
Since you last knew me, Iβve developed a few food-related obsessions. The first one is plates. I collect vintage plates now on Ebay and Etsy and I have quite a collection (OK, hereβs a peek on Instagram). Iβm also obsessed with old cookbooks, usually ones that have historic value (The Lutece Cookbook, for example) but sometimes I purchase cookbooks that are pretty campy and semi-historic (The Uta Hagen Cookbook, The Liberace Cookbook, The Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous Cookbook). Those collectible cookbooks held the highest position on my old cookbook shelf, a shelf that was beginning to look like a real mess. Hereβs what Iβm talking aboutβ¦
Even Mr. Lolita was scandalized.
So this past weekend, I took it all apart. Every book came out and I laid them out on various tables and chairs, though I didnβt do the whole βspark joyβ thing. I made that mistake once before and accidentally gave away half my not-food-book collection. But thatβs a story for another time.
Looking at all my cookbooks spread out, and then at the empty shelf (which Craig purchased at H.D. Buttercup and which he gladly AHEM reluctantly donated to my kitchen back in 2013) I decided that it was time to shake things up.
The former organization prioritized the vintage/collectible/campy stuff on the top shelf, the things I hoped people would enjoy rifling through at dinner parties. That never really happened. Then there were the staples on the second shelf, spilling down to the third shelf. On the bottom shelf, dessert books.
This time, though, I decided to map things out differently:
Thatβs right, no more vintage/collectibles at the topβ¦ from now on, the top two shelves would be VIPs!
Meaning: the books Iβm most excited to cook from RIGHT NOW.
Not sure if thatβs obvious to everyoneβto put the books youβre most excited to cook from at the top of your cookbook shelfβbut to me, itβs a definite game changer. Now when I mosey into my kitchen, I see the books that Iβm most psyched to see at the very top. Letβs take a closer look:
These are truly my top-tier cookbooks right now, the ones Iβm most likely to cook from if youβre coming over for a dinner party. You might spy Ottolenghiβs new dessert book, Sweet, in the mix; yup, thatβs a VIP! But there are some unexpected ones, too: Donald Linkβs Down South, Alfred Portaleβs Simple Pleasures (where I got the recipe for the best soup Iβve ever made), The Food of Campanile (which Nancy Silverton wrote with Mark Peel, back when they were married and owned a restaurant together). But the book Iβm happiest to own right now is this oneβ¦
Margot Henderson is married to Fergus Henderson, the British chef famous for cooking all the parts of the animal (I ate at his restaurant St. John when I was in London) and who wrote a book called Nose To Tail. Well as wonderful as that book is (itβs also in my collection), I have to say Iβm a bigger fan of Margotβs book. Itβs bright and funny and does something that no other cookbook does that Iβm aware of: it scales its recipes to various sizes depending on how many people youβre feeding. More than anything else, itβs the book Iβm most excited to pull off the shelf these days just to spend time with it.
One tier down, you have the other VIP books. Please donβt judge them unfairly for not making the top tier; itβs like getting a silver medal at the Olympics. These books are still at the Olympics. Give them a break.
These are all solid books, with some novelties mixed in (Ottolenghiβs first book, for example, a gift that my friend Lauren gave me years ago, before Ottolenghi was a name, and I was like: βUmm, thanks!β Little did I know itβd be a SECOND TIER COOKBOOK someday). Iβm particularly excited about cooking from Every Grain of Rice (which, weirdly, I keep putting off), The Big Sur Bakery Cookbook, and My Two Souths (already made the fried chicken from it; it was pretty special).
Now letβs talk about the third tier. Things changed from my original plan: dessert books moved up a shelf and now share space with the warhorses. These are the books thatβve been with me the longest, in a wayβ¦ the Inas, the Marios, the Lidias. These books are still stalwarts in the kitchen. Iβll pull down an Ina anytime I want to make a solid meal without too much fanfare. And Marioβs always a good resource for authentic Italian, as is Lidia. The dessert booksβthe ones that SURVIVEDβare on the right.
And finally, we have the classics. These are now on the bottom shelf because Iβm thinking of the bottom shelf more as a library, rather than the place Iβll go to first when I have people coming over. I think that makes sense. Gone are the noveltiesβLifestyles of the Rich and Famous AND The Two Fat Ladies Cookbook are now in our living room (hope Craig doesnβt notice)βand Utaβs in my nightstand. There are some real treasures on this bottom shelfβ¦
Come into the Kitchen by Mary and Vincent Price, The Cooking of Southwest France by Paula Wolfert, The Graham Kerr Cookbook (he was The Galloping Gourmet long before I was The Amateur Gourmet), Veal Cookery by Craig Claiborne, When French Women Cook by Madeleine Kamman (thatβs one of my favorites), Simple French Food by Richard Olney, The Alice B. Toklas Cookbook, and The Breakfast Book / The Supper Book both by Marion Cummingham. They may be bottom-tier books geographically speaking, but these are top-tier cookbooks by all other measures. And Iβm glad theyβre all down there for me to peruse on lazy Sundays of the future.
So behold: my newly organized cookbook collection!
And to all of the cookbooks that didnβt survive the reshuffling, please know that youβll always hold a special place in my heart. Just not on my shelf.




















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