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Home Health • Food

9 tried-and-true cookbooks that make perfect holiday gifts — including 3 by Chicagoans

by Edinburg Post Report
December 15, 2022
in Health • Food
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If you’re the type of cook with well-thumbed cookbooks filled with your most-used recipes — or know someone who is — you understand how essential they are.

And while the hottest, newest cookbooks make great holiday gifts, there’s something particularly meaningful in giving one that has stood the test of time and proven itself a thoroughly useful resource for weeknight meals, family dinners and all the other ways we connect through food.

So we at the Chicago Tribune have pulled together a list of our top tried-and-trues — the desert island cookbooks, if you will. Give them to a loved one who might be new to cooking or an old pro who could use some new ideas.

The cookbook author Lindsay-Jean Hard cooks with bananas in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on May 5, 2021. Hard is an expert on no-waste cuisine and wrote a book about cooking with scraps. (Cydni Elledge/The New York Times)

It’s maybe not the most appealing title, but “Cooking with Scraps” ($20, Workman Publishing Co.) is extremely useful. A family friend bought it for me as a joke after I wouldn’t shut up about scrappy cooking and composting — but it turned out to be great. Recipes feature parts of fruits and vegetables that often get thrown away, but are perfectly edible. My favorite feature is the option to search by food product, so those with miscellaneous beet peels lying around the fridge (just me?) can easily find something to do with them. Author Lindsay-Jean Hard includes sauces and seasoned salts, but also complete, substantial dishes — which helps me not end up with merely an endless supply of condiments. — Sarah Freishtat, business reporter

Ina Garten cooks in her New York kitchen on Oct. 16, 2018.

Ina Garten cooks in her New York kitchen on Oct. 16, 2018. (Jesse Dittmar / The Washington Post)

I’d recommend any of the Ina Garten’s Barefoot Contessa cookbooks, but one of my go-to’s is “Cook Like a Pro” ($35, Clarkson Potter). From its pages, I most recently made eggplant Parmesan (with the unconventional addition of goat cheese); fried chicken sandwiches that require you to marinate the chicken in a bowl full of buttermilk, garlic and jalapeños; and strawberry shortcakes. Plus I flip through it all the time for inspiration on what to make for dinner. Her recipes are generally foolproof if you know the basics of cooking, and even if you don’t, she walks you through it so gently both in her books and on her show. I’m obsessed with her in all ways. — Zareen Syed, education reporter

David Lebovitz, a best-selling cookbook author and a pioneer of food blogging, is seen with his large granite mortar and pestle in his kitchen in Paris on Oct. 9, 2015. Of all his kitchen tools — which include two stand mixers, a blender, a food processor, an ice-cream maker and an espresso machine — Lebovitz’s favorite is his mortar and pestle.

David Lebovitz, a best-selling cookbook author and a pioneer of food blogging, is seen with his large granite mortar and pestle in his kitchen in Paris on Oct. 9, 2015. Of all his kitchen tools — which include two stand mixers, a blender, a food processor, an ice-cream maker and an espresso machine — Lebovitz’s favorite is his mortar and pestle. (Ed Alcock/The New York Times)

I don’t buy many cookbooks anymore, since I’ve collected and donated a few full libraries before and after moves to far-off places. But when I want recipes, and the often funny stories behind them, I’ve turned to my friend David Lebovitz. The chef, Paris-based blogger and cookbook author still shares so much for free, but you can now upgrade to a paid subscription to his newsletter on Substack for $5 per month or $50 per year. Unlock an all-access pass to his stunning photos, recipes, discussions and stories, all on the way to making your own. — Louisa Chu, food critic

The Chicago Tribune's "Holiday Cookies" cookbook.

The Chicago Tribune’s “Holiday Cookies” cookbook. (Bill Hogan / HANDOUT)

Call it a shameless plug if you want, but the simple truth is, I use this Tribune-crafted cookbook year-round. From simple recipes that take 30 minutes or less, to the most classic versions of cookies that shoot me straight back to childhood, “Holiday Cookies” ($25, Agate Surrey) has it all. This selection of winning recipes from the first 25 years of the Chicago Tribune’s Holiday Cookie Contest features home-baked cookies that have been tenderly handed down through generations, as well as inventive takes I’d never think of on my own. There’s appropriately named Mrs. Levy’s Giant Chocolate Chip Cookies (each cookie weighs almost a quarter pound), a multitude of gingerbread and such a range of recipes that you’re guaranteed to satisfy every sweet tooth in town. — Ariel Cheung, food and travel editor

Inez Yeargan Kaiser’s "Original Soul Food Cookery"

Inez Yeargan Kaiser’s “Original Soul Food Cookery” (Rochell Sleets/Chicago Tribune)

When I need a tasty, simply seasoned batter for fish, a creamy white sauce for pasta or a fewer-than-five-step soul food recipe, I turn to the rare, now-hard-to-find (a single copy runs anywhere from $152 to $500 on resale sites, Etsy and Amazon) “Inez Yeargan Kaiser’s Original Soul Food Cookery” (revised edition, August 1968). Pretty much anything you want to make from scratch — from beverages, casseroles, cookies and candies to soups, seafood, rolls and “TV snacks” — are pure jewels in this comprehensive cookbook. A true keeper for those who like to get down in the kitchen. — Rochell Sleets, director of news

Singer and cookbook author Patti LaBelle cooks chicken with black-eyed peas and yellow rice during an interview in the Tribune's test kitchen.

Singer and cookbook author Patti LaBelle cooks chicken with black-eyed peas and yellow rice during an interview in the Tribune’s test kitchen. (JAMES F. QUINN / CHICAGO TRIBUNE)

For lovers of soul music and soul food alike, “LaBelle Cuisine” ($30, Gallery/13A) by the multihyphenate “Godmother of Soul” Patti LaBelle is the perfect gift. Aside from churning out hits for decades, in this part-cookbook, part-memoir, you’ll learn LaBelle has built a culinary reputation of providing good ol’ fashioned Southern home cooking for all your favorite celebs — and the tea she spills is almost better than the food she cooks. Read it for a Chicago cameo featuring a mishap with her famed potato salad at Oprah’s Harpo Studios alone. For proof that her recipes withstand the test of time: My family has cooked LaBelle’s Over-the-Rainbow Macaroni and Cheese every holiday since I was little, and every year it’s the first dish cleared. — Lauryn Azu, deputy senior editor

Chef Rick Bayless explains a cooking method during Chicago Gourmet at Millennium Park in Chicago on Sept. 28, 2019.

Chef Rick Bayless explains a cooking method during Chicago Gourmet at Millennium Park in Chicago on Sept. 28, 2019. (Youngrae Kim / Chicago Tribune / Chicago Tribune)

The cookbook I’ve used more than any other is Rick Bayless’ “Mexican Everyday” ($30, W.W. Norton & Co.). Half the pages are falling out, and the other half are covered in stains. But every recipe works, and it’s a great introduction to the cuisine, with plenty of quick-and-easy meals for busy weeknights. — Nick Kindelsperger, food critic

The cover of ‘Nerdy Nummies’ by Rosanna Pansino.

The cover of ‘Nerdy Nummies’ by Rosanna Pansino. (Saleema Syed / Chicago Tribune)

We go gaga over the chocolate chip cookie recipe from the “Nerdy Nummies” cookbook ($30, Atria Books) by Rosanna Pansino, a YouTuber my teenage daughter was obsessed with for awhile when she was younger. They are hands-down the best chocolate chip cookies we’ve ever had! — Saleema Syed, deputy senior editor

Chandra Ram's recipe for butter chicken with spiced cashews features chipotle chiles; it's available in her new cookbook, "The Complete Indian Instant Pot Cookbook."

Chandra Ram’s recipe for butter chicken with spiced cashews features chipotle chiles; it’s available in her new cookbook, “The Complete Indian Instant Pot Cookbook.” (Robert Rose / CTMG)

I’d never quite managed to get my flavor profiles right when cooking Indian food until I got this cookbook (which, full disclosure, was basically the entire reason I wanted an Instant Pot to begin with). But leave it to Chicago’s own Chandra Ram, associate editorial director of food at Food & Wine, to use “The Complete Indian Instant Pot Cookbook” ($25, Robert Rose) to not only guide the reader through essential spices, tools and other tips, but to translate the deeply complex layers of flavor in dishes such as saag paneer, biryani and butter chicken into simple Instant Pot recipes that can take as little as 15 minutes to whip up. — A.C.

archeung@chicagotribune.com

Big screen or home stream, takeout or dine-in, Tribune writers are here to steer you toward your next great experience. Sign up for your free weekly Eat. Watch. Do. newsletter here.

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