My Homemade Cookbook
Comments
90 responses to “My Homemade Cookbook”
-
Halva.
I used to miss it so much but now I can order it on line. That alone for me is one of the best advantages of the internet.
Patty -
What a wonderful treasure you created…..and didn’t know it a the time! You simply must put some of those favorite recipes in your book! And the one food I couldn’t live without…….Cape Cod Potato Chips!!!
-
Goodness. that is hard. What would I miss the most. A Santa Fe green chile sauce would probably be at the top of my list. So Hatch Green Chiles. I love being able to order my groceries from France and Germany on line these days. Such a treat. xo marlis
-
Oh yes there is one thing I really miss.. Dessaux Fils vinegar.. It makes me cry to think they are no longer in business. Julia Childs is rolling over in her grave, still. xo marlis
-
My mother had a cookbook very much like yours. Recipes accumulated over a lifetime. It too has stained and tattered pages. Notes accompany every recipe (who gave it to her, when she first made it, how it came out, etc). When she passed I brought it to my house and I use it. But more importantly I feel so close to her when I read it. Even though she had shared many of the recipes with me over the years, I love having all of hers bound in one place. It is almost like a journal or diary of her life. And oh, I would miss lobster.
-
Geez Corey, Your cookbook is awesome, please take it to a publisher. I think it would make a wonderful book, so much character and soul 😀
-
I have a binder like this. I was just looking at it the other day. Now, I mostly cook by combining what is in the fridge with what is in the pantry – very organic. I keep my most precious family recipes in a small box and new recipes are in a file on the computer. Maybe one day I will make them all into a book for my children.
-
Cheese!
I once asked Favorite Aunty for her 3 bean salad recipe. I could remember there were garbanzos in it, but what were the other two beans. She laughed and said though everyone called it her 3 bean salad actually has 4 beans in it and shared the recipe. Now that she is a bit drifty, Wish you could give out copies of your cookbook, it looks like a real treat. -
I agree with Chris M. I think you should revisit your idea to publish a cookbook. A facsimile of your current book would be perfect!
And I don’t really have a cookbook like yours that I have created myself, but I do have a four volume set of my grandmothers that I treasure beyond all other things. -
GORGEOUS just like YOU!I recently bought Italian leather bound books for my boys so I can do the same for them!Your children are going to have to flip a coin as to who gets your BEAUTIFUL COOKBOOK!
-
I am with everyone else… An exact copy , page by page, of that cookbook of yours… How wonderful. You have made your life here on earth a feast… A glorious banquet . Hey you’ve been home like what a whole two weeks now, You must be getting itchy feet.
-
Corey, I have been reading your blog for quite some time. You have inspired me to create a cookbook like your of my own. Many of the entries are from your blog. My grandaughter is now doing the same.
Thank you for such a wonderful idea. You would not believe how mine looks like after only a few short years.
You are now a part of my culinary history.
Thanks again. Patt… Yuba City -
Corey, you should publish your cookbook!!! It would be a treat to read and the recipes must be fabulous!
-
I have my mother’s cookbook from when she was a bride. More importantly, I have her recipe box stuffed full with her handwritten recipes, clippings from old newspaper and magazines, and the food messes that occasionally were left behind on her 3×5 cards. I treasure these reminders, especially her persimmon cookies.
-
When I lived in Canada I missed some Polish food until they opened a huge Polish supermarket close by where I lived and you could get everything Polish your heart desired. Now when I am back in Poland I miss sweet potatoes, molasses (for ginger bread), good maple syrup, many varieties of pumpkin, sweet fresh corn from a farm and good Indian food take out.
-
“real ” french cheese … that is to say not pasteurized
-
You have beautiful handwriting. For me it’s a tie between chocolate chip cookies and kimchi.
-
Oooh, I miss Extra-Sour Dark-Bake Sourdough Bread from San Francisco. What’s fobbed off as sourdough bread made anywhere else AIN’T :-(((
Back when checking two items of luggage on a flight was free (sigh!), I’d bring as my second item a box from the supermarket filled with as many loaves as possible of that morning’s freshly delivered sourdough bread, several 2-pound bricks of extra-sharp Tillamook cheese from Oregon, a bag of Meyer lemons from the mature and prolific tree in my aunt’s backyard and, if in season, a few 2-pound bags of fresh baby artichokes. -
Is vodka considered a “food”?
-
Back in summer 1991 I amused myself in my spare time by creating a database of my own design for my favorite recipes. I printed them out, inserted each in a clear sheet protector (to protect the pages against splatters), and organized them in a 3-ring binder with dividers between categories. Over the years I’ve printed out a few more as wedding gifts for young relatives and friends.
Of course, after more than two decades, the format — MSWorks using 12-point Courier font — appears quaint, to put it tactfully, now that so many other software programs are available to make professional-looking home cookbooks. A friend’s husband, who’s a computer scientist, has created a magnificent color-illustrated specimen containing her favorite recipes, whose format I long to use in order to re-do my recipes (yeah, I know, in my spare time!). -
I dunno, but if you drink enough of it you won’t care any more 😉
-
Isn’t it one of the major food groups??
-
Asparagus! Could not stand it as a kid – can’t get enough of it now!
-
Hatch chili, tortillas, and pinto beans. Oh, and coffee. Wow, I’m getting hungry! I love your tattered book. If it were ever published, I’d buy it.
-
love this post….and the pictures devine!
-
Hmmm…fried chicken and queso & chips. I don’t have either now, but if someone said that I could never have them again I think I would cry.
-
Let’s see…if I started with the letter “A”, I would most miss artichokes, avocados and asparagus. Had the first two for lunch today. But I would have to keep ordering Shearer potato chips from Brewster, Ohio no matter what else I had to give up.
-
Hmmmm…
I just had Panang Curry at my favorite Thai restaurant last night, and every time I taste it, it is so divine! I adore butternut squash raviolis in sage cream sauce…
I also love Chocolate Chip Cookies. And just chocolate, in general. -
Toast! Plain simple hot buttered, whole grain toast. When I’m sick, or just want something to eat
(especially in winter time)it’s good ol’ toast. My cookbook is covered in splatters too, even though I rewrote it once. -
This post made me smile, and brought back so many memories of myself as a new bride trying to navigate Japanese cooking. I still have my hand-written temperature and measurement conversion chart, now yellowed with age, taped on the inside of one of our kitchen cabinets for easy reference, though I don’t really need it anymore. I have all of my recipes stuffed into a file with clear pockets – much less aesthetically pleasing than your notebook (love your handwriting, by the way).
Things I would miss? Peanut butter, gooey brownies, and rice balls with pickled plum and crunchy nori seaweed. :o) -
When I got married I did not know how to cook and started my own fav recipe book similar to yours. It grew over time and now we have 2 books stuffed with fav recipes. 17 yrs later, I’m thinking I need to update the books since cuisine has changed overtime. I’m liking the new bistro type recipes, but comfort food is always a Sunday best. I love…love… food and don’t mind spending my days off cooking. DH and I dine almost every night on our creations and well set table. Dinner and a movie is how we spend most of our time. Can’t tell you which is my fav…I just love good food and a good movie which includes a lot of French film.
-
I have a recipe box, a simple 3X5 card file that I “had” to start in jr. high for homework! I still use it & all of the skills my 8th grade “home ec” teacher taught me, even how to measure shortening! Collecting recipes has been a hobby, I now realize, over the past many decades- through casseroles, “quick & easy”, to a bit more “gourmet” -for me, anyway. After reading your post today, I realized that it is an historical “tour” through my life. Thanks for the memories!
-
Wonderful!
-
Corey…..why is vanilla hard to find in France? I would have thought a good Madagascar vanilla would be a staple considering how many pastries and desserts they turn out. Is it actually possible they don’t even use vanilla?
-
I love it! and I’m like you too! I started it while still living in Ukraine. It’s actually a thick notebook that was made for writing down recipes, organized for soups, main dishes, pastries, and was giving to me by my aunt on one of her visits when I was still in college. This my cookbook arrived with me in the States and later traveled to Hong Kong. It got recipes in it written in three languages, Russian, English and Chinese (with English translation by Alfred). My cookbook is my treasure 🙂
-
When I lived in Kenya (Peace Corps)I missed m&m’s and learned to settle for Cadbury Chocolate bars instead.
When my family lived in England I missed maple syrup, peanut butter and bags of chocolate chips. That’s what I told visitors to bring. When we lived in Germany and I was pregnant with my 3rd child I craved Kraft mac and cheese which alas was not to be found in Germany. When we returned to the USA my kids missed Kinder Eggs. -
Most definitely!!!!
-
The tummy busting, foil wrapped, torpedo shaped, super burrito from San Francisco’s Mission District.
-
Butter.
It goes with everything and margarine doesn’t come close.
And nuts.
Oh, and fruit – any kind. I’m crazy about fresh fruit.
oh, yeah and sugar.
Well, I might as well add
macaroons
and dark chocolate
and aussie meat pies
and crispy bbq pork
and potato crisps
and cheese
and wine
and cream
and anything baked
or fried
or fresh
or
or . . .
Aww, don’t make me choose coz I can’t
BTW I just love your book with all the side notes and pictures. It is just wonderful. -
Dear Corey,
Love your cookbook.
I always keep a bunch of recipies I want to try, but only a few make their way to “the” selfmade cookbook.
I remember that I once saw a book on baking bread that was sold with intentionally applied flour dust, some poppy seeds and doilies between the pages 🙂
One food I couldn’t do without is potatoes, in whichever form, potato chips, cooked, fried or baked potatoes, you name it. Oh: and tomatoes, sliced on bread, with salad, in pesto…
XO, Claudia -
What a treat Corey. I used to work in publishing and have to echo the sentiments from others here – as soon as I got past your first paragraph of today’s blog I was itching to write to you to urge you to PUBLISH! You have a treasure trove there just waiting………
-
That Sherried Brie and Mushroom Soup recipe looks fabulous!
-
I miss Mexican food and, for the most part, save eating it for trips to the States. I now find most of my recipes on the Internet.
-
These are the best kind of cookbooks. When I was first married and before kids when we would have guest over for dinner I would sometimes give a similar book with the recipes I used that night.
-
such a typical Corey post, full of colour, flavour, interest, lovely pixies, a laugh….:)
do i collect recipes? YEEEEESSSSSSS I do – I must have one of the more impressive collections of lovely cookery boos – not even to use but for inspiration, for the super photography, for the beauty of those tomes!
I absolutely LOVE cooking, but only for people I love – so every meal becomes automatically a ‘labour of love’ with my love, feelings, sentiments thrown in, together with herbs, natural ingredients, if possible 1st class, organic stuff, then I add the thoughts, smiles, sometimes tears, wishes for seasoning – I love drinking a glass of wine while cooking! It seems to add a certain recklessness which does my cooking good…
I love your cookery book – it’s so full of just you being yourself. Lovely, lovely – wish I could just send you a shot of my cookery book shelves, my scrap books of what wines I bought when, of what menus i wrote down for which friends (it’s an eternal stop and go project, therefore pretty useless)…. -
Hi Kiki
When you wrote: “I love drinking a glass of wine while cooking! It seems to add a certain recklessness…” It brought up a memory of drinking a glass of wine that turned into more while I was cooking. The story still makes me laugh. I am glad it adds flavor to your cooking style, I cannot say it does the same with mine.
C -
Hi Linda!
Oh Mexican food. As I learned in the Yucatan the Mexican food that I “miss” is California’s Burritos!
Tortillas in the Yucatan, and Mexico … make every other tortilla I have ever had seem like white bread. I ate a plenty of Yucatan handmade tortilla plain with butter. Heaven in my mouth!
C -
Hi NPP
Oh it is!!
Delicious!
C -
Thank you Nikki and many of you for suggesting that I publish. One day if I ever get around to it. Writing a book is a full time job!
C -
Hi Claudia
“…(A) book on baking bread that was sold with intentionally applied flour dust, some poppy seeds and doilies between the pages…” Now that is my kind of cookbook: Ideas, beautiful photos, seeds to inspire ..
C -
Hi Karen
Butter. Now that is a honest answer!
I love your list minus the aussie meat pies
and crispy bbq pork.
C -
Hi Laurie
God knows I lived on those when I lived there.
C -
Hi Momof 5
Around the world with flavors. The first line is still what I ask people to bring to us.
C -
Hello Irina,
I’ll never forget your dumplings and soup!
C -
Hi Ali,
Vanilla is expensive. Most make theirs with bean pods. And many a recipe calls for rum. Also in France they have sugar vanilla packets which have bits of vanilla pod. It does the trick. But nothing like a bottle of vanilla from the States.
C -
Hi Jennifer,
Well said, “a historical tour” through (your) life”. That says it all in a nutshell, or on a recipe card. i love it!
C -
Hi Ann
Set me a place I am coming over!
C -
Hi Joanne,
Starting with the letter A…
lol, great response!
C -
lol
-
If you add lemon.
-
Hi Jenna
Kimchi?
C -
Hi Melanie
Ditto!
C -
Hi Zosia
Isn’t that the truth, we miss what we don’t have. When I am in Willows i miss French food, France, when I am home I miss everything… -
Hi Annie!
Reading your comment made me think of the phone list / pad at my mother’s house and how my dad’s handwritten phone numbers make me “feel” him.
C -
Thank you Ellen.
-
Hi Patt,
The next time I am in WIllows we have to meet, and swap recipes!
C -
Hi BH
I tofu feast with plenty of nuts.
C -
Hi Judy0,
What is recipe of your Mother’s do you miss the most?
I share your sentiments exactly.
C -
Hi Patty!
Halva, I gotta go buy some right now.
C -
Bonjour !
I do have a homemade recipe notebook ,even though I love recipe books . The latest one I bought is called “Je cuisine poétique” and it is pretty inspiring. I have cook books from a little bit everywhere I’ve lived, Ireland, Tunisia and Brazil and of course here.
My own recipe notebook is after all built like yours : pages torn down of recipes, or handwritten notes of friends or family ( my great-grandmother’s recipe of Gâteau de Savoie, a heavenly light sponge cake)in french, english or portuguese,pictures glued ( I like it pretty) and of course the inevitable stains (lots of chocolate ones, I must confess. I have a great recipe for Chocolate Mud pie and Fondant au chocolat…sigh ).
A food I would miss : tasty greens like ruccula or artichokes or fresh coriander ? oysters and sea urchins for their divine iode taste (and the delicious glass of crisp white wine that goes with them!)? champagne ( I know, it is no food but hey !)? Nah. I think chocolate. My favorite is dark chocolate with fleur de sel de Guérande. Pure heaven !
Now see what you did ? You got us all raving about food ! Off to the kitchen I go , it is wednesday -kids day- we are going to chek into Ratatouille’s cookbook (yes we have one !) what to do for lunch !
(if my comment is too long feel free to delete it !) -
I love it, so much more than a cookbook, yes, fabulous.
You should copy every page, drippings and all and compile it into a book with notes – I would buy it in a heartbeat! I could live on cheese, fresh fruit, good bread and chocolate but you know, who couldn’t?
When I travel, I miss good mexican food the most. (and cold drinks) -
Olive Oil. And those pages would make a fantastic, collaged wallpaper!
-
WHERE CAN WE BUY THIS?
? ? ? ?
PLS DIY at the corner copy shop!!!
is there one in yr little town?
GO TO MARSAILLES(sp) then
Go to BLURB and do it.
You figured out Photoshop (I haven’t yet)
YOU CAN DO THIS!
Come on Corey I DARE!!!! -
PS
DO NOY CHANGE A HAIR!
ya hear gurl?
EXACTLY AS IS do it
! ! ! !
I REALLY MEAN IT
very adorbs. -
Corey, what a treasure! This is your own written brocante! Love it! You could sell them and make a fortune! My husband is a chef and we have more recipes than one can imagine, but none as beautifully written as your pages. Merci. Thank you for sharing. Read your blog daily and although I have never been to France, I get to live it vicariously through you. Love your insight. Fond Regards,
Peg -
I love your book Corey – it looks like a treasure trove. It’s peculiar how we see all these glorious pictures of French Food and long to taste to just a little, yet even in it’s perfection there are those little treasures that are lacking.
I can’t decide between tapioca pudding and yorkshire pudding… both seem necessary to me! -
I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again – you should reproduce this exactly as is and sell it!!!!
It’s beautiful, Corey. -
Hi Corey
Thanks for your reply. My mother was such a great cook but I always loved her lemon squares made with fresh lemons. Yum! Mine just don’t taste quite the same. I miss hers. -
I couldn’t cook either when I got married…except scrambled eggs and toast. So I started collecting cook books and found out I LOVE cookbooks! I read them cover to cover! My two best cookbooks have stains and writing all over them. I even had to write in some of the ingredients and directions when “somehow” they disappeared.
I would miss my grandmothers potatoe salad, fried corn, fried green tomatoes, cornbread and greens and baked chicken and chocolate ice cream. (This IS the South, you realize).But what I would really miss a BIG green salad with tomatoes, cucumbers, olives and diced chicken on top with red-wine dressing. That’s what I crave…a BIG salad! I eat one 4-5 a week! YUM! -
Butter, definitely butter.
-
Oh, no. Must be lime.
-
Had a few shots last night to remind me just how much I’d miss it.
-
Corey,
Have someone bring you Penzey Spice’s double vanilla…you will never want the single vanilla again! They have a website, and now have a store in the Bay area. -
Oh Food Glorious Food…
30 years ago I gave up eating oh so many of my favorite things for health reasons. After my stroke 10 years ago, I decided that I wanted all those wonderous tastes back in my life. This is not to say that I don’t keep the “forbidden” foods well within reason, I was simply tired of denying myself.
You see food has always been an obsession with me. As a child we traveled with Me Da all around the world and frequently ate out. My parents quickly learned that if I fell in love with something I was served, no one could restrain me from running back into the kitchen to find the Chef and ask him every question I could think of about what I’d been served. (As an adult, I’m still known for Kissing the Chef after an extraordinary meal). I was too young then to write everything I learned down, but the essentials were tucked deep inside my memory banks. I began collecting recipies sometime during college…that book looked exactly like yours, the pages crusted, wilted and tattered over time.
The one food I will never be able to give up again is cheese. -
oh Corey – I adore your cook book. I’ve got books like yours, only yours is elegant and beautiful. Mine are ugly. But I started collecting recipes when I was a young girl, from my Mom’s magazines. I’d cut them out and paste them on thick sheets of paper. I do not believe I ever made a single recipe.
Eventually, those books went into the trash bin. They were huge! Guess I’ve always loved cooking and the idea of combining different ingredients to make something spectacular.
Yours has history, names, places. Mine tend to simply have recipes and notes to help make the recipe again.
But it is like a diary of our lives, isn’t it?
Lovely!!
My favorite food I would miss the most? Too many to count, but most likely chocolate. Anything with chocolate. I don’t eat it daily, but if I never had it again, I’d be very sad indeed. -
You know of course that, 200 years from now, your cookbook will be at a brocante and someone (perhaps a new bride, struggling with language and loneliness) will discover it and find solice…
-
This cook book is glorious, and an heirloom for the kids! Recently when my mom (she’s 80) asked me what I wanted for Christmas, I told her I wanted her recipes. So she bought a book, and wrote all my favorites in there, along with stories about the times she had made them. Reading all of these, in her hand, mean more to me than anything she could ever have given me.
Grilled cheese. I am no longer allowed wheat or dairy, but I know that when I need it, I WILL have a grilled cheese sandwich. -
Yes, yes, yes….I see a cookbook in the making!
-
Oh this is awesome! A cooking journal!!! I am really into journaling and bookmaking lately. What a wonderful treasure your cookbook is! Makes me want to start one!
-
Publish your cookbook just like it is!!! I will take 5 copies!
Leave a Reply