French Cooking and the Home Made Cookbook

Cookbok

This is my tattered, splattered, well worn, cookbook. I started it when I first arrived in France. I carried it with me everywhere… 

One of the first things I learned when I moved to France was: Cooking was going to be a challenge because measurements followed the metric system and the ovens went by numbers or by Celsius.
No biggie if you are a number type person. But if you are like me were numbers tumble upside down and backwards and walk away… well let's just say cooking was a challenge (and I won't even start about the language.)

Cookbook-pages 

I bought a plain thick notebook with 250 pages at Monoprix (a large chain supermarket in France,) and wrote down every little delicious thing I saw or tasted. No matter if I was at my Mother-in-law's, or at a friend's house, or at a restaurant, or even at a bookstore. I wrote down recipes, ideas, tastes, flavor combinations and whatever little tidbit that could help me whip up a meal.
Baking-recipe 
My homemade cook book is stuffed full like a tofu turkey. Not a single page, nor space remains empty. It contains savoring memories of dinners, lunches, cocktails that I have had in France. Recipes gathered along the way.

scrapped cookbook 

Of course in France a baguette, some cheese, garlic, a couple of eggs whipped up into an omelette, a large leafy salad and a bottle of wine … a simple feast.
Mustard-sauce 

Pesto-soupe 

Do you collect recipes?

Onion-tart

Thumbing through my twenty something old cookbook is like thumbing through a Roledex. Friend's names appear flashing me back to the their kitchens, listening to their tales on how to cook: Pesto Soup, Eggplant Pate, Leeks with Mustard Sauce, Creme Brulee, Fresh Herb and Goat Cheese Cake, Cheese Souffle, Chocolate Mousse… Friends from France and friends back in the States, metric, cups, farine/flour Sucre/Sugar all mingled together in my scrapped together cook book.

Recipes-book

Merigue 

Before the internet, and when calling home was over $5 a minute (France to the States) finding recipes and learning about cooking was an expensive task. Calling home to ask about a recipe always took longer than a one minute phone call, "Hi, Mom. Hey what is the recipe for Sweet bread?" Sometimes when I received the phone bill I wondered why I didn't just fly home… it would have been cheaper.
Table-setting

Bored-bride 

My cookbook has dripped sauce dots, dusting flour, chocolate fingerprints, yellowed scotch tape, and cutouts from magazines. Each and every speck is a jewel reminding me how far I have come from the days of being lost at sea in the land of French cooking.

This image always makes me laugh: The Frustrated Bride. That is how I felt at most dinner table conversations. I was lost in the sea of language, lost at which fork to pick up first, lost as to where to keep my hands, lost amongst a table full of people. 

The lifesaver that saved me was the food. I studied it. How it was present, how the table was set, what the hostess served first, what wine was served… That lifesaver was one delightful ride to a shore of lusciousness.

Bonnie-banana-bread 

Along the way I met Americans living in France who had adapted American favorites, some with substitutes for food items that could not be found twenty years ago in France. Some with recipes I longed to have and did not have in my scrapped together cookbook. When I see their recipes I taste the nourishing friendship they gave me: Bonnie's Banana Bread, Cynthia's Cheesecake, Jean's Peanut Butter Cookies, Erika's pancakes…
Home-cooking 

In the beginning when anyone came over from the States to visit and asked me if there was anything they could bring my list mostly included food items. Tortillas, vanilla, peanut butter where on top of the list, so was baking soda and Johnson's baby powder.. I know it isn't a food… but it was up their with chocolate chips.

Dressing 

Brie-soup 

What is one food you would miss if you could never have it again?



Comments

101 responses to “French Cooking and the Home Made Cookbook”

  1. When I lived in Germany years ago, I missed Mexican food, Tex-Mex especially. My mother sent me ingredients. My Tex-Mex became famous in Bavaria and I was invited to cook a Mexican dinner at the American Officers’ Club once a month. It was the clubs biggest night each month. I remember how astounded the German staff and French Chef were when I explained how to make refried beans.

  2. Natalie Thiele

    Your cookbooks are beautiful works of Art! I would love to see those. Your illustrations are simple and lovely. The mustard drips and wine stains enhance them, too. Just gorgeous!
    A food I would miss terribly if I couln’t have it again?
    Chocolate and Nectarines tie for first place.

  3. This is the easiest question for me to answer…without a doubt…it would be Watermelon…100% love it and know I can’t live without it…no one eats it like I do.Seedless of course!!

  4. Wow, 20+ years of memories all in one little book. What a treasure! Did you ever misplace it?
    Your cookbook notebook is so similar to Jamie Oliver’s notebook. As you’ve probably never seen his shows (I remembered that you don’t have a TV) you’ll have to find one of his cookbooks to look at or look on the internet.
    Like all Aussie’s I would miss the famous Vegemite (yes, that awful black stuff!!) that all Australian kids grow up on.

  5. Chips and Salsa. Love them….

  6. What a cookbook…loved it!!! Do you have any wonderful vegetable tartes in your collection?? I think I would miss Mexican the most. Was away from my computer for a few days while traveling….wonderful post & comments while I was absent!!!!

  7. okay, i really thought about this and as i was listing my favorite food, i was able to check off everything except fresh tomatoes. i use them for everything and i hope i never have to go without them! who knew that all my favorites would boil down to this!

  8. Oh Corey, I love your notebook. What a treasure! I’m thinking that one day years from now it will be the treasure of a grand child……so cool.
    Of course, I would miss any food made here in New Mexico. Tamales, Frito Pie, Burritos, Carne Adovada, Posole, home made salsa, breakfast burritos, rellnos.

  9. Eggs, I love my eggs every morning.
    What a wonderful time capsule that you’ve created by way of your cookbook, a treasure.

  10. I love your book! My mom had an ancient Betty Crocker cookbook that was stuffed with pieces of paper and recipes. I took all of those papers and put them in a binder. But I love your notebook idea. Heck- I’m having trouble finding dried beef here in Maine- the kind you make chipped beef gravy with. Can you find it in France??

  11. Katiebell

    Corey! A work of art certainly. Wish we could see more. Publish it all here for us please?
    lovely to see you doodle and draw and drip like me at every opportunity. Really wonderful Corey. You are an artist. What a great way to get to know a place!
    My favorite thing you’ve shown us so far, beats brocante finds any day.
    What would I miss? We are spoiled for good fresh food and choice here in Australia (even found a French deli the other day, we are lucky to be so multicultural) so it depends where I am.
    But in the UK I miss the range of cuisines, (curry with chips is just weird). In France I miss affordable food, though I loved it all, esp baguettes and hot choc for breakfast! In the US I missed having coffee not served in polystyrene. In Italy I missed real toast (not the tiny dried verity) and I carried a huge jar of vegemite around everywhere, wrapped up in a cardboard box. Until I realised the glass was smash and I had been eating it without knowing!
    Now I have just re-read your question! Oh well, I just answered my own. I would be bound to miss most foods if I could never have them again, even if i didn’t really like them. If something if forbidden, don’t you just want it more?

  12. Definately CHOCOLATE! I know what you mean about recipes from others. Seeing my mohter-in-law’s handwriting on a cookie recipe floods me with memories of her in the kitchen, wearing her apron, lovingly baking treats for those she loved. She was a wonderful inspiration. My aunt’s fudge recipe that I make every Christmas, does the same for me, I picture myself in her little kitchen and can see and almost taste her amazing fudge and divinity! Your recipe book pages would make wonderful backgrounds for collages … or to use as backdrops for photos. Thanks for the lovely thoughts and memories ~ Violet

  13. Ice cream! Okay…..I’ll admit it! I am ADDICTED to Ben & Jerry 🙂 There is no AA for B&J, which is probably a good thing. Where would I find B&J if I moved to Europe??

  14. Ellen Cassilly

    Lovely annotated cookbook! My favorite foods change seasonally. This time of year it is a funny combination of warm broccoli pieces that I dip into hummus. Also I love slicing yesterday’s cooked sweet potatoes also slathered with hummus. Yum.

  15. Julie Ann

    Chocolate !
    I love love love your book ! I shall ask you to show me one day in France. I have my mothers hand written in her legendary handwriting. Mine is a binder organised into different sections. I hope you will be pleased to know that there are already several permanent residents in the binder headed with the name: Corey Amaro. I have made several of the recipes you have published and they will remain forever in my personal cookery record bearing your name. Jx

  16. Love, love, love your cookbook and all the memories it brings you. When my girls were growing up, I started little cookbooks for them of their favorite recipes and little anecdotes about how they came to be part of us. Many of the recipes are the same for each, but, I made sure to include some that were unique to each girl (and, aha, a method to my madness as I hoped it would someday promote one calling the other to see if they had one they were thinking of). The girls have their books now and use them and I have even had to call them for a missing link.
    I have a “church lady” recipe book that was my husbands great grandmothers. It was from her church, in tiny print, and ingredients, like lard, that we no longer used. In between the pages and lines are other recipes, sewn in. No paperclips?!
    I could not live without pasta. Pasta of any kind. Pasta adapts to most cuisines and stands pretty well on its own.

  17. Hello Corey….Love your cookbook, shame you could not make it into a book for sale…so we can all read it:-)

  18. I do collect recipes but my book is not as beautiful as yours. Your book would collect hundreds of dollars if sold. Not that you would sell it. It is art, homemade books are very big now. How inspiring to see yours.
    I miss so many foods moving to another part of the country. Rezas in Chicago has the best Persian food! I miss it so much. I would have to say Persian food…I can pretty much get the rest.

  19. Food I’d most miss: ice cream!
    My cooking bible since my teens has been the Fannie Farmer Cookbook. My copy’s now loose at the binding, as well as stuffed with recipe clippings snipped out of newspapers and magazines, or copied by hand from friends and other sources.
    The main problem was that it eventually became more difficult to locate anything in the book, and slips of paper would fall out if I didn’t handle the book gingerly (not always realistic when one is in the midst of chopping, mixing, stirring, pouring, spreading). Also, the pages with recipes I used most often tended to become badly splattered.
    So, in desperation nearly 20 years ago, I decided to start a recipe database on my computer. I’d used simple databases at work for things like mailing lists, but this was clearly going to be a more elaborate task. I asked a computer scientist friend if there were any good recipe software programs on the market, but he thought not, so recommended that I instead design my own to fit my personal needs.
    The major challenge was that one format had to fit such a wide range of recipes: in both category and size, each field had to apply equally to entrées and desserts, and to accomodate complex as well as simple dishes. Plus I wanted to be able to print out each recipe onto a single sheet of paper so I could insert it into a clear plastic sheet cover, then place it in a 3-hole binder for convenient reference (and to be able to clean off any of the inevitable splatters).
    The project took a goodly chunk of spare time over an entire summer — and of course I had to keep tweaking my format as I encountered new problems to solve — but it has proven convenient for accessing my most commonly-made recipes. Nowadays I add a few new dishes each year.
    Kathie B. (not to be confused with poster “kathie” below)

  20. Kiss the cook often and season everything with love………
    Love you
    Jeanne♥

  21. I’ve begun to eat more seasonally over the past few years so I’m always craving something: Asparagus and strawberries right now! For me though, not ever being able to take a tomato, still warm from the garden, and make a sandwich so juicy I have to eat it over the sink. I would miss that!

  22. Denise Moulun-Pasek

    I collect recipes too Corey, but not as beautifully as you. At first, as a young bride, I had a recipe card index. Later, I relied on new cookbooks for new trends that were sweeping through the country. My mom’s old favorites were all copied on different sheets of paper.
    Before my Mom died, we compiled a cookbook with her favorite recipes, added photos from her childhood and youth and included jokes and little stories that go with every page. All of this on Word on a computer.
    My Mom’s legacy is about to become a book for every member of our family.

  23. Oh my goodness. I am smitten with your book. It is so charming and personal. I LOVE IT! What a lovely thing to pass on someday! How many memories you must have wrapped up in it…it reminds me of the Herodotus book that the English Patient uses as a scrapbook…very romantic indeed.
    As far as what I could not live without…oh boy. That is a loaded question. I could never decide.

  24. Oh, I miss so many things from home, I wouldn’t even begin to know which one I would miss more… Maybe at the top of the list is roasted chestnuts, the kind we found at every single corner of the streets in Lisbon during winter time… I absolutely adore chestnuts (and now my kids do too!!) and would be crushed if I could never have them again!
    Isabel

  25. sure love your personal cookbook…it’ll be a goldmine for your daughter some day – just to have your writing. as i continue to clean/organize/purge my 83yr old mom’s house – i just found a few recipe cards written in HER mom’s script (and she died when my mom was only 14). even if it is something i’ll never make from scratch…i love having the card.
    when we lived in spain – our “wish” list was much like yours…especially the chocolate chips. a friend still there always asks for packets of ranch dressing. i used to crave oreos but i learned a valuable lesson in those years without…taste has strong memory. i could just close my eyes – imagine the taste and when i’d finally GET one in my mouth…it was just like the memory.
    can someone just tell me WHY i can’t just use that technique and quit putting things in my mouth??? our struggle NOW – is missing things from spain. oye…heaven must be the place where all the tastes we miss / crave / desire are on one big table for our tasting (all zero calories…never adding to weight gain)

  26. Cookbooks are taking over my house! My oldest son buys them one at a time with his meager paycheck and brings them home to cook elaborate experimental dishes. Beautiful books “ruined” by drips. He says that’s how cookbooks should be. Like yours: full of doodles and drips.
    When I married my husband who is Armenian, I had to learn how to cook Armenian food. I have his grandmother Sutenig’s recipes for lamb shish kebob, dolma, rice pilaf, etc. all written in her handwriting. Very precious!
    Don’t we humans relate to food as a way of connecting with each other, even with language barriers and cultural differences? Great post as usual Corey. –Delores

  27. Wine . . . I like to cook with wine, sometimes I add it to my food!

  28. I would miss my big glass of orange juice
    that I have every day…sometimes two
    glasses of it. My husband worked for
    a large orange juice company for many
    years and now that he is retired, we can
    still buy it at a discount, and I like the
    very pulpy kind…it is a lot like fresh
    squeezed juice, which is the best of course.
    I think that the orange juice also helps
    to keep me healthy.
    jann

  29. I love bananas! And the occasional helping of thai rice noodles. These are two I’d miss. Can’t say that I’m much of a foodie, but I do enjoy a few staples!

  30. Ohh, that’s a tough one – If I had to pick I would have to go for Chocolate … maybe Coffee… No chocolate…..no….hmmmm

  31. Kathleen in Oregon

    This is the book you should write, a cookbook with the story surrounding each recipe. I love to read this type of book! Something along the lines of Edna Staeblers book “More food that really schmecks”.
    Chocolate would be hard to live without.

  32. Lieselotte

    Cakes, biscuits, tarts, chocolate … and again cakes.

  33. Isn’t this how a recipe book is supposed to be? I starting “collecting” recipes when I was 12 and because I was a good home economics student, I adhered to a strict recipe writing standard when I was young so all of the older recipes are dated with the name of the source. I majored in home ec so the collection continued to grow and during those years I had the incredible experience of running into Julia Child and Paul in 1976. Her autograph graces my oldest recipe box.
    After marrying a man from Beirut, learning new recipes got so much easier! While the measurements were a challenge, I learned quickly that the best way to learn how to make any of the incredible dishes would be to learn as an understudy with the older women and they don’t generally measure in the strict sense of the term. Pinches, handfuls, demitasse cup fulls and weight were somehow easier.
    I love pulling out my cookbooks and boxes because of the wonderful memories attached to each of them.
    Thanks for the post, I might go browsing for an oldie but goody!!!

  34. My cousin once said, “can I inherit your recipe box when you die?”. I thought that was so funny, but I would like to inherit hers.
    When I lived in Kansas many years ago I missed Mexican food so much. We couldn’t find tortillas in the markets there. I tried making them, but never was successful. So when I would travel to somewhere that had them, I would stock up on tortillas.
    Now it seems like I can find just about anything locally, even French macarons which I love.
    I think if I couldn’t have my regular dose of sushi and Thai food I would have a difficult time. That has become my comfort food.
    Loved seeing your recipe book, so perfect and artistic in a perfect Corey way.

  35. I love seeing your recipe photos, Corey, they speak a lifetime in their words and “embellishments.” What food would I miss? Probably pasta. I can’t imagine not having pasta as part of my pantry.

  36. Any food cooked for me by my Son and I miss my Mom’s cooking and my Grandmother no longer cooks and I miss her Hungarian meals made for us all with so much love
    Love you
    Jeanne

  37. Your cookbook is wonderful. As a young gal I bought Betty Crocker Dinner for Two. Dreamining about the day I would cook for two. But the book got tucked away as I became a career women where cooking was the last thing on my mind. Eating out was the only way for me to connect with friends.
    Then I started noticing a trend where men invited me to their place and they cooked elaborate meals. But I still didn’t see the reason to cook. When I met DH I invited him to dinner that I cooked. I had one knife that did everything. Then he said I’ll cook for you next time. So he came with his knives, wok, bag full of groceries, and gourmet receipe for chicken stir fry which blew me away. Married 15 yrs now, he does most of the cooking. I do some, we have invested thousands in cookware, gadgets, dishes, hundreds of cookbooks and if we got one thing right it was the cooking. We don’t eat we dine. Dinner and movie is our favorite pastime and I would say we are gourmands. The challenge is how to eat well and keep the weight down.
    I have two cookbooks similar to Corey’s, pictures and all, it is a work in progress since cuisines change over time. But I have to say cheese is the one thing I must have at least once a day. I love all kinds of cheese, “I never met a cheese I didn’t like.”

  38. Chocolate, cheese, bread, wine, coffee.
    Simply could not do without. Love your cookbook journal…it is a treasure!

  39. I would miss cookies the most. I love them with tea or hot cocoa or a tall glass of ice-cold milk! I adore your cookbook. I am making a cookbook now to share with my children next Christmas. It’s my project of homemade love.

  40. I would miss my tea and chocolate of course. I love your cookbook. ONe of my goals this year has been to become a better cook who doesn’t depend on Hamburger Helper. Julia Child would be impressed I cooked twice this week and my family said they liked it. I was like wow!!! So I have become obssessed with cookbooks and so I giggled when I came here and low and behold your post.
    Thanks my friend.
    blessings and love

  41. When I lived in Brazil, I missed salsa, chips and cheddar cheese. My husband’s cousin is a flight attendant and that’s what she would bring to us every time she was on a trip.
    Now that we live in the States, our Brazilian friends bring us back chocolate, chocolate powder (for chocolate cake) and cheese bread mix.

  42. oh my gosh Corey…your cookbook looks like the ones I buy when I find them at the thrift store, flea market, etc…plus I long for the ones that my grandmother has that look like this!!!!
    What a wonderful thing to have and pass on!!!
    You should print it just like it is on Blurb…I, for one, would buy it!!!!
    HINT HINT!
    and your handwriting is delicious also!
    (sorry for all the exclamation points…haha)

  43. I Adore your cook book. It is so beautiful and full of life! I started one similar recently because I tend to make things up as I cook and morph several recipes together and realized that I may be able to recreate it but I have no idea how pass that on to another person. So I am keeping track for my girls to have someday.
    And the food I couldn’t live without….its a tie between wine and pizza…both together would be preferable.

  44. oh my lord, I love your cookbook, it reminds me so much of Jamie Olivers show – Jamie at Home.. his cookbook looks similar.. all illustrated like you have.. I was just about hyperventilating while reading your post.. my recipes are a collection of bits torn out and written down.. how I wish I had the vision to keep them as neat as you do.. some are in my head, even more of a problem because age does not store things well up there!!.

  45. Peanut butter. Glorious melt-on-your tongue peanut butter!

  46. Your cookbook is a treasure, Corey!! Beautiful. It will be a precious thing to your children someday. Btw, your handwriting is so nice!
    I would miss so many foods, it is hard to narrow it down, but I think chocolate would be high on the list!

  47. what a treasure your cookbook is! thanks for sharing this.

  48. I would miss chocolate in any form, cakes, cookies, candies.
    My mother passed away in November and I have wonderful memories, but the “thing” I have that brings back warm wonderful feelings is her cookbook. She was a fantasticl cook and when I read her recipes and notes I remember all the love she put into her cooking. A real legacy.

  49. I would have to say I would miss pasta and chocolate, not together though. I have a cookbook similar to yours but not quite as tidy and organized. Also I am addicted to cookbooks, I just love them and books that have a theme of renovating in France or Italy with some cooking mixed in and I am in heaven.

  50. PS. I would love a copy of your cookbook xxx

  51. Kathy Woods

    Your oookbook is wonderful. I have one similar to that without the anecdotes and ilustrations. I have two teenage daughters and I will be making one for each of them to pass to them for their 21st birthday.
    Chelsea will treasure your cookbook
    Kathy

  52. Many years ago I was in the Peace Corps in Kenya and craved Brownies. A “friend” made us some for a party and I ate way too many…without realizing there was an extra ingredient. I have NEVER forgotten those brownies. When my family lived in Germany and England we also had family and friends bring us peanut butter and chocolate chips. I would miss rice pudding, my favorite comfort food. Your cook book is wonderful.

  53. I treasure and still use the cook book my Mum gave me when I emigrated to Australia. it is an old Mre Beaton book, but has notes in it by my Mum.
    Like you I do not eat meat (but do eat fish, do YOu?), so never miss any of that).. I would really miss an English institution of a food if I couldn’t get it any more and that is Marmite.( savoury spread ). You have to have been reared on the stuff to appreciate it’s salty savouryness.
    When I came to Australia, I couldn’t get it here ( and their Vegimite tastes dreadful to me). Whenever uk visitors arrived I would be presented with a huge jar of Marmite! Now I can find it in the shops here, such a relief!
    ps Cory am in Paris in May. Any suggestions for vegi type cafe meals I can request? thanks.

  54. My grandpa used to bring me Geneva bakery French bread, olive oil and Greek cheese. I lived on it growing up and wouldn’t trade it for anything. I still eat it and think of childhood. I love your book, I always tell my aunt whom Ive learned the art of cooking from that I want her recipes, they look like yours! Maybe someday she will share her Carmel apple recipe!

  55. Brenda L from TN

    Your cookbook looks like mine…drips, spills,scotch tape,..plus recipes from magazines and newspapers…I love it..I also collect cookbooks from around the south. But I would also like to have yours..It looks very interesting.
    Food(s) I can’t live without…there isn’t just ONE…(my grandmother’s)potato salad,fried corn,fried green tomatoes,(real)banana pudding,anything chocolate and Mayfields Frozen yogurt Praline Pecan ice cream and Beyers Coffee ice cream….YUM…YUM.

  56. When I moved to France as a college student many years ago, I had my parents send Kraft Mac & Cheese. Then one day I found an American grocery shop, and I was in heaven. Not thatt he French food waan’t awesome- but as a poor college student, we weren’t exactly eating gourmet….When I made it for the little French girl I nannied, she thought it was heaven. Ahhh…

  57. Chedder Cheese! We lived in Switzerland for a time and I couldn’t get it. Nachos were not the same with Mozerella cheese.

  58. The firt time you move you learn that not all foods move with you….even within the US. Texas to California was difficult. California to New York was easier. I miss(ed) queso in both states post Texas. Resturants have no idea what you are referring to once you leave the south.
    The one thing I crave the minute I hit France is popcorn. I miss the salty buttery kind…..not the one with sugar that pops up in markets.

  59. Your book is fabulous! I sat down in 2006 and created my own collection of recipes that I have used, both my grandmother’s, my grandmother in law, my mother’s, my mother’s in law, my sister in laws, friends, etc.. I did this so that my children would have something onto which to fall back when I die..and I added pictures to each recipe.. one of the food and one snapshot of our family or friends at our dinner table (perfect way to use all those photos!) I finally found an awesome German deli in Dallas that ships! but I still miss Broetchen and a real baquette.. i had a great baquette recipe, but lost it when our home burned 10 years ago.. so i’m still hunting for one that tastes like i remember..
    Since I didn’t know what the following was until I moved to the states – this is surprising, but my most missed food would be
    Green Chile Chicken Enchiladas!

  60. Now that is an heirloom, Corey! I especially like how your cookbook comes with funny, naughty illustrations. Your terrific sense of humour is infused into the pages.
    My aunt sent me a cookbook that belonged to my nana and it has handwritten recipes in it going back to my great grandmother and great aunt. I scanned, printed out the pages, and bound them in a binder for my immediate family members several Christmases back.
    Anyway, what food would I miss if I could never have it again…fresh fruit. Definitely. Just thinking of fresh raspberries has me dreaming of summer. Recipe-wise…my mom’s special spareribs because it comes with happy memories of birthday dinner requests and my mom taking pleasure in how much my sister and I loved her cooking.

  61. You gave me a great idea for our daughter who is waiting in America for their visa’s and will be ariving on French shores soon. As to the food, BREAD!

  62. Linda Tunnell

    Oh, your book makes me wish I had kept one over the years, such a sweet thing.Too bad I don’t like to cook and even more so now after the nest is empty. I love to bake but just eat it and that isn’t good! I loved your little film clip with your neice and delight that your so comfortable with yourself, I am trying to be happy with my self! thanks for time

  63. jend’isère

    These pages whet my appetite for creative cooking as cookbooks & online recipes are mere instruction manuals. Merci.
    Vegetables at their spiciest and chocolate at its darkest!

  64. PESTO SOUP?? I love pesto! Will you share the recipe?
    I would miss salads and Mexican food the most if I had to go without them. And coffee. And chocolate. 🙂

  65. Spaghetti and 4 layer german chocolate cake with tons of coconut frosting I would REALLY miss.
    Man I have got to bake a cake now.
    I was looking at your cookbook and wond’rin what the rest of the recipe was with the apple, lemon juice, oil, salt and baking powder, curious – I love apple in cakes too.
    Have a fun day
    Betsy

  66. peanut butter, and will you please leave me your cookbook in your will? It is absolutely fabulous.

  67. Pasta, potatoes and bread. Oh, my.

  68. Marzipan! And chardonnay

  69. What a beautiful, beautiful, living journal of your life! It would be a gorgeous book to publish someday, along with your story. I feel the same way about some of my music books. I look at the markings, the tears, the rain splatters, the grass stains and remember all the events those books have been at with me.
    Unfortunately, I feel the loss of a favorite food already: peanuts. I developed an allergy to them 4 years ago. Now it’s so bad I can’t even be in the same room with them, and the allergy is moving on to other nuts. It’s just the saddest thing! Sometimes I dream about eating nuts…at least I still have my dreams.

  70. I’ve a similar cookbook too, inherited from my Mum … but what I adore about our books is we were “journalling” before it became fashionable. I once covered an old ring binder folder, to hold larger torn out recipes and hints, with tin can labels. Too poor to buy paper. Sadly eventually threw the folder out when everyone said it was sooo tacky … wish I had that now … how times change. Thank You for sparking the gorgeous memories!

  71. Birdbrain

    Butter and olive oil.

  72. My mother passed away shortly after I married and before any of my children were born but I still have all her recipe books and handwritten recipes.
    Now, whenever I come across a recipe written in her beautiful handwriting it brings back more memories, tastes and kitchen aromas than anything else.
    What would I miss if I could never have it again? My Mum’s cooking. Nothing I make tastes even close.

  73. Hi Corey,
    Chocolate chips (because chopping chocolate into tiny bits gets on my nerves), peanut butter (because Skippy isn’t really peanut butter and paying 4 euros for a small jar kills me!), and tortillas (give me a break El Paso – that’s not a tortilla – it’s gluey cardboard).
    I can’t believe I haven’t seen your blog before. I’ll be back for more. That cookbook is a total treasure – just beautiful.

  74. Tacos and olive oil. I guess now you know how you’re going to make your million… Write a journal / cookbook and make the cover look vintage. At least your 3000 readers will buy a copy! (we’ll sell it at the store too). Now get to work!

  75. Pizza, absolutely! Any kind of it, I have to say….
    My cookbook is not so used and scrapped like yours is, but I keep my most loved recipes in there, recipes I collected like you did, from friends, restaurants and magazines.

  76. Lindt chile chocolate. I only discovered it last year but am now addicted. A glass of red wine (French of course) and a piece of this chocolate, hmmmmm heaven…..
    Karon

  77. I love this idea of a food diary where you don’t just keep recipes but remembrances of meals you’ve shared.

  78. Hi what a perfect book, my reipes are all covered in food, i like the stains, it makes me remember the timne i made it. And my favorite food and drink has to be chocolate and espresso. Ofcourse together preferably! I don’t miss out a day.. It is my secret addiction…
    haha

  79. Corey! This is truly delightful! Now here is a book I would love to see in print!!! Its love, joy, tears, hunger, and life all filled with deliciousness! I’m hoping to do a ‘altered cookbook’ class this spring, and yours is PURE INSPIRATION!
    How I miss you!
    Ulla

  80. Almost forgot – My life would never be the same if it was without Figs…

  81. You know what I love most about your cookbook Corey…the picture of the table setting. How does the saying go ” a picture speaks a 1000 words”..
    That picture speaks volumes to me.
    It says you were in a foreign land, had much to learn, and were determined to do so!.. and with style might I add.
    thank you.

  82. c, Imagine the story…one day in the future, your cookbook found in a brocante amongst a pile of other treasures. A young transplant, lost in a sea of people and language, picks it up and smiles as she hugs it close and feels a bit of relief…

  83. Heart Stopping as always Corey…I have a book just like yours , the cover is black and the binding is broken and falling apart . The pages are coming loose , and everything is bulging out , scraps of paper and index cards and magazine articles…whenever I don’t feel like going through my cookbook collection ( which is large ) , I turn to this black book and relive my memories .I’m working on a cookbook , which may or may not be published , and i will be called
    ” From Mom’s Table ”
    I inherited my Grandmothers (Mom’s MOM )recipe box , and treasure it above most things , all those index cards written in her hand !! If it disappeared from the face of the earth , I would die .
    What food would I miss….AVOCADO !!

  84. I do collect recipes, and if I ever I were to visit you, you’d have to lock that book away because it looks WONDERFUL! Maybe you could post a recipe every now and again?
    As far as food goes, I couldn’t do without my grandmother’s homemade biscuits smothered in gravy; it’s not michelin rated, but it’s darn good.

  85. Hi. I think your cookbook is a treasure that would make a wonderful published book, stains, tape marks and all. Perhaps you could photograph a few pages and send a proposal to a cookbook publisher. If you wanted any help to rearrange or cleanup any pages, I’d be willing to help using photoshop…

  86. nancy from mass

    I saw your recipe titled “soupe au pistou” and my mouth watered! Yes, I collect recipes. way too many recipes. But! my favorite recipes of all are the 2 I received by one of my favorite aunts on my wedding day. She would make batches of these and bring them to my house from time to time in an old cookie tin. She brought me some on my wedding day (in an old tin I still have) with the recipes written out. Lumberjack cookies and Brown Sugar Brownies…both old family recipes. MMMMM.
    I think I cannot live without raspberries or molasses. (not together though – ‘shudder’)

  87. Jeanette Mc.

    This is so easy for me – anything made with flour. I have recently been diagnosed with Celiac disease and while there are many good substitues they are just not the same. I miss bread, glorious real bread, pizza crust, pasta, cookies etc. You have beautiful handwriting.

  88. It has become apparent that I have become addicted to S.Pellegrino Sparkling Mineral Water. Last week when I went to my source to purchase my usual case, I was informed that the supplier was sold out due to the Christmas and New Year Holidays. I felt a sense of panic and dread.

  89. Lovely recipe book!!
    Can’t go without chocolates, bread, fruit and salads! My husband and sons – yeah, all of them cannibals! – love big, juicy steaks (in South Africa big = 500g!)

  90. Corey, you are the Julia Child of our generation! I watched Julie/Julia last night and now all I want to do is read French recipies. We had to try her recipie for crepes, and they were the best we ever made! This surprised us because the recipies we used before were from real French cooks! Now that I’ve had a glimpse of your amazing and beautiful cookbook I can think of no other cookbook that I’d rather spend long quiet hours looking through. What a treasure you have created! I will not be surprised to someday read your published book, or watch your life story on the silver screen. You are always inspiring!

  91. corey,
    when my family planned my wedding shower (many, many moons ago…) the one thing they asked each guest to bring was their favorite recipe on a card to be placed in a recipe box. that box is now overflowing with recipes collected over the years, and while it is convenient to just pop on the internet for a recipe, there is so much joy in seeing all these recipes….each beautifully hand written with all sorts of notes!!!
    and what food would i miss….a hunk of Parmigiano Reggiano and a glass of red wine!!
    meleen

  92. I’m sure there are many foods I could not live without (well, OK, but not happily). What first came to mind is espresso, but then it has to have a dollop of light cream. I’m sure once that need is satisfied, another MUST would quickly surface. The comment that said “my mother’s food” did give me pause. Whoa, let’s not even think about being without that.

  93. It’s hard to pick just one food that would be hard to live without. My first response would be Yorkshire Pudding and Home Made Ice Cream…..But truly what would life be without summer fruit and winter vegetables? Fresh picked. Some would be grown in my very, very small garden. Right now the only thing growing in there are thyme, oregano, sage, rosemary and bay leaves. The bugs ate my spinich and cauliflower.

  94. Marie-Noëlle Roland

    The food I should miss ?
    Lately I suggested to you that making lists was typically American …. or probably JUST NOT ME !!!
    Well, in French we say “L’exception confirme la règle” … I would need a list NOW to answer your question.
    – cherries
    – raspberries
    – peaches
    – tomatoes
    – charolais (cheese)
    – pierre dorée (cheese too)

  95. Corey–That book of yours is a most beautiful work of art!
    My one food would be…moist chocolate cake, I think. At least that is what I have been craving lately!

  96. Hi Corey! Sorry I haven’t been around in awhile … I was so very sick for weeks … glad to be back and I look forward to catching up. 🙂
    Oh gosh, I love this post Corey! What a beloved keepsake, excellent documentation of your getting acquainted with France, setting down roots and a wonderful resource.
    Saying very shyly, I would so love the recipe for your Fresh Herb and Goat Cheese Cake if possible, it sounds so intriguing! (I LOVE goat cheese.)
    Happy week to you!

  97. Corey – seeing that little notebook brought back so many memories for me. It reminded me so much of the one I purchased in Europe in 1969. We in America expect lined notebooks, not ones laid out in tiny squares. I used it on our tour through Europe and then during our stay in Pau where we attended the Summer University of Bordeau/Toulouse. And like your book, mine not only held my writings, but also ticket stubs, funny little drawings, etc. When our home burned in 1982, that notebook was one of the items I mourned the most. Thanks for a trip back in time.

  98. another book idea for you!

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