Wednesday, October 20, 2010

Annual Cookbooks Best Deal for the Buck

If you have a favorite food magazine, no doubt you have seen their ANNUAL cookbook. It is usually a hard cover cookbook with ALL the recipes they published in the previous year's magazine without all the ads. So, it's up to you to decide what type of recipes you like and level of skill as a cook or time you have to create great dishes!

What makes these cookbooks a great deal is that they were usually available for retail sale around $30, but with a little searching on the web, you can get them for about $10 including shipping! Better yet, find a "lot" of cookbooks to save on shipping. Check eBay and Google shopping to find the best deals!

Some of the cookbook annuals to look for (in no particular order):  Southern Living, Pillsbury, Martha Stewart,  Quick Cooking (From Taste of Home), Taste of Home, Weight Watchers, Better Homes & Gardens, Cooks Illustrated (the hardest to find in the second tier market for a good price), Food & Wine, Eat Up and Slim Down, Cooking Light and a few more! Many go back decades!

Bang for the buck, one of the best collection of recipes you will add to your cookbook library is an annual cookbook. 

An example of Cooking Light:  http://justask.ecrater.com/p/5186952/lot-annual-cookbook-cooking-light

Thursday, October 14, 2010

Great "from scratch" recipes from older cookbooks!


In part, due to the economy, people are once again discovering a room in their home----the kitchen. Using the stove and oven and even stocking the fridge with food that is meant to be made into meals rather than let it turn into a science project by letting it go bad. More families are turning cooking into a necessity and realizing that it could also become a fun hobby. Cooking and baking is a skill that you will enjoy for the rest of your life and create memories for your family that could last for generations to come!

With the deluge of "Food Network" cookbooks, that at best have only a handful of recipes that you would make, it's time to think outside the box and find old fashioned recipes -- those classic comfort food recipes that you want to make over and over again that are basic home recipes.

Look no further than your mother's or grandmother's kitchen and their comb bound or wire spiral community or church cookbooks. Most of these cookbooks were created to fund a project or cause. And they have been creating this glimpse into the art of cooking for well over 60 years, but some of the best church and community cookbooks came into their own in the 1950's and 1960's and even a few in the 21st century.

Depending on were you are in the country, your state could be lucky enough to add "ethnic" recipes to their collection--such as Swedish and Norwegian here in Minnesota, Cajun in Louisiana, etc. The church and community cookbooks keep those hard to find heritage recipes alive and remembered (and made) by generation after generation for decades if the recipe books stay with their families.

Why are these cookbooks so good? Well, the cooks that contributed their recipes sent in only the best and their names were attached to each recipe. In fact, in older cookbooks, it was suggested that you contact the cook if you had problems.

The recipe was basic, simple and all "from scratch" cooking so there were no pre-packaged foods. It feed the family week after week and you looked forward to a meal that was made with love. Hot dishes (casseroles everywhere else in the world except Minnesota) usually combined meat, potatoes and vegetables so you had a 'stick to your ribs' meals!

This time of year, people start their quest to find the recipe book that has their Aunt Mary's cake recipe in a church cookbook from the 60's to be given as a gift. Fortunately, eBay will help the seeker find a hard to find cookbook, either by checking the list of (on average) 85,000 cookbooks listed at any given time or better still, posting to "want it now" where 100's of people check out who wants what and can recover that food memory. Even eCrater (where I have my store) has over 11,000 cookbooks. If all else fails, check Google shopping--if you give enough information you could find what you are looking to cherish for years to come.

So if you can find your favorite community cookbook, keep it safe and look for another copy because it could turn into something that you want to pass down to the next generation!

Monday, October 11, 2010

Learn to find great cookbooks and enjoy the surprises and treasures they hold.


Well, there hasn't been that much to write about, so I kept collecting cookbooks. Most from church sales, garage and estate sales. Even used book stores need to be checked out! 

The one thing I can count on are annual church sales and a large, favorite church just had theirs. Arrived 10 minutes before the doors opened, but ended up at the end of a line that had more than 300 people ahead of me! (Note to everyone: Get in  line early.)  Knew right where the cookbooks were displayed and raced to get there before too many others did. Good! Only four others were flipping through the cookbooks. With over 200 cookbooks I'm bound to get a few good ones. Looks like someone gave up their church and community cookbook collection--my favorite! But things have changed in the world of book buying. With aps for reading ISBN numbers, dealers rifle through stacks with their phones reading bar codes to snag the good books. They don't know what they are missing! So I am picking out the spiral bound cookbooks--just looking at the title and the city and state they came from, but not checking for much more. When you are in a herd of cookbook enthusiasts, you have to make a split second decision. Some things are no-brainers, like a 1963 McCall's Step-by-Step cookbook--1st Edition, or a 1st edition Junior League cookbook that I've never seen before. But not too many of those. Well, I'm up to about 30 cookbooks and go through the cookbooks again just before check-out to make sure they don't smell of smoke and aren't too damaged.

Got home and started going through my newly acquired treasures and the first one was a community in Kansas celebrating their town's 100 anniversary. Nice cookbook--well put together with a cookbook publisher. Then I noticed that there was a gift inscription written on the blank side of the title page: "Congratulations.... (I'm leaving the name of the city out because there are only about 130 people in the town) Kansas Keep on cooking and writing recipes it's a great hobby! (Signed) Julia Child.

What? Well a week before this, a friend showed my her signed cookbook from Julia Child and it was the same signature. WOW. This ranks right up there with Martha Stewart following ME on Twitter! It was amazing to me that first, the town sent Julia Child the cookbook and even more amazing is that she sent it back with a wonderful note. So, just how many OTHER community cookbook editors were smart enough to send their cookbook to Julia Child to read--and lucky enough to have her send back a note. I think that this stays in my collection. I would be nice for the next caretaker of this book to be just as surprised and grateful to Julia for being America's Chef. Thanks, Julia and thanks to someone who tool the trouble to have this happen....what a sweet treat.