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”
What a great and generous idea!
My all time favorite cookbook would be Maida Heatter’s Book of Great Chocolate Desserts. I’ve probably made every single recipe in it.
This is such a fun and generous giveaway! My latest favorite cookbook to gift is Simple by Ottolenghi—it’s a great intro to his cooking for those who haven’t used his cookbooks yet, and it’s also excellent for those who have! I’ve been loving it! xx
One of my biggest favorite is How to be a Domestic Goddess by Nigella Lawson!! That’s where it all started…my passion and love for cooking and baking! ????
I gave this book to a new mom. I love the story and the easy recipes to bring todays family to the table.
Dinner: A Love Story: It all begins at the family table
Rosenstrach, Jenny
Sold by: Amazon.com Services, Inc
There are too many choices. Period. Ottolenghi Simple is my next purchase to present to one of my sisters, but I will not let her know it’s for her.
Ina Garten is my new favorite chef. Her recipes are simple and never fail to be delicious! I love everything she does! But then I love cookbooks so am sure the others have lots to offer as well.
Wow! A favorite? That would be hard to decide, especially if you could see my many shelves of cookbooks. But there’s always room for several more! I love Samin Nosrat’s approach in “Salt, Fat, Acid, Heat”. My go-to right now is Bosh! for fun, vegan ideas. But wait….what about…..??
My favorite cookbook is the second one I ever received (the first being the Betty Crocker Cookbook for Kids out of which I made macaroni & cheese for my first dinner party at age 7): Julia Child’s French Chef Cookbook. I still refer to it 40 years later and it has never failed me — although there have been a couple of times I’ve failed it 😉
Jane, I still have my Betty Crocker Boys and Girls Cookbook! I remember making the meatloaf and mashed potato recipes from it – you bake the meatloaf in a round pan and cut it into wedges, then put an ice cream scoop of mashed potato on it for meatloaf a la mode!
I love to give Food in Jars to friends who want to venture into canning but don’t know where to start. And The Cookie Book is my new favorite holiday baking cookbook. This list is amazing! I already own two of the titles, so if I’m lucky enough to win one they’ll be gifted to my public library.
My favorite author is Ina Garten. I have 7 of her cookbooks. The recipes are elegantly simple and super yummy. I plan to purchase Simple.
Love Ina Garten’s cookbooks!
Love your recipes, and your moms peasant bread. Happy Holidays. Hope I win.
I love cook books. I don’t have one cookbook gift that works for everyone, but one of my favorites to give new cooks is the good old Betty Crocker cookbook. It has all the basics.
After spending time living in the Middle East, I’ve loved cooking from Ottolenghi’s books and have given Plenty to several friends – the Moroccan carrot salad and black pepper tofu are my favorites. Now that I’ve tried Simple, my mostly-vegetarian brother is getting it for Christmas (shhh!). Of the books on your list, I’d most like to up my dessert game by trying Genius Desserts.
Hello, Thank you for this opportunity! Thinking back, I have no top pick cookbook, but always looked forward to buying the annual Southern Living collection Cookbook that provided the past year’s best recipes. I have quite a few!
I’ve been loving (and would love to give) Six Seasons- I was inspired to buy from all the recipes you were making from it that I then recreated in my own kitchen!
My favorite has to be Plenty by Ottolenghi. It made fall in love with vegetables and their diversity!
I love my baking books. I pull out my “Flour, water, salt, yeast” book by Ken Forkish often.
What a great podcast! I have heard lots of chatter about everything in the collection, and of course would love to have them all. 🙂 A cookbook that I go to frequently is Deborah Madison’s Vegetarian Suppers and Moosewood’s Simple Suppers. On the flip side, my family loves a good Pioneer Woman meal, and I have two of her first cookbooks. When I was teaching myself to cook though, I relied on America’s Test Kitchen red binder. 🙂 And, of course, I love my Bread, Toast, Crumbs! Oh, and Alana Chernila’s cookbooks are go tos of mine too!
I love most of Ina Garten’s cookbooks…they’re foolproof!
Fannie Farmer was the first cookbook I purchased about 50 years ago…great. And, The Blueberry Hill cookbook has some wonderful recipes.
I love Bread, Toast, Crumbs and have gifted it four times already. Another I really enjoy and may gift this year is The Lost Kitchen by Erin French. Inspired recipes and just lovely to look through. My most used cookbook in recent years is The Perfect Pie by Susan G. Purdy. I don’t gift that one, as I am the pie maker in my circle of family and friends. Smitten Kitchen books are fabulous, too. Her IG feed is a constant inspiration. Picking a favorite is just impossible.
I love The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook and Smitten Kitchen Every Day by Deb Perelman. Great recipes that tend to use things that I buy anyway, so it’s easy to turn to them for last-minute meal ideas.
Patricia Wells Trattoria is my favorite, second would be Amanda Hesser’s Ny Times.
I love Smitten Kitchen everyday. The recipes are flavorful and interesting, but also quick to make which is perfect for busy weekdays and with young kids.
My favorite cookbook to use and gift is The America’s Test Kitchen Family Cookbook because I love th show, the recipes, and the equipment and ingredient ratings. Each recipe has been delicious and very doable.
A definite favorite for me is The Smitten Kitchen Cookbook. I’m also really liking a local one I received recently: Eating Local in the Fraser Valley by Angier Quaale. (The Fraser Valley is located near Vancouver, BC, Canada, which is where I live).
Naming a favorite cookbook would be like trying to choose a favorite child. I have favorites for different needs: parties-Ina, learning new things-Julia (especially The Way To Cook), family favorites-my Mother’s and Mother-in-Law’s stained recipe cards. I also love anything by Alice Waters, Emeril, and Frank Stitt.
I’m a big fan of yottam ottolenghi, and I often read his Simple cookbook. It is beautiful to look at too.
Such a great idea. Love all of them.
Enjoy Ina’s cooking techniques. My first and favorite cookbook I received when we married 50 years ago, was a Better Homes and Garden. I still love it.
Vivian Howard’s Deep Run Roots is excellent. There is something in there for everyone, with recipes ranging from home cook easy to sophisticated professional chef level. Vegetables shine in this cookbook though there is plenty in there for seafood, meat and poultry lovers. And there is a sense of pride in the people and farming traditions of Eastern Carolina, so this is far more than just a compilation of delicious recipes.
I love Deb Perelman’s cookbooks. Simple recipes with easy to find ingredients that work the first time. Can’t wait to look for some of these cookbooks!
Anything by Nigella Lawson or Ina Garten are gratefully received.
Yottam Ottolenghi’s Plenty!! I love cookbooks and the ones that really stick out and make me want to share are the ones that are beautifully written and put together, with good food that you want to share with the people you love!!