The Cookbooks of Home

Description
Our August List of the Month is dedicated to cookbooks that reflect the cuisine of each member's home country or region. Whether home signifies the place where one was born and raised, or the place where one now lives, is left for the member to decide.
1
5,231 members
51 reviews
4.1
2
1,477 members
31 reviews
½ 4.3
11 Members
karenb, dara85, Morphidae, mldg, RBeffa, irishiz, bcsl, SueMoran, EGBERTINA, Ashug, Tim.Murphy
Explanations
mldg: This was a wedding gift. It's been my go to cookbook for 45 years.
3
2,491 members
18 reviews
4.1
4
2,096 members
18 reviews
½ 4.3
5
171 members
3 reviews
3.9
6
2,008 members
22 reviews
4
5 Members
chibitika, irishiz, SueMoran, BarbKeith, LLLLibrary
Explanations
chibitika: From my neck of the woods.
7
151 members
7 reviews
½ 4.3
4 Members
herschelian, charl08, abbottthomas, booksaplenty1949
Explanations
abbottthomas: Not so much a cookbook, more a way of life. It’s not like that any more!
8
272 members
2 reviews
½ 4.3
4 Members
cjayosburn, tututhefirst, perennialreader, LizStl
Explanations
cjayosburn: Great southern recipes for the place I now live.
perennialreader: Basic cooking of old southern recipes.
9
64 members
1 review
½ 4.5
4 Members
NorthernStar, gypsysmom, BarbKeith, MockyCoffee
Explanations
NorthernStar: Many classic Canadian recipes, but I use the one for frozen berry pie the most, when I make Saskatoonberry Pie.
10
302 members
4 reviews
½ 3.7
3 Members
anglemark, PawsforThought, donnamcculloch
Explanations
PawsforThought: The ultimate “classic cookbook” in Sweden. 9 times out of 10 when I’m looking for a baking recipe, I look here. It has everything that I associate with Swedish baking. The Swedish title is “7 kinds of cakes and cookies” (even though it contains hundreds of recipes) - alluding to the number of baked goods that a “proper hostess” should traditionally serve guests.
11
209 members
5 reviews
½ 3.5
3 Members
paradoxosalpha, Michael.Rimmer, MockyCoffee
Explanations
paradoxosalpha: I live in the future!
Michael.Rimmer: I am a child of the Galaxy!
12
96 members
2 reviews
4.2
13
220 members
11 reviews
4.8
3 Members
abbottthomas, kleh, AgedPeasant
Explanations
AgedPeasant: Hartley was immensely knowledgeable about country life, and had personal experience of the vanishing world of remote farmhouses. Her book preserves many traditions which readers today do not even suspect the existence of.
14
272 members
4.1
15
249 members
1 review
½ 3.3
3 Members
karenb, ManWithAnAgenda, Tim.Murphy
Explanations
karenb: A midwestern US specialty in the second half of the 20th century (see also The Simpsons).
16
215 members
3 reviews
4.1
2 Members
Aquila, grayle
19
360 members
2 reviews
4.2
2 Members
Maddz, EGBERTINA
Explanations
Maddz: My father's side of the family - cosmopolitan Egyptian.
20
230 members
½ 4.3
2 Members
cbl_tn, Tim.Murphy
21
180 members
3 reviews
4.1
2 Members
djryan, irishiz
22
123 members
3.9
23
902 members
7 reviews
3.8
24
6 members
1 review
4
2 Members
charl08, hfglen
Explanations
hfglen: Classic Cape Malay food; the recipes work and are beautifully illustrated. There are also delightful stories of life in Bo-Kaap. The author has written at least one other that would be worth looking out.
26
45 members
½ 4.3
2 Members
hipdeep, irishiz
Explanations
hipdeep: The region I call home.
27
37 members
5
2 Members
rosalita, Tim.Murphy
Explanations
rosalita: Cookbooks produced by the local Junior League have been a staple of the Midwest as long as I've lived here.
28
134 members
3 reviews
4
2 Members
sturlington, nrmay
29
450 members
5 reviews
4.2
2 Members
abbottthomas, AgedPeasant
Explanations
AgedPeasant: For centuries bread, good bread, was the staple diet of the English working class. David’s thorough treatment covers every aspect of not just bread but every type of yeast cookery.
30
21 members
2 Members
Aquila, grayle
32
28 members
4
33
884 members
18 reviews
3.9
34
1,065 members
32 reviews
½ 4.3
35
454 members
8 reviews
½ 4.3
Member
pussreboots
Explanations
pussreboots: My grandmother was given a copy as a wedding gift by her MIL. She later upgraded to a newer edition (the 1950's edition). My mother has her original (the 1940s blue edition) and I have the 1950s edition. It's the book I use most for basic cooking.
36
306 members
3 reviews
3.8
Member
SomeGuyInVirginia
Explanations
SomeGuyInVirginia: This was in everyone's house when I was a kid, although it was seldom displayed on shelves and almost never to be found with other cookbooks. It was the Playboy of cookbooks- passed from hand to hand and tittered over in small groups. Regardless of how we saw ourselves, all of us had eaten the food found in the book or made it ourselves. And adding potato chips really does make almost everything taste better.
37
274 members
4 reviews
4.2
Member
Lynsey2
38
215 members
9 reviews
½ 4.4
Member
nrmay
39
196 members
5 reviews
4
Member
technodiabla
Explanations
technodiabla: Very authentic and well curated collection of receipes from all regions of Texas. I am from Texas (gone now) and have made several of these recipes and they are spot on. If you're a heat-weenie, beware!
40
170 members
3.8
41
Member
lorsomething
Explanations
lorsomething: This isn't just a great cookbook, but is a history of a culture that was famed for its hospitality and is now disappearing.
42
160 members
8 reviews
½ 4.5
43
145 members
3
Member
EMS_24
44
131 members
1 review
4.1
Member
tallpaul
45
128 members
½ 3.7
Member
erinclark
46
123 members
2 reviews
½ 4.3
47
108 members
1 review
4.2
48
97 members
3 reviews
½ 4.3
Member
AgedPeasant
Explanations
AgedPeasant: Easily the finest book on English food: a mixture of anecdote, history, and recipes transcribed into modern format.
49
89 members
½ 4.6
Member
eggwood
50
65 members
½ 4.4
Member
ldefillipo
Explanations
ldefillipo: Fuhgedaboudit
51
46 members
2 reviews
5
52
44 members
1 review
5
Member
RShelton
53
44 members
½ 2.5
Member
Kristelh
54
42 members
5
Member
bjrie
55
39 members
Member
kidzdoc
56
32 members
1 review
3.8
Member
perennialreader
Explanations
perennialreader: Alabama Chicken Stew is the best. Alabama BBQ White Sauce is very local.
57
27 members
1 review
3
Member
hfglen
Explanations
hfglen: The classic Durban Indian book, as found in the trousseau of all local Indian brides. The recipes work, but illustrations are, in the 21st century, a bit sparse.
58
22 members
2 reviews
½ 4.3
Member
NorthernStar
Explanations
NorthernStar: A toss up between this and Fear of Frying by the same author. His attitude towards food, cooking, and eating changed how I cook during my time on the west coast.
59
17 members
4.2
Member
chwiggy
60
17 members
1 review
4
Member
birder4106
Explanations
birder4106: For decades, this book was almost the only school cookery Bible in the German-speaking part of Switzerland. (1st edition: 1923. For the time being, last published edition: 2013. Internet: elisabeth-fuelscher.ch. https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Das_F%C3%BClscher-Kochbuch) Dieses Buch war während Jahrzehnten die beinahe alleinige Schul-Kochbibel der deutschsprachigen Teils der Schweiz. (1. Ausgabe: 1923. Vorläufig letzte erschienene Ausgabe: 2013. Internet: elisabeth-fuelscher.ch. Wikipedia: https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Das_Fülscher-Kochbuch)
61
17 members
½ 3.5
Member
MmeRose
62
Member
AbigailAdams26
Explanations
AbigailAdams26: I've spent much of my life in New York State, and used to go up to the Catskills to hike. These recipes sound like home to me...
63
Member
lilithcat
Explanations
lilithcat: What could be more Chicago than Marshall Field's? (nuts to you, Macy's).
64
16 members
1 review
Member
tardis
65
15 members
2 reviews
4
Member
megbmore
66
12 members
½ 3.3
Member
raidergirl3
Explanations
raidergirl3: Chef Michael Smith shares recipes from his restaurant/farm in Prince Edward Island.
67
11 members
4
68
8 members
4
Member
Romonko
Explanations
Romonko: This cookbook is the most like my Baba's cooking that I have found. My Baba came to Canada from the Ukraine in the early 18 century when the Ukraine was suffering a famine. She landed in Gimli Manitoba with her mother, sister and brother. They settled in Saskatchewan. Her sister and brother married and became farmiers. My Baba stayed in Swift Current with her Mom and her husband who worked for the CPR. She was the best cook ever and when I tried to get her recipes from her she couldn't provide me with the details as she cooked by memory and instinct. This boogie me her recipes.
70
5 members
1 review
4
Member
MrKillick
Explanations
MrKillick: Every member of my family gets a copy when old enough. It's a saying in the family to first ask Grete how she would do some meal. Solid german cooking with lots of interesting pieces of history and background information.
71
Member
tealadytoo
Explanations
tealadytoo: Recipes from "Brownie" Schrumpf, food columnist for the Bangor Daily News for 37 years.
73
2 members
4
75
1 member
Member
LolaWalser
Explanations
LolaWalser: THE classic Dalmatian cookbook, first published in 1939.
76
1,877 members
17 reviews
½ 4.4
Member
kac522
77
1,317 members
11 reviews
4
Member
RuMuse
78
900 members
11 reviews
½ 4.3
Member
Maddz
Explanations
Maddz: My mother's side of the family - that style of cooking was ingrained
79
615 members
4 reviews
4
Member
chibitika
80
567 members
8 reviews
½ 4.3
81
525 members
13 reviews
½ 4.3
Member
alexdaw
82
416 members
1 review
½ 4.4
Member
hipdeep
Explanations
hipdeep: Somewhat south and west of the region I call home, but a fundamental book for "southern" cooking in America.
83
263 members
1 review
3.9
Member
RBeffa
84
244 members
1 review
3.9
Member
cjayosburn
Explanations
cjayosburn: While I live in Virginia now, I am from Colorado.
85
218 members
3 reviews
½ 3.6
Member
kleh
86
207 members
1 review
4.1
87
175 members
4 reviews
4
Member
lorsomething
Explanations
lorsomething: Down-home recipes interspersed with fun facts about the Andy Griffith Show.
88
133 members
3 reviews
4
89
109 members
1 review
½ 4.4
91
Member
rosalita
Explanations
rosalita: I've lived in the American Midwest for more than 30 years, but my tastes were set growing up on Long Island, New York, in a robustly Italian family and community.
92
54 members
2 reviews
½ 3.7
Member
perennialreader
Explanations
perennialreader: Fine old southern recipes.
93
54 members
1 review
½ 3.5
94
41 members
Member
Helenoel
95
30 members
½ 4.5
Member
cbl_tn
96
19 members
1 review
½ 4.7
97
9 members
2 reviews
4
Member
Kristelh
98
7 members
3
99
Member
AbigailAdams26
Explanations
AbigailAdams26: Ah, upstate New York! The birthplace of many favorite American foods...
100
Member
lilithcat
Explanations
lilithcat: What's more local than a community cookbook?