A mix of classics, modern standouts, global deep dives, and the books I turn to again and again.

68 Gifts for Cookbook & Food Writing Lovers

68 Gifts for Cookbook & Food Writing Lovers

A mix of classics, modern standouts, global deep dives, and the books I turn to again and again.

Kenji's food writing bookshelf
Gift the Cookbook Club!

These aren’t just great books — they’re the ones I reach for when I want to understand a cuisine more deeply, troubleshoot a technique, get inspired, or rediscover the joy of cooking at home. Some of them are new, some old, but all of them are masterful works with depth and personality. Whether you're buying a gift for a friend or building your own library, these books offer a lifetime of learning and pleasure.

This is also a way for me to drive business towards my favorite bookshop, The Book Larder here in Seattle. If you order my book through them, I will personally go into the shop to personalize it for you and they'll ship it anywhere in the world. This is an ongoing offer that I've been fulfilling for several years, so there's no rush.

Ordering your books through the links in the list will either directly support The Book Larder, or this website. So thank you!

1. The Food Lab

J. Kenji López-Alt (2015)

My Books

I originally wrote this guide without any of my own books, but then figured that I'd rather not have to have that conversation with my publisher (or deny my mom a perfectly good opportunity to be secretly proud of me behind my back, because anyone who grew up with an Asian mom knows they will never be proud of you to your face).

1. The Food Lab

J. Kenji López-Alt (2015)

Science-forward cooking for the home kitchen.
In this book, I combines rigorous testing with practical weeknight cooking, helping readers understand not only how to make great food but why techniques work. It breaks down searing, roasting, frying, and more with clarity and what I am told are vague attempts at humor. Many of the recipes are engineered for maximum flavor or to teach you everything you might want to know about a particular dish, but my goal is to teach you the fundamentals so that that you won't even need recipes by the time you're done. It's the book that I would have wanted when I was first learning to cook.

If you like this, try: CookWise by Shirley Corriher — a science-driven cookbook that explains everyday culinary reactions in clear, accessible language.

Buy The Food Lab

2. The Wok

J. Kenji López-Alt (2022)

2. The Wok

J. Kenji López-Alt (2022)

A modern wok manual.
The wok is a multi-technique lesson in everything you can do with my favorite pan: stir-frying, deep-frying, steaming, braising, smoking—you name it. This book teaches both the science and the feel of wok cooking, helping cooks build intuition through repetition and heat awareness. Recipes range from fast weekday staples to weekend projects, from regional Chinese, Thai, and other Asian cuisines, to the Chinese-American staples that reveal the wok’s full versatility. It’s a tool that rewards practice, and hopefully this book will inspire you to put in the time.

If you like this, try: The Breath of a Wok by Grace Young — an exploration of wok culture and technique that blends personal stories with practical kitchen wisdom.

Buy The Wok

3. Every Night Is Pizza Night 

J. Kenji López-Alt, illustrated by Gianna Ruggiero (2020)

3. Every Night Is Pizza Night

J. Kenji López-Alt, illustrated by Gianna Ruggiero (2020)

A joyful introduction to food curiosity for kids (and adults).
Through Pipo’s enthusiastic pizza mission, kids learn that everyone’s “best food” deserves respect and exploration. I wrote this story as a parent who knows that other parents may have to read the same book over and over again for nights on end, and who want a story that works on multiple levels. My illustrating partner Gigi's illustrations are warm, energetic, full of details to spot, and lively. It sparks curiosity and sets the stage for adventurous eating. A perfect gift for families who cook and read together.

If you like this, try: Tomatoes for Neela by Padma Lakshmi — a beautifully illustrated book about family, food, and seasonality written for young readers.

Buy Every Night is Pizza Night

4. On Food and Cooking

Harold McGee (1984; revised 2004)

Foundations & Core Technique

These are anchor books every cook should own — the ones that build intuition, lifelong skills, and a deeper understanding of how cooking really works. They’re the “learn it once, use it forever” books.

4. On Food and Cooking

Harold McGee (1984; revised 2004)

The essential encyclopedia of culinary science.
McGee’s landmark work explains the chemistry behind ingredients and cooking processes in a way that transforms intuition. It covers proteins, starches, browning, dairy, spices, as well as materials sciences, thermodynamics, and physics. It's as dense as a cookbook, but incredibly readable. It is by-far the most referenced book on my shelf (I'm on my third copy after destroying the first two with heavy use and post-its) and essential for any nerd int he kitchen.

If you like this, try: The Flavor Equation by Nik Sharma — a book that explores the science of flavor through beautifully designed recipes and clear explanations.

Buy On Food and Cooking

5. Jacques Pépin’s Complete Techniques

Jacques Pépin (1976; revised 2012)

5. Jacques Pépin’s Complete Techniques

Jacques Pépin (1976; revised 2012)

The clearest visual guide to core cooking skills.
Pépin’s photo-driven instructions are like old school video demos before web videos existed, making classical techniques feel approachable and teachable, from knife work and butchery to pastry and sauces. His writing is warm, efficient, and endlessly encouraging. It’s one of the best technical manuals ever written for home cooks from the greatest teacher I've ever known. This was the book that started my culinary education, and it's still one of my favorites.

If you like this, try: The Professional Chef by the CIA — an authoritative reference that covers foundational cooking methods used in professional kitchens.

Buy Complete Techniques

6. Mastering the Art of French Cooking (Vols. 1 & 2)

Julia Child et al. (1961 & 1970)

6. Mastering the Art of French Cooking (Vols. 1 & 2)

Julia Child et al. (1961 & 1970)

The gold standard for Western technique.
Julia Child’s detailed instructions transform ambitious dishes into manageable projects. She explains methods with elegance and humor, helping cooks understand why steps matter and how flavors develop. Together, the two volumes form a comprehensive curriculum in classical home cooking. They remain as influential as ever.

If you like this, try: The Way to Cook by Julia Child — a more relaxed, intuitive guide from Julia that adapts core techniques for modern home kitchens.

Buy Mastering the Art of French Cooking

7. Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking

Marcella Hazan (1992)

7. Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking

Marcella Hazan (1992)

The masterwork of Italian home cooking.
Hazan teaches clarity, restraint, and sensory awareness with unmatched authority. Her techniques for pasta, risotto, sauces, and vegetables build foundational skills that translate across cuisines. The writing is direct and deeply experienced, making complex concepts feel natural. A book that permanently sharpens intuition.

If you like this, try: Tasting Rome by Katie Parla & Kristina Gill — a rich portrait of Rome’s culinary traditions, offering both classic dishes and regional history.

Buy Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking

8. Good Meat

Deborah Krasner (2010)

8. Good Meat

Deborah Krasner (2010)

A thoughtful, modern guide to sourcing and cooking meat.
I met Deborah Krasner when she was embarking on a years-long quest to raise her own meat on her farm in Vermont. This book is the result of those experiences. Her explanations of cuts, cooking methods, and sustainable procurement empower cooks to make better-informed choices. Her recipes are practical, well-tested, and rooted in traditional technique. She also breaks down the ethics and logistics of buying responsibly. A standout for the conscientious carnivore.

If you like this, try: The River Cottage Meat Book by Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall — a deeply detailed guide to meat cookery with a focus on sustainability and technique.

Buy Good Meat

9. The River Cottage Cookbook

Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall (2001)

9. The River Cottage Cookbook

Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall (2001)

A joyful manifesto for seasonal, from-scratch cooking.
The very British Hugh mixes philosophy with hands-on technique, covering vegetables, meats, preserves, and baking with charm and irreverence. His writing encourages readers to build a deeper relationship with ingredients and the land. The recipes are straightforward but deeply satisfying. A practical guide to living (and eating) joyfully.

If you like this, try: The Art of Simple Food by Alice Waters — a classic guide to seasonal, ingredient-first cooking rooted in home kitchen techniques.

Buy The River Cottage Cookbook

10. Flour Water Salt Yeast

Ken Forkish (2012)

10. Flour Water Salt Yeast

Ken Forkish (2012)

A modern classic in home-bread technique.
Forkish demystifies fermentation, folding, hydration, and shaping with precision and patience. His formulas yield exceptional results in home ovens, and his method-driven approach builds a strong understanding of dough behavior. It’s ideal for serious beginners and intermediate bakers looking to level up.

If you like this, try: Tartine Bread by Chad Robertson — a foundational sourdough book that teaches bakers to work with natural fermentation and high-hydration doughs.

Buy Flour Water Salt Yeast

11. The Meathead Method

Meathead Goldwyn (2024)

11. The Meathead Method

Meathead Goldwyn (2024)

A science-driven, technique-focused guide to better grilling and barbecue.
Goldwyn breaks down heat transfer, smoke behavior, seasoning chemistry, and moisture management with clarity, humor, and rigor. The book emphasizes methods over recipes, giving home cooks the tools to troubleshoot and improve any barbecue setup, whether charcoal, gas, pellet, or smoker. The explanations are accessible but grounded in real food science, and the recipes demonstrate how the techniques translate into predictable, repeatable results. It’s an indispensable resource for anyone with a mind for science who is serious about mastering outdoor cooking.

If you like this, try: Black Smoke by Adrian Miller — a cultural history of African American barbecue that illuminates the roots and evolution of this uniquely American tradition.

Buy The Meathead Method

12. Plenty

Yotam Ottolenghi (2010)

Vegetable-Focused Cooking

Vegetable cookbooks aren’t just for vegetarians. These books teach creativity, texture, seasonality, and the joy of letting plants take center stage. These are some of the most inspiring cookbooks for any home cook, regardless of diet.

12. Plenty

Yotam Ottolenghi (2010)

A bold reimagining of vegetable cooking.
Ottolenghi uses herbs, spices, acids, and textures in ways that feel vibrant and celebratory. His dishes are colorful, surprising, and rooted in Middle Eastern and Mediterranean sensibilities. The recipes feel exciting without being fussy, and they often turn humble ingredients into centerpieces. It’s a genre-defining book that helped shift the way home cooks treat vegetables.

If you like this, try: Six Seasons by Joshua McFadden — a produce-driven guide organized by season that teaches cooks how to coax the best from each ingredient.

Buy Plenty

13. Tenderheart

Hetty Lui McKinnon (2023)

13. Tenderheart

Hetty Lui McKinnon (2023)

Comforting, soulful, vegetable-first cooking.
McKinnon’s recipes are warm, hearty, and full of gentle creativity, reflecting her Chinese-Australian heritage and Brooklyn life. She writes with deep empathy for home cooks, offering dishes that feel nourishing without sacrificing flavor. Her storytelling is intimate, and the dishes lean into comfort in thoughtful, surprising ways. One of the best vegetable-focused books in recent years.

If you like this, try: Family by Hetty McKinnon — a collection of unfussy, comforting recipes built around togetherness and crowd-pleasing flavors.

Buy Tenderheart

14. Veg-Table

Nik Sharma (2023)

14. Veg-Table

Nik Sharma (2023)

A scientific and sensory dive into plant-based flavor.
Nik blends global influences with a scientist’s understanding of aroma and texture, showing how vegetables behave under heat, seasoning, and time. His recipes are vibrant, aromatic, and visually stunning, with a strong emphasis on building flavor from first principles. The book encourages curiosity in every chapter. Perfect for thoughtful, experimental home cooks.

If you like this, try: The Vegetarian Flavor Bible by Karen Page — a comprehensive flavor-pairing reference that helps cooks build and improvise vegetable dishes with confidence and creativity.

Buy Veg-Table

15. The Moosewood Cookbook

Mollie Katzen (1977; revised editions later)

15. The Moosewood Cookbook

Mollie Katzen (1977; revised editions later)

A beloved classic of American vegetarian cooking.
Hand-illustrated and filled with warmth, Katzen’s book helped define the 1970s natural foods movement and introduced a generation of cooks to globally inspired, vegetable-driven dishes. The recipes favor comfort, creativity, and approachability over strict authenticity, giving cooks permission to experiment. Its friendly (OK, hippie) tone and adaptable style still resonate today. A foundational book for anyone exploring meatless or vegetable-forward cooking.

If you like this, try: The New Vegetarian Cooing for Everyone— a comprehensive, technique-driven guide to vegetable cookery that offers flexibility, depth, and a vast repertoire of plant-forward recipes.

Buy Moosewood

16. Invitation to Indian Cooking

Madhur Jaffrey (1973)

Home Cooking Traditions

These books celebrate dishes shaped by generations. Food rooted in memory, identity, and the rhythms of home kitchens across cultures. They’re full of stories, techniques, and flavors that connect cooks across time and place.

16. Invitation to Indian Cooking

Madhur Jaffrey (1973)

The seminal introduction to Indian home cooking.
Jaffrey demystified Indian cooking for American home cooks with extraordinary clarity and warmth. Her explanations of spices, tadka, dals, curries, and techniques remain foundational fifty years later. The recipes are deeply reliable and full of character. It’s still the single best starting point for learning Indian cuisine.

If you like this, try: Indian Cookery by Madhur Jaffrey — an accessible, practical follow-up that expands on her essential techniques.

Buy An Invitation to Indian Cooking

17. Stir-Frying to the Sky’s Edge

Grace Young (2010)

17. Stir-Frying to the Sky’s Edge

Grace Young (2010)

A definitive exploration of stir-frying across the Chinese diaspora.
Grace Young blends meticulous technique with rich storytelling, tracing how Chinese communities around the world adapted stir-frying to new ingredients, cultures, and home kitchen realities. Her instructions are exceptionally clear, making even high-heat wok cooking feel approachable for beginners. The recipes are diverse, flavorful, and grounded in tradition while reflecting a global culinary journey. It’s both a masterclass in wok technique and a cultural history of one of China’s most enduring cooking methods.

If you like this, try: The Key to Chinese Cooking by Irene Kuo — a classic guide to Chinese techniques explained with precision and care.

Buy Stir-Frying to the Sky's Edge

18. The Art of Mexican Cooking

Diana Kennedy (1989)

18. The Art of Mexican Cooking

Diana Kennedy (1989)

The definitive English-language document of Mexican cuisine.
Kennedy’s scholarship, depth, and respect for regional traditions make this one of the most important Mexican cookbooks ever published. She provides precise instructions and cultural context that help cooks appreciate the diversity of Mexico’s culinary landscape. The recipes are vibrant, bold, and uncompromisingly authentic. A landmark work of culinary documentation.

If you like this, try: Oaxaca: Home Cooking from the Heart of Mexico by Bricia López — a vibrant, deeply personal collection of Oaxacan recipes that balances cultural storytelling with home-cook accessibility.

Buy The Art of Mexican Cooking

19. Mexico: One Plate at a Time

Rick Bayless (2000)

19. Mexico: One Plate at a Time

Rick Bayless (2000)

A friendly, technique-focused entry into Mexican home cooking.
Bayless breaks down masa, salsas, moles, and chiles in approachable, actionable ways. His enthusiasm makes the book accessible to beginners while still offering depth for experienced cooks. The recipes are modern without sacrificing tradition. It’s an excellent gateway into understanding Mexican food through a practical lens.

If you like this, try: Authentic Mexican by Rick Bayless — a deeper, more traditional dive into the fundamentals of Mexican cuisine.

Buy Mexico: One Plate at a Time

20. Gran Cocina Latina

Maricel Presilla (2012)

20. Gran Cocina Latina

Maricel Presilla (2012)

A monumental exploration of Latin American and Caribbean cuisines.
Presilla brings academic rigor and culinary warmth to a vast region of food traditions. The book spans history, technique, and cultural narrative, all while staying highly cookable. The scope is enormous, but the writing is intimate and engaging. Essential for anyone exploring Latin American foodways.

If you like this, try: Colombiana by Mariana Velásquez — a vibrant, modern celebration of Colombian home cooking that blends tradition, personal narrative, and bold, colorful flavors.

Buy Gran Cocina Latina

21. The Taste of Country Cooking

Edna Lewis (1976)

21. The Taste of Country Cooking

Edna Lewis (1976)

A lyrical portrait of Southern foodways.
Lewis writes with unmatched grace about seasonal, community-rooted cooking in rural Virginia. Her recipes are simple but profound, honoring the rhythms of home cooking and the ingredients that define Southern life. The storytelling is as nourishing as the dishes themselves. A cornerstone of American culinary literature.

If you like this, try: High on the Hog by Jessica B. Harris — a deeply researched cultural history tracing the roots and evolution of African American cuisine.

Buy The Taste of Country Cooking

22. The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen

Sean Sherman (2017)

22. The Sioux Chef’s Indigenous Kitchen

Sean Sherman (2017)

A vital re-centering of Indigenous North American cuisine.
Sherman highlights pre-colonial ingredients, seasonality, and regional traditions with clarity and purpose. His recipes are flavorful and grounded in ecological respect. It broadens the definition of “American food” in essential ways. A crucial, eye-opening cookbook.

If you like this, try: Turtle Island by Sean Sherman — a powerful exploration of Indigenous North American foodways that blends culinary history with practical cooking guidance.

Buy The Sioux Chef's Indigenous Kitchen

23. Washoku

Elizabeth Andoh (2005)

23. Washoku

Elizabeth Andoh (2005)

A mindful guide to Japanese home cooking and philosophy.
Andoh teaches harmony, balance, and respect for ingredients through traditional techniques. Her recipes are detailed but gentle, helping cooks build intuition and deeper cultural understanding. It’s both a cooking manual and a philosophical guide. A beautifully structured introduction to Japanese cuisine.

If you like this, try: Japanese Home Cooking by Sonoko Sakai — a thoughtful, technique-driven guide highlighting fundamentals of Japanese home kitchens.

Buy Washoku

24. The Food of Sichuan

Fuchsia Dunlop (2001; revised 2019)

Modern Asian Classics

These books dive deep into the methods, flavors, and cultural histories that define some of the world’s most influential culinary traditions. They’re essential for any cook who wants to understand not just how dishes work, but why.

24. The Food of Sichuan

Fuchsia Dunlop (2001; revised 2019)

The definitive exploration of Sichuan cuisine.
Dunlop reveals the underlying techniques, pantry staples, and flavor logic that make Sichuan food so compelling. The revised edition is even more thorough and beautifully written, with updated recipes and cultural insight. The dishes are bold, consistent, and structured to build real cooking intuition. A foundational text for cooks drawn to spice, depth, and regional tradition.

If you like this, try: The Chinese Kitchen by Eileen Yin-Fei Lo — a richly detailed, technique-forward guide to regional Chinese home cooking with clear instruction and deep cultural context.

Buy The Food of Sichuan

25. Every Grain of Rice

Fuchsia Dunlop (2012)

25. Every Grain of Rice

Fuchsia Dunlop (2012)

A gentle and practical guide to everyday Chinese home cooking.
This book focuses on stir-fries, tofu dishes, vegetable meals, and pantry-friendly recipes that reflect real home kitchens in China. Dunlop’s explanations encourage adaptability and confidence, making the cuisine less intimidating for beginners. The flavors are bright, comforting, and deeply satisfying. It’s one of the best entry points into Chinese cooking.

If you like this, try: Land of Fish and Rice by Fuchsia Dunlop — an elegant tour of Jiangnan cuisine blending regional history with refined, delicate recipes.

Buy Every Grain of Rice

26. Mister Jiu’s in Chinatown

Brandon Jew & Tienlon Ho (2021)

26. Mister Jiu’s in Chinatown

Brandon Jew & Tienlon Ho (2021)

A brilliant fusion of Cantonese tradition and modern California cooking.
Jew’s book captures the depth of Cantonese technique while infusing it with Bay Area creativity and ingredient-driven sensibilities. The recipes range from classic sauces and broths to ambitious restaurant-style dishes with cultural significance. The storytelling honors the heritage of San Francisco’s Chinatown while pushing it forward. A stunning modern Chinese American cookbook.

If you like this, try: The Woks of Life by Bill, Judy, Sarah & Kaitlin Leung — a deeply practical, technique-rich guide to Chinese American cooking from a multigenerational family perspective.

Buy Mr. Jiu's in Chinatown

27. Hot Thai Kitchen

Pailin Chongchitnant (2016)

27. Hot Thai Kitchen

Pailin Chongchitnant (2016)

A crystal-clear roadmap to Thai flavor and structure.
Pailin breaks down balance, seasoning, curry pastes, noodles, and stir-fries with exceptional clarity. Her recipe testing is meticulous, and she explains why dishes work, giving cooks the tools to improvise successfully. The dishes are vibrant, accessible, and full of personality. One of the best Thai cookbooks available for home cooks.

If you like this, try: Bangkok by Leela Punyaratabandhu — a beautifully researched portrait of Thailand’s capital cuisine, combining cultural context with precise technique.

Buy Hot Thai Kitchen

28. Burma: Rivers of Flavor

Naomi Duguid (2012)

28. Burma: Rivers of Flavor

Naomi Duguid (2012)

A transportive blend of storytelling and Burmese home cooking.
Duguid paints a vivid portrait of Myanmar through salads, soups, noodle dishes, and curries, each rooted in deep cultural context. Her recipes are approachable and filled with personality, often reflecting dishes learned directly from home cooks. The writing brings landscapes, markets, and people to life. A rare, beautiful exploration of Southeast Asian cooking.

If you like this, try: Taste of Persia by Naomi Duguid — a rich blend of culinary travel writing and regional home recipes spanning the Persian cultural sphere.

Buy Burma: Rivers of Flavor

A vibrant, contemporary interpretation of Ukrainian and Eastern European foodways.
Chesnakova weaves together personal history, diasporic identity, and deeply comforting flavors in a cookbook that feels both rooted and forward-looking. Her dishes draw on Ukrainian, Russian, and broader Slavic traditions while embracing Pacific Northwest seasonality and her own creative instincts. The recipes balance approachability with depth, giving home cooks a window into a lived culinary heritage. The writing is warm and lyrical, and the photography beautifully captures the emotional landscape of the cuisine. A standout modern diaspora cookbook.

If you like this, try: Salt & Time by Alissa Timoshkina — a modern, atmospheric exploration of Siberian and Russian cooking rooted in personal narrative.

Buy Chesnok

30. My Korea

Hooni Kim (2020)

30. My Korea

Hooni Kim (2020)

A chef-driven but deeply personal exploration of Korean flavors.
Kim blends classical technique with the flavors of his childhood, offering dishes that balance tradition with polished, restaurant-level execution. His explanations of pantry fundamentals—gochujang, doenjang, dashima—are among the clearest available. Recipes range from simple banchan to refined seafood dishes, all grounded in ingredient respect. It’s both a practical cookbook and a window into a chef’s identity.

If you like this, try: Korean Home Cooking by Sohui Kim — an intuitive, family-centered guide to Korean comfort dishes and everyday traditions.

Buy My Korea

31. BraveTart

Stella Parks (2017)

Baking & Pastry

Flour, butter, sugar, time — these books turn fundamentals into joy, structure, and beautiful desserts. They teach technique while celebrating the creativity and science behind baking.

31. BraveTart

Stella Parks (2017)

A brilliant reinvention of classic American desserts.
Stella is one of the most brilliant pastry chefs and writers I've ever known. Her book blends scientific precision with a deep love for nostalgic treats, offering meticulously tested recipes that elevate everything from cookies to pies to layer cakes. The book also uncovers surprising histories behind iconic sweets, which is half the fun. Her approach is rigorous but never intimidating. A must-have for curious bakers.

If you like this, try: The King Arthur Baking School: Lessons and Recipes for Every Baker — a comprehensive, classroom-style guide that teaches foundational baking skills through clear instruction and methodical, confidence-building recipes.

Buy BraveTart

32. Tartine

Elisabeth Prueitt & Chad Robertson (2006)

32. Tartine

Elisabeth Prueitt & Chad Robertson (2006)

A modern classic from a groundbreaking bakery.
Robertson’s bread techniques emphasize craft and intuition, while Prueitt’s pastry recipes highlight seasonal California flavors. The instructions are detailed but approachable for dedicated home bakers. Many recipes offer stunning results with thoughtful technique and attention. A cornerstone of contemporary baking literature.

If you like this, try: The Pie and Pastry Bible by Rose Levy Beranbaum — an authoritative guide to pies and pastries with detailed explanations for consistently excellent results.

Buy Tartine

33. Hungry Monkey

Matthew Amster-Burton (2009)

Food, Family & Story

These books nourish the heart as much as the kitchen — filled with memory, identity, humor, and the ways food connects us to one another.

33. Hungry Monkey

Matthew Amster-Burton (2009)

A funny, heartfelt memoir about feeding a toddler and rediscovering joy in cooking.
Amster-Burton writes with wit and warmth about the strange, hilarious, and unexpectedly rewarding world of cooking for (and with) a small child. It’s part parenting memoir, part food writing, and part recipe collection, all delivered with disarming honesty. The tone is light, charming, and deeply relatable for anyone who’s ever cooked for kids. It was an essential partner when I was trying to raise my own curious little eaters.

If you like this, try: The Man Who Ate Everything by Jeffrey Steingarten — a sharp, humorous collection of essays blending culinary obsession with curious, often comical investigation.

Buy Hungry Monkey

34. Padma's All American

Padma Lakshmi (2024)

34. Padma's All American

Padma Lakshmi (2024)

A thoughtful exploration of identity, belonging, and American food culture.
After seven years of traveling and researching for her show Taste the Nation, Padma weaves personal narrative with broader reflections on immigration, politics, and the evolving meaning of “American cuisine.” Her writing is sharp, warm, and deeply human, drawing connections between culture and the kitchen. It’s a reflective work that invites readers to consider the threads that bind food and identity. A moving read for anyone who values storytelling in their cookbooks.

If you like this, try: The Cooking Gene by Michael W. Twitty — a powerful historical memoir tracing African American foodways through genealogy, travel, and personal discovery.

Buy Padma's All American

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