Curious to hear what everyone's favorite cook books are (and maybe include a recipe from it you are particularly enamored with).
I buy a lot of books. Cook Books are the only thing I buy that's not fiction, illustration or programming (occupational hazard) & I really do love them. There are a lot of things that can make a good cookbook; good recipes, good technical explanations, sometimes it's just a nicely made book.
I have two that stand out because they have taught me a lot about cooking. They aren't the finest printings but then, they are priced such that when I needed a copy of one in better shape, it was a no brainer to just order it:
Bouchon & Ad Hoc at Home, both by Thomas Keller.
From Bouchon, I would recommend the any of the Quiches (the plain Lorraine or Florentine are my choices) or the "Simple Roast Chicken", which is a treatise in how one might with only salt get far better results than they had in the prior 3 decades with innumerable sticks of butter. From Ad Hoc at Home, Potato Pave.
I buy a lot of books. Cook Books are the only thing I buy that's not fiction, illustration or programming (occupational hazard) & I really do love them. There are a lot of things that can make a good cookbook; good recipes, good technical explanations, sometimes it's just a nicely made book.
I have two that stand out because they have taught me a lot about cooking. They aren't the finest printings but then, they are priced such that when I needed a copy of one in better shape, it was a no brainer to just order it:
Bouchon & Ad Hoc at Home, both by Thomas Keller.
From Bouchon, I would recommend the any of the Quiches (the plain Lorraine or Florentine are my choices) or the "Simple Roast Chicken", which is a treatise in how one might with only salt get far better results than they had in the prior 3 decades with innumerable sticks of butter. From Ad Hoc at Home, Potato Pave.