In the age of the internet, one might think that cookbooks would have become a relic of the past, however, new cookbooks continue to enter the market on a regular basis.
Plenty of classic cookbooks contain wisdom that even tenured chefs still rely on.
鈥淚 think the thing that makes classic cookbooks classic is they are both trend-proof and bullet-proof,鈥 says ICE Los Angeles Campus President Lachlan Sands. 鈥淭he recipes in them remain popular because they are delicious, culturally relevant and if you follow the directions as written, they work. With the advent of the internet and the opportunity to source from millions of online recipes, professionally tested and functional recipes are hard to identify. Classic cookbooks make it easy.鈥
Why do professional chefs prefer certain classic cookbooks?
In the digital age, cooking remains stubbornly analog, which is a comfort for those of us who love to do it, and physical cookbooks are also a reminder of that, regardless of changing technology and tastes.
鈥淢any of these books are by the giants upon whose shoulders we stand,鈥 adds ICE Chef-Instructor Stephen Chavez. 鈥淚 do believe that ingredients, innovations and tastes change, but the technique is forever. There are only seven classic ways to cook: saut茅, grill, fry, braise, poach, roast and the rarely used poeler,鈥 he says. 鈥淚f you can master those techniques, then you can cook anything.鈥
ICE Chef Ann Ziata adds 鈥淐hefs today didn't invent cooking; they learned from the cooks before them. And before the internet, if you wanted to expand your skills beyond family recipes, you had to open a book. When students start culinary school, we take them back to the basics: traditional cooking techniques and classic recipes. Once they have a solid foundation, they can add their own flair and create dishes with dimension and meaning.鈥
Cookbooks have and will continue to be our partners-in-crime for the cooking process. Their dog-eared corners and sauce-splattered pages are like a diary, reminding us of some of our favorite memories of feeding ourselves and our loved ones. Both recently and historically classic, here are eight cookbooks that chefs still frequently turn to.
鈥溾 by Irma S. Rombauer
鈥淭he Joy of Cooking鈥 reminds us that cooking can 鈥 and should 鈥 be a joyful pursuit.
鈥溾楾he Joy of Cooking鈥 is such a solid foundation for understanding everything from grains to soups to breads and desserts,鈥 Chef Ann says. 鈥淎 great dish is a classic for a reason, and good taste never goes out of style."
Originally published in 1931, The New York Public Library named it one of the 150 most influential books 鈥 not just cookbooks 鈥 of the 20th century, speaking to its long-lasting relevance. The 75th Anniversary edition, published in 2006, retains the original voice of the author, and there is a joy to be found even in the table of contents, with sections including 鈥淕riddle Cakes and Fritter Variations鈥 and 鈥淧oultry and Wildfowl.鈥
Related: Cookbooks Written by Female Chefs
鈥溾 by
Published in 1997, this excellent, scientifically focused cookbook is a favorite of Chef Stephen.
鈥淎long with James Beard, she is one of the major influences on Alton Brown and was seen occasionally on camera in his show 鈥楪ood Eats,鈥欌 he says. 鈥淪he approaches food from a scientific perspective and answers not only how to do something, but why that something happens, and what the science is behind it,鈥 an especially helpful methodology for aspiring chefs.
Cookbooks not only outline the cooking process but can help reignite memories tied to specific dishes and cuisines. Chef Stephen knows this well.
鈥淵ears ago, when applying for my first job teaching [at] Le Cordon Bleu, I memorized [Shirley O. Corriher's] information about cooking cr猫me anglaise, and recited it word for word when doing my cooking demo,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hankfully, that extra bit of information that I gave to the panel was what put my demo over the top, and I got the job. Here I am still teaching in my twentieth year, and I still reference Shirley and her book today.鈥
鈥溾 published by Phaidon Press
Before Marcella Hazan did for Italian cuisine what Julia Childs did for French, this cookbook was on hand to help people learn Italian cuisine.
鈥溾楾he Silver Spoon鈥 cookbook was originally published in 1950 to establish a baseline for classic Italian cooking,鈥 Chef Lachlan says. 鈥淔ocused on fresh, quality ingredients and authentic regional flavor profiles, this is my favorite cookbook ever. If I could eat from this one every day, I would.鈥
鈥溾 by Cook's Illustrated
Chef Lachlan cites this extensive work as one of two cookbooks he finds himself returning to. Authored collectively by Cook's Illustrated, informally considered 鈥淎merica鈥檚 Test Kitchen,鈥 the original was published in 1999, with the 鈥淣ew鈥 version published in 2004.
鈥淭his encyclopedic work covers just about everything you would ever want to cook with clear directions and dozens and dozens of tests for each recipe,鈥 Chef Lachlan says, 鈥渕aking them both bullet-proof and super tasty.鈥
鈥溾 by Julia Child, Louisette Bertholle and Simone Beck
Chef Stephen notes that he, of course, has a copy of what became one of the most influential cookbooks of all time. Not only did it inspire home cooks in the 1960s to travel to France via their own kitchens, but it also inspired so much more: the genesis of cooking television, a tribute blog and a major motion picture. So let it continue to inspire you, as well.
Sure, you can look up hundreds, if not thousands, of Boeuf Bourguignon recipes online, but will your process have the well-tested pedigree of this manual, not to mention the appropriate feel without it propped open on the counter, and the quirky falsetto of Julia herself whispering in your ear?
鈥溾 by Marion Cunningham
ICE Pastry & Baking Arts Chef-Instructor Kathryn Gordon recommends this cookbook with its reassuring title, for its 鈥渃lassic and usually straightforward recipes and a sense of nostalgia.鈥
Speaking of nostalgia, this is arguably the most classic of the classics, originally published in 1896 as "The Boston Cooking-School Cook Book." A perfect manual for beginners especially, the book includes nearly 2,000 recipes to bring aspiring cooks back to the basics.
鈥The Voluptuous Vegan鈥 by Myra Kornfeld
While Mollie Katzen鈥檚 "Moosewood Cookbook" is long considered the bible for vegetarian cuisine long before 鈥渓ocal鈥 and 鈥渟easonal鈥 became principles that American cooks dared aspire to, Chef Ann suggests that Myra Kornfeld鈥檚 book does the same for vegan cookery.
Published in 2000, 鈥渋t was ahead of the time for vegan recipes,鈥 Chef Ann says. 鈥淚f you've been plant-based for a while, you remember how rare it was to find good recipes that weren't just saut茅ed tofu with carrots. This book opened my world to vegetables I hadn't tried before and techniques that made every meal very gourmet.鈥
Want to eat more plants? Broaden your horizons in ICE's Plant-Based 国产福利 Arts program
鈥溾 published by Better Homes & Gardens
It is the red gingham of this book that conjures my own earliest kitchen memories and comforts me with its ongoing commitment to practicality: the category tabs, the helpful introductory sections on measuring and ratios, the photo series that delineate everything from pasta shapes to cuts of beef. And perhaps most importantly, the 3-ring binding, which allowed it to easily lay flat on the counter. (It鈥檚 hard to believe that this hasn鈥檛 become the industry standard for cookbooks in the years since it was first published in 1965.)
Even though each edition has added new recipes to stay contemporary and relevant, it hasn鈥檛 lost sight of its roots, and it鈥檚 what I want to reach for when the urge for classic comfort foods like scalloped potatoes or pot roast strikes.
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