12 Days of Cookbooks (!!!) — Chatting About The Season’s New Books with Margaret Roach
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
AA
♬♬♬ It’s the most wonderful time of the year… ♬♬♬
I hum this to myself a lot: When my first CSA arrives in June. When the first good tomatoes all but fall of the vine in early September. When snowflakes the size of golf balls drop from the sky. AND, most of all, when it’s time to talk about cookbooks with my friend Margaret Roach, the master gardener behind A Way to Garden
Last year, we talked about all-time favorites, the first books we ever owned, and the ones with the most besmirched pages. This year, we’ve kept our chat to the latest crop: the fall and winter 2018 cookbooks, and we hope our chat might give you some ideas for gift giving this season. Rest assured, there is something for everyone — the bakers, the boozers, the pie lovers, the pizza lovers, the Ina fans, the Dorie fans, the gadget collectors, and more.
Read the transcript or listen here.
I have not had a chance to cook from all of the books we discussed, and there are many others I haven’t even had a chance to page through yet, namely Emily: The Cookbook, which is #1 on my Christmas wishlist—Santa, hope you’re reading. That said, I have cooked from a number of the season’s new books, and I’ve included some notes below.

ALSO, Margaret and I are each giving away 12 cookbooks (!!!). To enter, leave a comment below: tell me what your favorite cookbook is for gifting (or just your favorite) and a little bit about why. Now, go double your chances to win by copying your comment into the comment box over at Margaret’s website.
Starting Monday Dec. 3, 2018, we’ll each draw one random winner a day through Dec. 14th. Here’s the order of the 12 Days of giveaways. The list will be updated daily to reflect the winner.
- Season: UPDATE: Winner is Cara Priddy
- Everyday Dorie UPDATE: Winner is Frank Wilk
- Israeli Soul: UPDATE: Winner is KARA P.
- Cooking with Scraps: UPDATE: Winner is Katherine Hubbard
- Sister Pie: UPDATE: Winner is Renee D
- Cook Like a Pro: UPDATE: Winner is Jo Kurdzeil
- Genius Desserts: UPDATE: Winner is Susan Rode
- Skinny Taste One and Done: UPDATE: Winner is Amy Olmsted
- All About Cake: UPDATE: Winner is Marie Guiles
- Milk Street Tuesday Nights: UPDATE: Winner is Sarah Bach
- Comfort in an Instant: UPDATE: WINNER is Michelle Swift
- Now and Again: UPDATE: WINNER is Paulina Muratore
One entry per person. Entries end at midnight Thursday, Dec. 13, before the final drawing. U.S. only. Good luck to all.

Category #1: Weeknight-ish/Everyday Cooking







Cook90: On January 1st 2016, David Tamarkin of Epicurious resolved to cook more — to cook 3 meals a day for an entire month — an experiment he called “Cook90”. In the end, he emerged a better, faster, and healthier cook, and he has since inspired hundreds of thousands of others to take the challenge. His cookbook, Cook90, outlines exactly how to do it: recipes, strategies, meal plans, and more.

Category #2: Global Flavors





Category #3: Baking






Category #4: Nose-to-Tail

Waste Not: Learned about this one through Margaret and her podcast with Top Chef star Tiffany Derry. Waste Not is a new cookbook from the James Beard Foundation and a campaign of anti-food waste advocacy spearheaded by that organization.
Now and Again: The latest from Julia Turshen, who believes a complete meal doesn’t have to be difficult or expensive, that leftovers can lead to inventive/fun cooking, and that gathering people around the table for a meal is a good thing. Organize both by season and menu — a brunch or an easy Thanksgiving. Helpful tips about what can be made ahead of time. Each menu is followed by a section called “It’s Me Again,” which offers a few recipes for using the leftovers.
And last but not least:
Rebekah Peppler’s Apéritif: For Francophiles and beyond, Apèritif offers recipes for both classic and modern French cocktails, along with French-inspired bites and hors d’oeuvres.

This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
740 Comments on “12 Days of Cookbooks (!!!) — Chatting About The Season’s New Books with Margaret Roach”
I love Lidia’s Mastering the Art of Italian Cooking- I love the recipes but I’ve also improved my technique. My husband, who is not a cook, loves to spend a Sunday making her milk based bolognese!
The Art of Eating Well by Helmsley and Helmsely. The recipes are Gluten Free, grain free and refined sugar free. The recipes are delicious. The chocolate fig pudding is out of this world.
I love cookbooks! Red Truck Bakery sounds wonderful. I think I might have to live a few lifetimes to get to all I want to try.
I have gifted Bread Toast Crumbs several times, perhaps most lovingly to my daughter, who is carrying on the traditions my mother taught me and her mother taught her. My daughter has become a creative baker herself, first baking bread with her late father when they had snow days together, later graduating to more complex loaves, then studying Jim Lahey’s no-knead bread techniques, and now expanding to other wonderful methods and varieties. Bread Toast Crumbs and Alexandra’s innovative approaches have been added to the repertoire. We often exchange recipes, innovations we have stumbled upon, and samples of finished products!
Unfortunately, even though I have an entire bookshelf of cookbooks, I often just go to the internet. But I really love The Basics.
I recently was gifted All About Cake and it quickly has become my favorite cookbook!! I love how much freedom it gives in making your own cakes in their style while also giving wonderful combinations! Great read!
I love Ottolenghi’s Plenty and David Chang’s Momofuku cookbooks. I received both from my partner for Christmas one year, who gifted them so we could spend some evenings during our winter break (we are both educators) cooking some more involved recipes together. The recipes are of course amazing, but the story of receiving these two books also makes them that much more special.
I love Sara Foster’s book “The Foster’s Market Cookbook” ! I love when a beloved restaurant puts out a cookbook of their most well known recipes so we can make them at home. Everything I make is so good.
Cookbooks are sooo beautiful and interesting. Even if you don’t cook from them they are fun to read and great to look through
For gifting, my favorite cookbook is The Joy of Cooking. It’s a great reference book with reliable recipes, and you just can’t go wrong with it (unless the only thing you’re interested in is glossy pictures). I confess that I have three different versions of the JOC on my cookbook shelf, and I often pull all three down when I’m looking for a recipe or information about an ingredient or technique.
My favorite book to gift is Small Victories by Julia Turshen. It’s easily my most-cooked-out-of book, and I love her general philosophy and approach to life! She is a lovely person through and through.
Although I don’t have many cook books, the one I find myself reaching for most often is Thug Kitchen ???? the recipes are soooo easy and tasty. My family isn’t vegetarian but there are no complaints about the meat free meals I cook up from this book. The casual swearing and humor by the author makes things fun, too. Sure it feels a bit juvenile, but the recipes are tested and true and I’m sticking with it!
You’re gonna laugh but I like to give The Cake Mix Doctor to a new bride because I think it will encourage her to start baking……something that has brought me great pleasure for many years. Happy Holidays!
You’re gonna laugh but I like to give a new bride a copy of The Cake Mix Doctor because I hope it will encourage her to bake…..something that has brought me great joy for many years. Happy Holiday!
I don’t own many cookbooks (I mostly get then from the library before deciding to buy, due to my tiny kitchen), but I’ve recently fallen in love with Six Seasons and I think it’d be a great gift for lots of people in my life.
I love Sarah Leah Chase’s Open House Cookbook and have given copies to my children, who are adults with their own families and their own entertainment agendas. I know that Ina Garten cites Open House frequently but honestly, I was there before she published her first cookbook.
AWESOME. I am a foodie and a home cook that loves to cook and do everyday.
From a generation of great cooks from the south. Male and female!
What a great read this was.
HUGE fan of Ina and Dorie.
Would LOVE to add to my collection.
YES, count me in to win 🙂
I haven’t had the occasion to give many, but my favorite cookbook for gifting is probably An Everlasting Meal, by Tamar Adler.
It’s beautiful. Small, yet every page hides a revelation. A great choice for future wives/moms, if you know the recipient won’t mind the lack of pictures. So relaxed and practical. And Adler is hilarious.
I love gifting any Ottolenghi cookbook- the combination of flavors in a dish is always greater than the sum of its individual parts. Makes for a lovely surprise every time!
I love Dorie Greenspan’s baking book. Her banana cream pie is unreal! I also love the Back in the Day Bakery books and Ina Garten is my homegirl
The post says one entry per person but doesn’t tell you how to enter. I’m guessing you need to make a post of some sort… I guess this will be mine.
Baking with Julia is a great book that I have enjoyed giving.
My daughter always wants me to make bbq sauce (A-1 Steak Sauce) from Barbara Lynch’s cookbook Stir.
Ottolenghi’s Plenty and 6 Seasons by McFadden are my current favorites to give!
Ina Garten’s “Cook Like a Pro”. Her recipes are well tested and precise so even beginners can be successful. And more experienced cooks can make changes with assurance that the base recipe is sound. Love Ina.
The cookbook that gets the most use is David Lebovitz’s My Paris Kitchen. I love the narrative he weaves in as well as the recipes.
My current favorite cookbook to give is Alison Roman’s Dining In. Everything I’ve made from it is delicious!
I get most inspired by reading blogs that mention cookbooks and give recipes to try. I like reading Alexandra Cooks, Budget Bytes, and Kevin Lee Jacobs and trying their suggestions. I do occasionally actually buy a new cookbook to read and have bought all three of these bloggers books and have enjoyed them. Going to make the apple muffins.
Any Diana Henry or Yotam Ottolenghi book!
Any Diana Henry or Yotam Ottolenghi book! I love both of their writing styles, as well as the international influence they pull into their recipes!