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The Era of Cookbooks Is Not Over – Jennifer Steinhauer

There comes a time in every home cook’s life when you wake up and think, “Tonight is feeling very cashew curry!” This instinct could naturally lead to the Googles, not so long ago a pathway to legacy media outlets and needlessly difficult but variously exciting recipes by chefs and restaurateurs. Search now leads to (largely) young women in fetching aprons whose culinary origin stories seem to always stem from a dead relative

I turned instead that morning to a hutch that holds my cookbooks, an admittedly dusty piece of furniture with a door that I have not bothered to fix and currently hold closed with a candlestick. From there I grabbed From Gujarat With Love: 100 Authentic Indian Vegetarian Recipes, a book that previously instructed me how to make this particular curry, as well as a simple butter paneer, a kheer with cherries, and a double-layered roti. 

Staring down those rows of books was an elegiac journey of past dinners, fleeting obsessions, failed projects, and once-regular rotation titles later eclipsed by daily newsletter commands to prepare Million Dollar Ravioli Casserole. Many of those books still held page markers fashioned from ripped Whole Foods receipts: a confit of carrot and cumin recipe from one of the many editions of the New York Times cookbooks; classic yellow cake from the Joy of Cooking; spicy freekeh soup with meatballs from Jerusalem that, like so many recipes from that book, I never actually made but stared at longingly; shakshuka and miso-glazed salmon from Dinner: Changing the Game, a Melissa Clark book so covered in soy sauce and honey that the pages stick together, which is fine because I long ago memorized those recipes, so essential were they.

I have many single-subject books like those for Jewish holidays and a seriously ancient soup tome I will never part with, a full collection of Meera Sodha books, Michael Solomonov projects I have made or admired, and a Masaharu Morimoto edition that helped me through the pandemic when I watched every episode of the Japanese show Midnight Diner. This last one led me to an ochazuke preoccupation that went on for several months and a short-term commitment to homemade dashi. 

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