Submitted by My_Poor_Nerves t3_xvomei in books
I like to scroll through cookbooks, especially while eating breakfast. I think they sort of function as picture books for adults. The Good Housekeeping Illustrated Cookbook has some amazing vintage recipes for salmon mousse (so, so very 1970's!) and chilled lime souffle that have so much more "scope for the imagination" than badly written novels, for instance.
I do especially love gimicky cookbooks that tie into literature too. The Anne of Green Gables cookbook is really well put together and I finally got to get my hands on the monkeyface cookie recipe I was so curious about as a kid.
And the personal stories and histories included in some cookbooks (like the Zingerman's Bakehouse one) can read, if well-written, like memoirs.
Any other bibliophiles make forays into the tasty world of cookbooks?
no_remakes t1_ir265dh wrote
Pat Conroy did an excellent cookbook and I enjoyed dipping in and out of that. Depending on where in the world you are you get different ones so James Martin (Yorkshire cook) did one about going around the US that I found interesting, Rick Stein did one about specialist farmers in the UK and the different things they grew/kept and how these local flavours were so important and both of them do little anecdotes.
Keith Floyd was an absolute master of this though. His books were very entertaining.