol). The book itself is still in print and will have had certain stuff updated, so honestly I really recommend it. Only book you need. https://smile.amazon.co.uk/Delias-Complete-Cookery-Course-Classic/dp/0563362499/ref=sr_1_1?keywords=delia%27s+complete+cookery+course&qid=1559307699&s=gateway&sr=8-1

Also, start with simple things. I still mainly cook simple things - my current staple is homemade curry. Main things you need is a carton of passata and curry powder. Start off with a bit of chopped onion, chuck it in the pan with some oil and cook it for a bit. Then just add a 2-3 tablespoons of curry powder (i usually also add a little extra tumeric, ginger and cumin too) and mix it in with the onion for a minute or so, then pour in the passata. After that, chuck in whatever you want - usually for me it's some diced chicken and some frozen spinach. And that's it.

u/Dungaurd · 2 pointsr/Cooking

https://www.amazon.com/Nordic-Cookbook-Magnus-Nilsson/dp/0714868728/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1492508514&sr=8-1&keywords=the+nordic+cookbook

The Nordic cookbook by Magnus Nilsson was the cookbook that got me into cooking, and I can highly recommend it.

u/Maybe_Not_Batmans · 2 pointsr/Cooking
u/hasitcometothis · 2 pointsr/Cooking

My most used and well loved cookbook is Marcella Hazan’s Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking. My Italian grandmother recommended it to me when I first started cooking as a teenager and it seems to be a staple for a lot of home cooks I know.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/039458404X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_ESCPAbCSJBRWR

u/1point618 · 2 pointsr/Cooking

A good cookbook isn't just about the recipes, or even primarily about the recipes. It's about the photos, the techniques, the flavor pairings, the curation. A good cookbook should be like looking into the head of a great chef.

We almost never cook from recipes, but my roommate and I own ~20 cookbooks between us.

To understand what a good cookbook can be, I recommend getting the NOMA cookbook and Fernand Point's Ma Gastronomie

u/Chefaholic · 2 pointsr/Chefit

My favorite cooking related book to give as a gift, just because it's so joyful and a lot of younger cooks don't know about it: Ma Gastronomie by Ferdinand Point. So many great musings and quotes.
https://smile.amazon.com/Ma-Gastronomie-Fernand-Point/dp/1585679615/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1481405420&sr=1-1

u/redux42 · 2 pointsr/Cooking

IIRC, this is the book M. F. K. Fisher thinks is the end-all-be-all of cooking... Tangentially related, I believe this is the "Joy of Cooking" for the French:

http://www.amazon.com/Know-How-Cook-Ginette-Mathiot/dp/071485736X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1293757218&sr=8-1

u/Genlsis · 2 pointsr/Cooking

Wow! I actually own this one already. Good to know that's the real deal.

Here's a link for those interested:

Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking https://www.amazon.com/dp/039458404X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_5puYzb43Z2KMK

u/badge · 2 pointsr/Cooking

How is "I Know How To Cook" not on there? It's solid gold: http://www.amazon.com/Know-How-Cook-Ginette-Mathiot/dp/071485736X

u/TheSummarizer · 2 pointsr/food

Marcella Hazan has a parallel story to Julia Child, only for Italian cooking.

Use this one. It is the classic in italian cooking, written for Americans.

u/A_Little_Off_Center · 2 pointsr/ScandinavianInterior
u/dilithium · 2 pointsr/food

For me it was French Cooking in Ten Minutes. Before it, I was fumbling through recipes. It is so brief, lacking detail and had such attitude that it gave me the confidence to just try.

u/DocAtDuq · 1 pointr/Cooking

Silver spoon. I've been taking a lot of recipes from it lately. It's considered "Italian" but it's the furthest thing from Olive Garden you'll ever see in respects to Italian. A lot of things are simply prepared but have immense flavor. I made the green risotto for our seven fishes night and it was great! I made the bucatini with red pepper sauce and that was amazing. I've made a few fish and beef recipes too, their lasagna is amazing. It has a lot of things most people haven't heard of but the book makes them extremely approachable if you collect all the ingredients. I used to be not very big on using cookbooks but I've had this book for a year and recently it's become a favorite of mine.

The one thing I do have to say is that you need to treat the recipes in a true Italian manner where spaghetti isn't the only dish but a filler before your protein. Almost none of the pasta dishes have protein (except one of my favorites anchovy and breadcrumbs) so you serve almost all of them as a small side dish. My edition has a section in the back where about a dozen chefs designed a menu with recipes not in the book but that you can only find in there. I've really wanted to pick a menu and do it one night for some friends.

https://www.amazon.com/Silver-Spoon-New-Kitchen/dp/0714862568

u/KnodiChunks · 1 pointr/DebateAChristian

Wow. Dude, that is not a deep argument. Spare your keyboard, you don't have to repeat yourself over and over.

Look, the fact is, when we die, we all go to the great pasta bowl in the sky. I don't know how to prove that to you, you'll have to take my word for it. There is a god, and he's made of spaghetti.

There's no way I can prove it to you in such a shallow forum. But perhaps this book will enlighten you. I could take you to a restaurant and introduce you to some of the best chefs in the world... but that's a lot of work.

I'm not being irreverent for the hell of it, I'm trying to make a point. You are incredibly tone deaf. Who do you think you're talking to? You just came to a debate forum, and told someone who has never seen any evidence of your god, "Don't worry, it's all true. Trust me. Some old people in a monastery are really nice. You'll die one day and then you'll realize that the dude you chatted with on reddit once was right all along."

The stuff you're saying is so vapid. If you learn nothing else on here, please learn this: If you want to convince a skeptical person who values evidence, a hollow and wordy emotional argument is actually counterproductive. When I decided I no longer believed, I was desperate for any counter evidence. I really wanted to keep my faith, but it just didn't make any sense. And arguments like yours (many of them, from several people) are what sealed my decision.

u/evorgeloc · 1 pointr/cookbooks

If you are looking for basic cooking information the Joy of Cooking is obligatory.

A couple things I've learned along the way is first to start slow and work through cookbooks. It's easy to keep buying book after book but they are just decoration if you don't know them well. Secondly, be wary of books with lots of pretty pictures! In my experience they are full of single-purpose recipes that don't teach you the true nature or source as you spoke of above.

As far as source recipes I'd second everything mentioned so far but if you are looking to blow people away with Italian and Mexican dishes (my particular favorite styles)... look no further than:

The Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking - Marcella Hazan - Possibly my favorite author of cookbooks of all time. This is definitely the one to start with in my opinion.

The Art of Mexican Cooking - Diana Kennedy - If you are looking for real mexican food this book is a great place to start.

Bonus Book... not a cookbook but a great way to learn about cooking

u/dnomseDtehC · 1 pointr/UIUC

Start with this cookbook

Anthony Bourdain's Les Halles Cookbook: Strategies, Recipes, and Techniques of Classic Bistro Cooking https://www.amazon.com/dp/158234180X/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_api_pyWeAbK4J2TDM

u/Garden_Weasel · 1 pointr/Cooking

I like to cook French and Asian/Indian foods the most. Here's my base list for any type of cooking: kosher salt, fresh cracked pepper, olive oil, canola oil, eggs, flour, potatoes, onions and shallots, cream, butter, bacon, cheese, rice, canned diced tomatoes, garlic bulbs, red and white wine, vinegar (rice wine or balsamic). Root vegetables can be added too, but I prefer to get them specific to the meal.
A few extras I tend to use a lot are ginger root, oyster sauce, and red cabbage. Not exactly stock-worthy to some people though.

But actually, I think this is the wrong approach. I suggest finding a good cook book, perhaps Ad Hoc at Home, and just start reading it. I did this with Anthony Bourdain's Les Halles book and it revolutionized how I think about cooking. I wish I had done it from the start to develop the thought process first, which then leads to better food preparation. When you cook a specific meal you can go to the store and look at each food separately for the meal you're preparing. When I'm at the market looking for specific ingredients and not "grocery shopping" I'm able to think about the food in a different way. Gradually, you can build up foods and spices over time, but in doing so you'll build good habits, good recipes, and a more mature approach to food in general. My approach before was very much like a shotgun blast of spices, whereas now I'm able to more precisely pinpoint the flavor profile I'm going for.

A word on spices: Buying in bulk will save you lots of money. People suggest dating them, so as to know when they're going bad, but this might be out of your scope right now. I know Central Market here in Texas has a pretty nice bulk spice section, and I imagine other whole foods places do as well.

Herbs: Fresh herbs are key. You want something to have at the ready? Fresh herbs you can get from the store. But really you should invest in a $.25 pack of basil seeds, rosemary seeds, and thyme seeds. These plants are hardy and tough to kill (maybe not so much with basil) and will make everything taste more expensive.

u/driedsoda · 1 pointr/Cooking

Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking is a great Italian cookbook, although maybe more recipe-centric than what you are looking for.

u/abracapocus · 1 pointr/vegetarian

Vegan Italiano by Donna Klein. No fake meats or tofu. Mostly easy to find ingredients.

u/commonone16 · 1 pointr/Cooking

There are more than enough resources out there to teach you how to cook. The better question might be - what do you want to learn how to cook?

If you're a big Italian food fan like I am, I did the following:

Step 1. Purchase copy of Marcella Hazan's ["Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking"] (http://www.amazon.ca/Essentials-Classic-Italian-Cooking-Marcella/dp/039458404X)
Step 2. Figure out the fundamental recipes - for me it was plain tomato sauce, bolognese sauce, minestrone soup, hand made pasta, roast chicken, ossobuco, and a few others
Step 3. Practice practice practice - I have probably made my own pasta 20 times in the past year and I am still not close to mastery (but I'm getting there!)

I'd also suggest that you work on basic knife skills, including sharpening your own knife. These are essential no matter what route you decide to take.


u/Mr3ct · 1 pointr/keto

I own this cook book. Haven't done any recipes in it but I've looked through it a good number of times and I can vouch for it. If I didn't have access online anything would turn out good and work just fine.

u/Twibbly · 1 pointr/keto

Melissa Joulwan's Well Fed and Michelle Tam's Nom Nom Paleo are where my brain immediately goes. They're paleo and (mostly Whole30), but have a heavy focus on eating real food and not a whole lot of desserts. They do, however, feature sweet potatoes and such on occasion.

Personally, I'm waiting anxiously for this book to come out, but I think that would probably be above the price range you're looking for.

You might do better to just find a collection of recipes you can keep printouts of, or even something like the one week meal plan.

u/Monk_In_A_Hurry · 1 pointr/Cooking

Control-F: "Please to the Table"

No results?

This book is basically my Soviet cooking bible. It has recipies ranging from Russia itself to several of the post-soviet republics. (I.E. Armenia, Uzbekistan, Moldova, Ukraine, etc)

u/Sincap · 1 pointr/Cooking

I love this cookbook: Arabesque by Claudia Rodin. It contains really excellent recipes from Lebanese, Turkish, and Moroccan cuisine.

u/doggexbay · 1 pointr/Cooking

Basically gonna echo most of the answers already posted, but just to pile on:

  • 8" chef's knife. 10" is longer than may be comfortable and 12" is longer than necessary, but 7" may start to feel a little short if she's ever slicing large melon or squash. I'm a casual knife nerd and I have knives by Wusthof, Victorinox, Shun and Mac. My favorite.

  • This Dutch oven. Enameled and cast iron just like the Le Creuset that a few other comments have mentioned, but much, much cheaper. I own two and they're both great. I also have the non-enameled version for baking bread, but I don't recommend it for general use unless you're a Boy Scout. Here's an entertaingly-written blog post comparing the Lodge vs. Le Creuset in a short rib cookoff.

  • This cutting board and this cutting board conditioner. The importance of an easy and pleasant to use prep surface can't be overstated. I'm listing this third on purpose; this is one of the most important things your kitchen can have. A recipe that calls for a lot of chopping is no fun when you're fighting for counter space to do the chopping, or doing it on a shitty plastic board.

  • A cheap scale and a cheap thermometer. Seriously, these are as important as the cutting board.

  • Just gonna crib this one right off /u/Pobe420 and say cheapo 8–10" (I recommend 10–12" but that's my preference) nonstick skillet. One note I'd add is that pans with oven-safe handles are a bit more dual-purpose than pans with plastic or rubberized handles. You can't finish a pork chop in the oven in a skillet with a rubberized handle. But one could say you shouldn't be cooking a pork chop on a nonstick pan to begin with. The important thing is to keep this one cheap: you're going to be replacing it every couple of years, there's no getting around that. For my money $30 or less, and $30 is pretty expensive for these things.


  • Cookbooks

    Nothing inspires cooking like a good cookbook collection. The great news about cookbooks is that they're often bought as gifts or souvenirs and they make their way onto the used market cheap and in great condition. Here are my suggestions for a great starter shelf:

  1. The Food Lab by J. Kenji López-Alt. I kind of hate that this is my number one recommendation, but I don't know your wife and I do know J. Kenji López-Alt. This one is brand new so you're unlikely to find it used and cheap, but as a catch-all recommendation it has to take first place. Moving on to the cheap stuff:

  2. Regional French Cooking by Paul Bocuse. This is possibly the friendliest authoritative book on French food out there, and a hell of a lot easier to just dive into than Julia Child (Julia is the expert, and her book is an encyclopedia). Bocuse is the undisputed king of nouvelle cuisine and people like Eric Ripert and Anthony Bourdain (so maybe a generation ahead of you and I) came from him. Paul Bocuse is French food as we know it, and yet this book—an approachable, coffee-table sized thing—still has a recipe for fucking mac and cheese. It's outstanding.

  3. Theory & Practice / The New James Beard by James Beard. These will completely cover your entire library of American cooking. Nothing else needed until you get region-specific. When you do, go for something like this.

  4. Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking by Marcella Hazan. When she died, the NYT ran a second obituary that was just her recipe for bolognese.

  5. Christ, top five. Who gets 5th? I'm going with From Curries To Kebabs by Madhur Jaffrey. Don't get bamboozled into buying "Madhur Jaffrey's Curry Bible" which is the same book, repackaged and priced higher. You want the one with the hot pink dust jacket, it's unmistakeable. This is one of those end-all books that you could cook out of for the rest of your life. It covers almost every diet and almost every country that Beard and Bocuse don't.

  6. Honorable mentions: Here come the downvotes. Pok Pok by Andy Ricker. If you're American and you want to cook Thai, this is the one. Ten Speed Press can go home now. The Book of Jewish Food by Claudia Rosen (so close to making the list). I shouldn't need to say much about this; it's the book of diasporic Jewish food, which means it covers a lot of time and almost every possible country. It's a no-brainer. Thai Food by David Thompson (a perfect oral history of Thai food for English speakers, only it doesn't include Pok Pok's precise measurements, which in practice I've found important). Flour Water Salt Yeast by Ken Forkish. Not for someone who just wants to become a baker, this book is for someone who wants to make Ken Forkish's bread. And for a casual bread baker I can't imagine a better introduction. Pleasures of the Vietnamese Table by Mai Pham. Andrea Nguyen is out there and Andrea Nguyen is awesome, but I really like Mai Pham's book. It's accessible, reliable and regional. You don't get the dissertation-level breakdown on the origins of chicken pho that you get from Andrea, but the recipe's there, among many others, and it's fucking outstanding. Veganomicon by Isa Chandra Moskowitz and Terry Hope Romero. This vegan cookbook is dope as hell and will really expand your imagination when it comes to vegetables. This could actually have been number five.
u/Particular_Maybe · 1 pointr/Cooking

The Essentials of Italian Cooking by Marcella Hazan is an excellent book on Italian cooking.

​

What's Eating Dan has some great videos on food science and why if you cook in certain ways the food is more delicious

u/Wavyhill · 1 pointr/personalfinance

There are loads of dishes that you can cook a pile of that will last several days, but keep it interesting by varying them. Just pick a country at random and google some of the dishes. You won't always have the ingredients at hand (you'll struggle to create an authentic Burmese dish, for example) but Spain, Italy and France all have cheap regional dishes that are easy to make and tasty.

Sounds obvious? Maybe it is, but there are a lot of dishes that are under the radar. So don't do spag bol, knock up Tagliatelle Amatriciana - tomato, bacon, onions and a bit of garlic. Bing bong.

This is also a great source of easy meals: http://www.amazon.com/French-Cooking-Ten-Minutes-Adapting/dp/086547480X

And don't overlook less obvious countries! Finland, for example, has a ton of nutritious and awesome food: http://thedomesticman.com/2014/09/16/nakkikastike-finnish-hot-dogs-in-sauce/

u/GruevyYoh · 1 pointr/keto

That's the basic definition of how you 'finish' a dish, in standard Italian cooking. https://www.amazon.ca/Essentials-Classic-Italian-Cooking-Marcella/dp/039458404X , like Italy-italian, not "North America's bizarro world version as promulgated by Olive Garden"

Surprisingly, authentic italian cooking can be very keto without sacrificing any flavour, and enhancing the satiation, and one of the big methods to do so is basically extra parmesan as a finishing touch.

Look for Marcella's recipe for minestrone. Leave out the pasta and potatoes, and it's full on keto. My version of the recipe is 12 g net carbs per serving, and only 8 if I leave out the cannellini beans. You lose zero flavour to having it be low carb. In the recipe you use parmesan heels (the part leftover when you grate all the cheese you can from a round) to start the broth thickening.

The classic italian meal treats pasta as an occasional, middle of the meal thing, and the portions are tiny by american standards- usually 30g or less carbs in the portion sizes I encountered. On my infrequent days off from keto, one of our go-to meals is Lasagne, northern italy style, and it's 40g carbs per serving.

u/used-books · 1 pointr/KitchenConfidential

I recommend this cookbook: The Silver Spoon New Edition https://www.amazon.com/dp/0714862568/ref=cm_sw_r_api_Uoo4yb5HMXSBF

Translated from Italian, 1000's of recipes. Get a reference copy for you kitchen, spend some time getting to know Italian seasonal non-tomato based cuisine in depth so you don't have to think on your feet when in order comes in.

u/Rivelsandgrits · 1 pointr/veganrecipes

I adore The Mediterranean Vegan Kitchen by Donna Klein--I've never had any of the recipes turn out less than excellent. It really increased my vegetable and whole grain intake, as well as provide some healthy fat (e.g., olive oil). http://www.amazon.com/Mediterranean-Vegan-Kitchen-Donna-Klein/dp/1557883599

u/Lyralou · 1 pointr/Cooking

Yes yes yes yes. This bad boy has all kinds of great bechamel - and other sauce - recipes.

u/rawdealbuffy · 1 pointr/wine

Get a nice bottle of Barolo and do a gift basket for her. If she liked Rome include all the ingredients to make a Spaghetti alla Carbonara. Since she liked Sicily get her some aged pecorino to grate on top. Also, toss in a copy of the Silver Spoon so she can whip up her favorite dishes whenever she likes.

u/KUROKOCCHl · 1 pointr/Cooking

I would recommend French Provincial Cooking by Elizabeth David. Unlike most other French cookbooks you'll find, she strays away from haute cusine. These recipes are more traditional and probably more like what your grandparents probably cooked.

u/russellh · 1 pointr/food

yes, how true, but Joy is like the annotated reference manual for every other cookbook. Personally, the most influential cookbook for me has been the classic French Cooking in Ten Minutes for its attitude and severe lack of detail.

u/hintlime9 · 1 pointr/vegan

The potato and green bean salad from here is amazing and would probably be fine without green beans. I don't have the cookbook with me, but it seems you can at least get the ingredients if you search for "potato salad" it's around page 41.

u/shyjenny · 1 pointr/Cooking

love reading good cook books too!
It's a little older, but when I moved of my parents house I took the Anna Thomas cook books.
The other one I like to page thru is the Silver Spoon
do you have a favorite?

u/peter_eater · 1 pointr/Cooking

Marcella Hazan, "Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking"
http://www.amazon.com/Essentials-Classic-Italian-Cooking-Marcella/dp/039458404X

u/Saan · 1 pointr/food

Je Sais Cuisiner English version

It is pretty much the bible of french cooking. Massive book and covers everything you would ever need to know about french cooking, basics to the complex.

u/Thehunterforce · 1 pointr/Denmark

3 spørgsmål:

  • Hvor kendt er du i et køkken.

  • Har du nogle preferencer til hvilket køkken (hvilke lande) du vil have kogebøger om?

  • Er der noget loft for hvad du vil give?

    For mig, der er den vigtigste bog at have, når vi snakker kogebøger, det er Kokkebogen. Det er en bog med alle de gode gamle klassiske retter i dansk køkken samt klassisker fra rundt omkring i Europa. Dertil får du alt den viden, som du har brug for, omkring alle dyr, udskæringer, køkkengrej og værktøj osv osv. Min gamle kokkelære på hotel og restaurations skolen sagde, at man med denne ene bog, kunne åbne en restaurant.

    God mad, let at lave er også en rigtig god bog. Den er fyldt med masser af fantastiske opskrifter, som er skide god, hvis man ikke gider lange og besværlige processer.

    Sølv Skeen Er den italienske udgave af vores kokkebog, bare uden alle de tekniske begreber. Jeg tror der er også 1000 opskrifter i denne bog (den er kæmpe. Min udgave har ødelagt et tørrestativ.)

    Frøken Jensens kogebog er en gammel klassisker, og en hver kok med respekt for sig selv, har sådan en i sit køkken.

    Jorden rundt på 80 retter er en lidt ukendt en til samlingen. Jeg synes personligt at den er skide god, fordi der er retter og inspiration at hente, som man normalt ikke ville falde over.

    Men igen, så handler det jo meget om, hvad du gerne vil have. Du kan også hente inspiration på youtube, hvor Gordon Ramsay har sine Ultimate cooking course, som er en rigtig god madserie ( men det er fyldt med foodporn dog).
u/TwattyMcTwatterson · 1 pointr/Cooking

I have three books that I carry with from job to job.

  1. Prudhomme Family Cookbook

  2. The Silver Spoon

  3. Modern French Culinary Art

u/hope1986 · 1 pointr/EatCheapAndHealthy

Ive never found any of the apps that give you premade lists great when trying to eat healthy and on a budget.

I live in Ireland but im back and forth to the USA as my husband who is a type 2 diabetic lives there and here is what Ive learned so far.
Always check the supermarkets weekly deal flyer before you go shopping, if something you use regularly is on sale and you can work it into your budget stock up.
Frozen veggies are your friends, Kroger often has bags of frozen veg down to a dollar each.
Whole foods are better for you and its easier to a) control your portion size and b) keep an eye on the amount of sugar that is in things, as an aside lowfat stuff is usually full of sugar to improve the taste.
Pintrest is great for ideas for meals that are quick an easy
Try and have some form of protein with every meal it will keep you fuller for longer.
Eggs are great for using up leftovers to make a full meal, I introduced my husband to frittas this trip and he loves them, he even brings the leftovers to work the next day for lunch.
If your interested in learning to cook, Delia smith has a great book called the complete cookery course that starts at the basics and moves on from there, here it is on amazon but you might pick it up second hand even cheaper https://www.amazon.com/Delias-Complete-Cookery-Course-Vol/dp/0563362499/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1503177499&sr=8-2&keywords=delia+smith

u/mexicatl · 1 pointr/vegan

Vegan Italiano by Donna Klein is great and the recipes are easy to follow.

http://www.amazon.com/Vegan-Italiano-Meat-free-Dairy-free-Sun-Drenched/dp/1557884943

u/wotan_weevil · 1 pointr/Cooking

I like Magnus Nilsson, The Nordic Cookbook, Phaidon, 2015: https://www.amazon.com/Nordic-Cookbook-Magnus-Nilsson/dp/0714868728/

It isn't a picture book, it isn't New Nordic, it isn't art food. It is of substantial thickness and weight. It's traditional cooking, and largely home cooking. The "traditional" ranges from ultra-traditional through to dishes that entered home cooking in the 1970s (like pork with bananas and curry sauce).

Not Iceland-focussed, but has Icelandic recipes.

u/HenryDeTamblesFeet · 1 pointr/gaybros

Get Marcella Hazan's Essentials of Italian Cooking. Start with the basic pastas and sauces and move on from there.

http://www.amazon.com/Essentials-Classic-Italian-Cooking-Marcella/dp/039458404X

u/PaperGirl90 · 1 pointr/Gifts

http://www.amazon.com/Silver-Spoon-New-Phaidon-Press/dp/0714862568
The most amazing Italian cook book, the author went to little villages and talked to real Italian cooks and got the truest traditional methods and recipes

u/mfizzled · 1 pointr/Cooking

First recommendation is don't work as a chef if you value a social/family life.

Good books to read are;
Larousse Gastronomique which is the absolute Bible/Koran/Bhagavad Gita

The Silver Spoon which is a great Italian cook book.

And another tip is old, outdated looking cook books are sometimes the best. I've got one I got from an ex girlfriend's mum which looks terrible but if you're into Cypriot/Greek/Turkish food is incredible, it's here

u/eatcheeseordie · 1 pointr/Cooking

Marcella Hazan has a great recipe. It's probably my favorite thing to eat ever. Her recipes can be a bit fussy, but the instructions are thorough and straightforward. I'd recommend cooking anything in her book the prescribed way first, and then making any changes the next time around (though I usually find I don't want to change a thing). I usually do her bolognese on the stove through all the reduction steps, then put it in my crock pot on "low" or "warm" for the rest of the day.

Added bonus: that book contains my other favorite pasta sauce; it's called something like "tomato sauce with butter and onion." It's a quicker sauce to make and it's quite addictive. (Edit: and it doesn't taste super oniony. You cook it with the onions and then take them out before serving.)

u/Mykmyk · 0 pointsr/AskCulinary

In addition to the above books...

English translation of Fernand Point's, Ma Gastronomie was rereleased a few years back.

Great book.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/1585679615/ref=redir_mdp_mobile/184-4633697-1538367

Keep meticulous notes: writing everything down you learn and things yet to learn. When watching vids or reading and you encounter something that is unfamiliar make note of it in a journal and reference it for later.

Edit: sorry, you were more so requesting resources as to what to cook. I would suggest finding a chef that interests you who has published a cook book buy it and start with the recipes in there. If you have no idea what chefs interest you choose a cuisine or region and find a book by a chef that is outstanding in that particular area of interest.

u/cfl1 · -3 pointsr/nfl

Buy this and start learning to cook some real Italian stuff:

http://www.amazon.com/Essentials-Classic-Italian-Cooking-Marcella/dp/039458404X/