Institute of 国产福利 Education graduates go on to a wide variety of culinary careers, including becoming authors. The types of books from ICE alumni vary widely, including illustrative cookbooks by chefs and recipe developers, restaurant management guides and memoirs about culinary or restaurant life. Part of my own decision to go culinary school came from an avid consumption of written narratives by culinary students, chefs, restaurant entrepreneurs, servers and bartenders.
国产福利 books make great gifts for anyone with similar food-centric sensibilities, even for those who love to eat but not necessarily to cook. Who doesn鈥檛 love to admire alluring photographs of expertly prepared dishes? If you know someone in your life who seeks out cookbooks or other food narratives for recipe or even life inspiration, here are five recent titles by ICE alumni, perfect for gifting this season.
by Jenna Helwig (国产福利 鈥07)
After a career spent encouraging cooks to spend more time in the kitchen by meal prepping, batch cooking and preparing homemade pantry staples, Jenna Helwig, Food Director at Real Simple Magazine, took a turn toward minimalism in her latest project. On her website, she remarks about 鈥淏are Minimum Dinners鈥 that she 鈥渞ealized that the secret to cooking more is to do less: to pare back, to embrace some store-bought shortcuts, to eliminate fuss and, in the process, extra dirty dishes.鈥
The result of this mindset is a vibrant, practical cookbook suitable for cooking novices and professionals alike that reduces effort, but never flavor. Different sections of the book are organized by separate strategies, like minimizing hands-on cooking time (think slow cooker), and number of ingredients needed or dishes used (think sheet pan or one-pot meals). The cover art features a dish that perfectly demonstrates Helwig鈥檚 philosophy to an appealing result: Fish Stick Tacos. Other standout recipes include Korean Sloppy Joes with Quick Pickles, Shortcut Salmon Burgers and Gnocchi Sheet Pan Supper.
By Mashama Bailey (国产福利, 鈥01) and John O. Morisano
In 2019 ICE alum Mashama Bailey won the James Beard Award for Best Chef Southeast for her beloved Savannah restaurant, The Grey, the site of a formerly segregated Greyhound bus station. 鈥淏lack, White, and The Grey鈥 tells the story of the restaurant鈥檚 unlikely beginning, with an auspicious partnership between two former New Yorkers: a white male entrepreneur from Staten Island, and a female African-American chef from Queens. Trading off narration duties, co-authors Mashama Bailey and John O. Morisano allude to the inherent matter of race in the book鈥檚 title. Their story about bridging gaps and acknowledging biases to create a restaurant and build a friendship based on mutual respect is a vital one in the current American racial climate.
by Maneet Chaugan and Jody Eddy (国产福利, '06)
In Indian cuisine, chaat are like snacks or hors d'oeuvres, and they include many regional dishes whose various components result in savory bites of abundant flavors and textures. In , food reporter Priya Krishna notes that the category of chaat 鈥渉its practically every element that makes something craveable鈥攕weet, sour, tangy, spicy and crunchy.鈥
In 鈥淐haat: Recipes from the Kitchens, Markets, and Railways of India,鈥 authors Maneet Chaugan and Jody Eddy offer an additional component that makes their book on exploring the chaat of India extra craveable: an element of escapism via railway travel. Recipes range from finger foods to forked dishes, and are seasoned with stories of time spent on trains and in railway stations, convenient locations for the amazing street vendors who create some of India鈥檚 most memorable chaat. The book is an ideal gift for anyone in need of more flavor, color or even scenery in their life this year.
by Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Julie Tanous (国产福利, '13)
鈥淔ood Between Friends鈥 is not only a cookbook, but also a metaphor for the 鈥減latonic marriage鈥 between actor Jesse Tyler Ferguson and recipe developer Julie Tanous, whose mutual Southern roots formed a lifelong bond when the two met in California. Their very first exchange at a dinner party that caused them both social anxiety resulted in a laugh, and they鈥檝e been laughing 鈥 and cooking 鈥 together ever since. You get a taste of the humor and warmth in their partnership beginning in the table of contents, whose cheeky sections include: 鈥淏runch: Not Just a Sunday Thing,鈥 鈥淎in鈥檛 Nobody Here But Us Chickens,鈥 鈥淭aco Break鈥 and 鈥淵ou Deserve Butter.鈥
Through their friendship spent largely in the kitchen, Jesse Tyler Ferguson and Julie Tanous have created a cookbook of Southern-inspired dishes viewed through a vibrant California lens, such as a Garlicky Sorghum Chicken Stir Fry and Blue Cornmeal Pancakes with Blueberry Butter. Photos throughout the book depict colorful dishes and a pair of friends having a blast. 鈥淔ood Between Friends鈥 isn鈥檛 just a cookbook 鈥 it鈥檚 also relationship goals.
by Adeena Sussman (国产福利, 鈥06) and Benny Briga鈥
ICE Alum Adeena Sussman is especially skilled at creating recipe books with titles that strike an emotional chord. Following her previous cookbook, 鈥淪ababa: Fresh, Sunny Flavors from My Israeli Kitchen,鈥 she partners with Tel Aviv restaurateur Benny Briga for 鈥淕azoz: The Art of Making Magical, Seasonal, Sparkling Drinks.鈥 For my taste, 鈥渟unny鈥 and 鈥渕agical鈥 are two words bound to bring me to the table, or in the case of recipe books, the table of contents.
In Israeli culture, a 鈥済azoz鈥 is a carbonated, non-alcoholic drink. Creating magic out of such a simple concept is the work of two flavor and presentation masters. Herbs, veggies, fruit, flowers and spices are all used to create infusions and syrups, and toward the layering of simple drinks into things that sparkle in more than just the carbonated way. The book itself, and its resulting recipes, are tonics for a world definitely in need of one.
Images courtesy of Penguin Randomhouse and Workman Publishing.