I happened to think about this today because my wife made waffles this morning using a recipe she found on line. They weren’t as good as the JOC recipe I use.
Well we have the updated 1997 version so it’s not straight up American food but even so.
View attachment 1101627 View attachment 1101628 Some of our favorites, especially the Thug Kitchen series.
All I know, and I am stupid, is that the first book was designed to get inner-city folks, that wanted to, eat better.I googled that. After accusations of "digital blackface", the series is now called the "bad manners kitchen".
Love that book. I especially like the information about building the smokers. One of these days I'd love to go to Austin, wait in line and try some of Aaron's brisket.Franklin Barbecue - a meat smoking manifesto
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For non-BBQ, a few listed in this thread already.
No worries about any of that. I have a ton of cookbooks too. I read through them front to back when I get them, then they go on a shelf and pretty much just sit there. You internalize the general information from the books, but recipes can be called up at will from google.I dunno. I have a couple hundred cookbooks. That I almost never look at. The most used one is a slightly dumbed down Thai one. Now? Mostly google.
Cheers,
Geoff
Likewise. The last time I was in Austin was a month after his bbq joint had burned down and before the new place was open!Love that book. I especially like the information about building the smokers. One of these days I'd love to go to Austin, wait in line and try some of Aaron's brisket.
I dunno. I have a couple hundred cookbooks. That I almost never look at. The most used one is a slightly dumbed down Thai one. Now? Mostly google.
Cheers,
Geoff
Then there's Marcella Hazan's Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking, and that's what it is. Lots of excellent recipes and pretty easy to follow.