• About Me
  • Products
  • Recipes
    • Breakfast
    • Drinks
    • Salads
    • Soups
    • Vegetables
  • Places
    • Restaurants
  • People
    • Potters
  • Books

A Good Dish

making food simpler

Books

 

91369

Foundational Cookbooks

When I moved into an apartment after college, I started to cook simple meals and bake uncomplicated desserts. Not knowing much, I used the Joy of Cooking as a reference for ingredients, temperatures, times and recipes. But when I started to take occasional cooking classes, I realized there was another, healthier and more creative world of cooking out there and my resources shifted to Moosewood, Vivian La Place, and Laurel Robertson. As I read the New York Times and Gourmet, my eyes opened to a culinary world I could only have hoped to know when watching Julia as a teenager. I still enjoy reading cookbooks and cooking memoirs, just for the pleasure of the read and I will add to this list from time to time.

There are five cookbooks I use so often that they have broken spines and dog-eared pages. Recipes are well-splashed and, in some cases, torn and worn through in spots. One (the Brody – which I inherited from my husband when he moved in long ago) is held together with duct tape. I came into my own in the kitchen cooking from these books and will be forever indebted to their authors. The last is a more recent publication but I have used it so much that it belongs in this category. Plus my teenage son loved every recipe I made from it – thank you, Lucinda!

 

  • The New Laurel’s Kitchen by Laurel Robertson, Carol Flinders, and Brian Ruppenthal
  • Still-Life with Menu by Mollie Katzen
  • Feeding the Whole Family by Cynthia Lair
  • Jane Brody’s Good Food Book
  • Mad Hungry: Feeding Men & Boys by Lucinda Scala Quinn

 

refbooks

Reference Cookbooks

When I’m not sure or simply don’t know how to cook something, these are my go-to books. This is especially true when I want to cook meat – not my strong suit because I didn’t eat it for years. These books are my reference library, in addition to the foundational cookbooks I listed above.

These “reference” books contain some my favorite recipes and cooking advice.

The Beard is a compendium of traditional recipes like baked beans, chowders and all kinds of meat and seafood. La Place is my fallback source for a simple, fresh dish with Italian sensibility or flavor. Stewart’s “101” recipes are wonderful if you’ve never made something basic, like roast chicken, and need hand-holding and guidance. I learned to make a very tasty ham from Rosso and Lukins and they have lots of helpful party planning tips, including drinks and menus. Waters cooks many different vegetables, has a great pan-fried pork chop recipe, among others, and is full of charming drawings. And the Bittman is useful whenever you want to check at what temperature to cook a roast or fish or find a simple technique for boning or chopping something with step-by-step illustrations. All make good reading as well as reference.

 

  • James Beard’s American Cookery
  • The Unplugged Kitchen by Viana La Place
  • The Martha Stewart Living Cookbook
  • The New Basics Cookbook by Julie Rosso and Sheila Lukins
  • The Art of Simple Food by Alice Waters
  • How to Cook Everything by Mark Bittman

Share this:

  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to print (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)
  • View agooddishblog’s profile on Facebook
  • View agooddisher’s profile on Instagram
  • View a good dish’s profile on Pinterest
Spring Market on Columbus Ave
West 97th St Farmers' Market

Welcome to A Good Dish

Here you will find recipes and ideas for easy to make and tasty meals, sources for interesting dinnerware on which to serve those meals and resources for ingredients, classes and food related travel. My goal is to make daily cooking simpler and to inspire you to try different recipes beyond the handful you already make repeatedly. I hope that relaying my experiences will enhance yours. Follow along and let me know about your own cooking and food journeys.

Archives

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Copyright © 2025 · Lifestyle Pro Theme On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in