An ode to cookbooks
What I love about cookbooks, let me count the ways. I love their glossy pages. I marvel at how each dish has been cooked again and again and again before it’s included. I am particularly proud of myself when I turn out a dish and it looks exactly like the photo. I am awed that cookbooks can so easily convey the personality of their author in a way literature does not readily.
A well-written cookbook will never leave your home and loves company. Every now and again I promise the family I will do a cull. But as soon as I pluck out a likely candidate, I’m transported back to the occasions I served that dish or basked in the compliments for that cake and that cookbook is now safe again.
It also fascinates me how we can chart the changes in our home lives by the cookbooks published across the generations. Mum recently gave me a first edition of Margaret Fulton’s 1977 classic, The Complete Margaret Fulton Cookbook. A lot of tin foil and fruit went into garnishing our dinner parties back then, and where was the garlic?
Blessed with a grandmother who cooked with whatever was left in the fridge, my introduction to recipes wasn’t until age 13 with the Home Economics text The Commonsense Cookery Book.
Can I tell you that following those recipes never translated into gastronomic delights, and those Home Economics classes never inspired me to cook.
Fast forward 12 years, and I discover Jill Dupleix’s New Food as I’m unpacking stock in a Mosman bookshop. What a revelation. Recipes introduced with inspiring back stories, mouth-watering photos, and a call to celebrate delicious food with family and friends.
I bought a roll of contact to celebrate my first acquisition in this magical genre of part coffee table, part cookbook. A love affair of reading cookbooks for pleasure, and then approaching the kitchen with excitement had begun.
Today, conversations with customers about what they have cooked from beloved cookbooks are among my favourite. We eagerly flip through new releases, ohhing and ahhing at the magnificent styling of recipes and share tips on where to source interesting ingredients.
Our bestselling cookbooks are those that boast an abundance of veg dishes, and a smattering of poultry, fish and meat dishes. So many flavour-packed options. Any new acquisition of mine is celebrated with a Sunday afternoon on the couch, reading and creating an order through Bundlfresh.
Being able to turn my cooking aspirations into reality so easily is now leading to new storage issues for the household as the cookbooks pile up. By stroke of luck though, cookbook stacks are a very on-trend design feature.
Libby Armstrong
Owner and Bookseller, Beachside Bookshop