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Nosh Pit

Cookbook Recs

The Cookbooks of Our Lives

Things get a little geeky in Style Editor Laura Cassidy’s cookbook collection.

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Cookbooks

Not everybody cooks, but everybody has a cookbook: The one you hid from your mom so she wouldn’t make that dreaded carrotloaf for supper, the one your first live-in girlfriend bought you—then took back when she bailed on you for that douchey guy at her office.
In this series, Seattle Met staff share the cookbooks that have shaped their lives. Last week Arts Editor Laura Dannen talked about Betty Crocker basics. This time, Laura Cassidy, Seattle Met Style Editor and overseer of all things wedding, breaks down her cookbook shelf and shares some rare finds.

My cookbooks can be classified into three groups:

1.Reference This group includes Alice Waters’ vegetable bible, an old, old paperback copy of James Beard’s fish preparation methods, Traunfeld’s herb recommendations, etc.

2. Inspirational I’ll probably never make anything from that 1978 Judie Geise book The Northwest Kitchen, but I love it as a historical artifact of our city’s food culture, and when I’m bored with my usual repertoire, instructions for Dandelion Salad Mimosa — not to mention George Tsutakawa’s accompanying sumi drawings — always lead to something delicious.

3. Healthy We sometimes call the house cuisine Pottery Teacher’s Potluck. To many that will sound boring and bland, but I love rich, flavorful, seasonal meals that I don’t have to feel guilty about. This section is by far my favorite and it gets pretty geeky — texts on the energetic properties of food from a Chinese medicine perspective (Paul Pitchford’s bible is indispensable) mix with the Moosewood collection and other 80s-era world/veggie/macro-biotic/Diet-for-a-Small-Planet type stuff. Then again, if I’m past deadline or late for a meeting, it could be because I fell into a hole at Tastespotting or some online compendium of Mark Bittman salads, and I can’t get out …

Tags: DIY cooking, Cookbooks, Cooking, Health Food

 

Comments Speech Bubble

By Graham on Jan 26, 2010 at 12:27PM

My current favorite inspirational/regional cookbook is You Can’t Eat Mount Rainier. It was published in 1955 and features Seattle dining establishments of the age, including recipes and cocktails as well as blue laws such as “women may not be in a bar unaccompanied”. I found mine in a local used book store but there is one copy on Amazon here: http://www.amazon.com/You-cant-eat-Mount-Rainier/dp/B0007DO1UK/ref=pd_rhf_p_t_1

By Laura Cassidy on Jan 26, 2010 at 1:54PM

Graham that sounds so awesome! gonna go check the Amazon link now!

By Nick Hawley on Jan 27, 2010 at 11:15AM

Love seeing that familiar, old school Moosewood! Hungarian Mushroom Soup—-the best!!!

By Bill on Jul 28, 2010 at 12:49AM

Judy Geise’s composed Salad Nicoise rates as one of my all time favorite summer recipes. For at least the the last 25 years my wife and I either serve it to friends (never any leftovers) or feast on vegetables for several days several times a summer. As she says it is not particularly authentic but in spirit and manner it is kin to the great composed salads of France a hundred years ago. Yes the food here back in the 70’s and 80s was interesting but also delicious (still) and meant to be eaten

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