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cookbooks

Cookbooks Worth Waiting for in 2022 Part Two - A Recap

Kath January 17, 2023

These were the new release cookbooks I was most looking forward to in the second half of 2022, you can read the original list here. Now that I have (almost) all of them, and had some time to read through them, it’s time for a recap of the list.

Just a note - The links to the books are for reference only and are not sponsored, I’ve just included where I bought them from or where I wish I had bought them from! Though its always best to search around for the best price as it can vary depending on when you are buying as well. Links to books on Booktopia removed 15/07/2024.

Did any of these books get a place on your bookshelf last year? What did you think of them? Let me know in the comments below. 

1. Pasta Grannies Comfort Cooking by Vicky Bennison - If you loved the first Pasta Grannies book, or just love pasta this is the book for you. This time Pasta Grannies ventures into some rice based dishes, pizzas and desserts too, so there is slightly more variety in the recipes compared with the first book. The stories of the grannies are just as heat warming as the first book, and the photography is just as excellent too. I realised when reading this book, that is one of the few I have looked through of late that isn’t focused on the author themselves. Vicky Bennison is showcasing the food of others, preserving recipes and writing down the history of peoples everyday lives. There is something genuinely comforting about that, and by the success of Vicky’s first book (she won a James Beard Award for it!), and the popularity of the related Pasta Grannies You Tube channel, many others must feel the same.

Pasta Grannies Coookbooks

2. Home Is Where The Eggs Are by Molly Yeh - the Australian release of this book has been very delayed, and I still don’t have my preordered copy :( I will add my thoughts here once it arrives!

Update (May 2023) - I have now had Molly’s book for a little while, and it is pure joy which is what I have come to expect from her. I love the colour scheme, and the fact that this book feels typically ‘Molly’ but has just evolved to suit her different phase of life (in comparison to her first book which was pre kids for her and her husband). The focus on family food and things that can be made more quickly is noticeable, but not in a way that excludes people who don’t relate to that part of Molly’s life. The illustrations scattered about the book are delightful, and I really like the food photography as well. Molly’s style of cookbook is very different to the usual American style cookbook, that always feel very different to their European, British and Australian counterparts. I’ve noticed many US based cookbooks utilise a really different style of food photography that looks like artificial light and flash is used and everything can be quite intensely bright and over exposed. Molly’s aesthetic is the total opposite to this. It is calm, yet vibrant, and the images have noticeable shadow creating depth and clearly utilising natural light that really makes the food sing.

3. Home Food by Olia Hercules - When I first got this book, I wasn’t super impressed with it. Looking back I think it was more because I had preordered it from Booktopia, then once the book was released it took them ages to actually ship it to me. It was annoying, and I think it created more frustration than excitement around getting a new book. Now it’s been a few months since then, and I can see it really was the general frustration impairing my view of Home Food. At first I struggled to find recipes I wanted to make, now I’m not sure how all the recipes I’d like to try didn’t stand out to me back then. Many recipes are influenced by Olia’s Ukrainian heritage, and others from her time living in Cyprus, Italy and the UK. This book encapsulates what comfort food means to Olia, and she explains it so well in the longer form writing in the book. The photography by Olia’s husband Joe Woodhouse is also excellent and combined with her writing makes a wonderful book to pursue through (once you’re over the initial frustrating shipping delays of course!). In terms of cover design for once I think the US cover is nicer than the UK/Australian one, but really, that doesn’t detract from all the goodness that is inside.

cookbooks worth waiting for 2022

4. Persiana Everyday by Sabrina Ghayour- As I expected these recipes look like they are flavourful and will bring a bit of Persian cooking to your kitchen. In the introduction Sabrina, says her style of cooking has changed more recently as she is now married with two step sons. She says she now gets the need for quick tasty meals and this book is a product of that. I think this is a good book for those looking for a different take on the meals you might want to make midweek, as the recipes don’t look overly fussy and you might try a few new flavours along the way. The photography is also nice in this book, with an image per recipe, plus I just really enjoy the vibrant cover design and the embossed pistachios on the cover.

5. The Joy of Better Cooking by Alice Zaslavsky - This cookbook really is joyful, and as I’ve said before it is just trademark Alice. This book positions itself to help you in the kitchen, but it also has things for those more experienced too. It seems to be able to cater for everyone, I think because Alice really walks the reader through each recipe is very generous with her cooking knowledge and explanations, but the recipes themselves aren’t those super basic things that more experienced cooks may wonder why they bothered with the book at all. The recipes are interesting, and might even challenge the generally favoured flavour and technique profiles of more experienced cooks. For some more info about the book and Alice’s cooking style more generally, you can check out the her segments on ABC News Breakfast (on iView or have a look at Alice’s Instagram as she shares them there as well). 

The joy of better cooking
Cookbooks worth waiting for 2022
In Off the Shelf Tags Cookbooks 2022, Cookbooks, Alice Zaslavsky, Olia Hercules, Sabrina Ghayour, Molly Yeh, Vicky Bennison, Pasta Grannies Book Two, Home is Where the Eggs Are, Home Food, Persiana Everyday, The Joy of Better Cooking, Cookbooks Worth Waiting For, Cookbook Review
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Molly on the Range by Molly Yeh

Molly on the Range by Molly Yeh

Off The Shelf - 'Molly on the Range' by Molly Yeh

Kath July 31, 2019

Bought from: Booktopia. I preordered this one, as I had met Molly at a Local is Lovely Workshop in 2016 (not too long before the book was due to be released), and knew it would be a good addition to my cookbook shelf!

Recipes Made: Shakshuka Couscous p.25-27, Quinoa Carbonara p.110, Pistachio Loaf Cake p.220-21 and Brown Sugar Cookies p.229-30

Molly on the Range by Molly Yeh

For the Shakshuka Couscous I didn’t follow the recipe to the letter, but it gave me (along with seeing Molly make shakshuka at the Local is Lovely Workshop) the idea to add quinoa to shakshuka. I cooked the quinoa separately, and added it in before I added the eggs. It was great, and exactly what I wanted as at the time I wanted to take the leftovers to work for lunch the next day, and the criteria for leftovers for work lunches are that it needs to be tasty and something I will look forward to eating, and also something that is filling enough (no one likes being hungry at work do they?!). This recipe ticked both of those boxes, and I am happy to report that even the egg from the shakshuka was really nice reheated the next day! 

View fullsize Shakshuka with Quinoa
View fullsize Shakshuka made by Molly at a Local is Lovely Workshop in 2016

Continuing with the quinoa theme, I decided to try the Quinoa Carbonara recipe. Again wanting leftovers for work lunch the next day, I made it and felt the flavour left me a little disappointed. It wasn’t as tasty as I had hoped, but took it for lunch the next day anyway. Well, that extra time seemed to do something as it was significantly more tasty the next day! So I can highly recommend this one to make ahead! 

The Pistachio Loaf Cake is definitely my favourite recipe from the whole book! I have never tried the cake Molly is recreating in this recipe, but I feel I probably don’t have to as this one is so good. I wrote a blog post a while back about this cake, and I have continued to make it since. I have also made it with a rosewater icing and decorated with freeze dried raspberries which was also realllllyyy nice. 

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

View fullsize Pistachio Loaf with Rose Icing + Freeze Dried Raspberries
View fullsize Pistachio Loaf

Brown Sugar Cookies (aka Chocolate Chip Cookies without the Chocolate Chips) - I definitely feel Molly on this recipe! I was always the kid who wanted a Chocolate chip cookie without the chocolate chips (thanks Mum for obliging on this for so many years!). I now know I can’t eat chocolate, but even as a kid I just didn’t really like it that much (controversial!!!). At friends birthday parties we would play that game where you had to cut the block of chocolate with a plastic knife and eat it (there was some time pressure to this whole thing but I really can’t remember the whole premise of the game now!), and I would always get another friend to eat the chocolate while I frantically tried to cut bits of a chocolate bar with a pathetic plastic knife. Same goes for cookies, I always appreciated them sans chocolate chips, or maybe with white chocolate.

When I made Molly’s recipe I didn’t refrigerate the dough - mostly because as far as I was concerned baking cookies should be a fairly instantly gratifying process and leaving the dough to rest for at least a day was just to much to handle. I probably would have had a better cookie if I had done so, but the instant gratification of a warm cookie was too hard to pass up. 

Molly on the Range by Molly Yeh

Favourite Things About the Book: The variety of recipes, and their uniqueness to Molly! Molly has such great and diverse recipes that really are a reflection of her Chinese and Jewish heritage and her life on the farm in the Upper Mid West of America. You really won’t find some of these recipes in other cookbooks, and it makes owning this book all the more special. 

I really like the snippets of Molly’s life and context around certain recipes or chapters as well. Through reading and cooking through this book, you really get to know Molly, how these recipes came about and why her style of cooking is so unique to her. Molly’s fun and bright personality shines through in her writing and recipes, and it’s like having a friend there with you in the kitchen.

Bookmarked Recipes (to make later!): Mum’s Matzo Brei p.13, Smoky Bacon Mac and Cheese p.99, Pizza Dough p.120, Cardamom Cupcakes with Lingonberry Filling and Cream Cheese Frosting p.262-3, Party Trick Peanut Butter Cake (thinking I could use another type of nut butter for this one!) and Funfetti Cake p.271-3.

Molly on the Range by Molly Yeh
In Off the Shelf Tags Molly On The Range, Molly Yeh, shakshuka, Pistachio Cake
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Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Kath September 29, 2017

I really love this cake. It is something I crave and always want to make. It comes from Molly Yeh’s (of the blog My Name Is Yeh) book ‘Molly on the Range.’ And I think the fact that it is so good and moorish is a testament to her cake making and recipe creation skills (but if you have seen her blog you’d never doubt those anyway!). The first time I tried this cake however, someone else made it for me. 

In February my Grandpa died, and one of my friends made this cake for me. It was really special as I had given her a copy of ‘Molly on the Range’ a few months before, for her birthday. This same friend made a cake when my Grandma died four years earlier, a chocolate vanilla marble cake. It was at that time that I learnt that giving flowers when someone is grieving was not a universal custom. Often, giving food is. And as a great lover of food, I think this particular tradition is something I can get behind. Food is one of the greatest comforts we can give one another, and I think that is why it is so fitting to receive food during times of grief, and why it is customary for some. 

On both occasions I was so humbled by my friends generosity, and the knowledge that she had gone to so much effort. The pistachio loaf cake was so good, I’m pretty sure I ate most of it myself. My friend made some alterations to the recipe, substituting the almond extract for vanilla extract (thankfully, as unbeknownst to her I hate almond extract, and always leave it out of every recipe that asks for it), and that is what I have done each time I have made this cake as well, so I have included that in the recipe below. 

Unfortunately I was able to return the cake making favour only a couple of weeks after my friend made this cake for me. Needless to say February wasn’t a great month, or start to the year for either of us. However for me, feeling the support of such friends and having a tangible (and edible) measure of my friend’s support made that time just that much easier. 

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake
Homegrown Daffodils

Homegrown Daffodils

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Ingredients: 

220g pistachios

75g plain flour

45g almond meal

225g margarine/softened unsalted butter

335g caster sugar

4 eggs

zest of 1/2 a lemon

1 tsp vanilla extract

 

For the icing: 

75g icing sugar

1 tbsp lemon juice, approx. 

 

Method: 

Preheat oven to 170 degrees Celsius, and grease and line (allow some of the baking paper to hand over the edges, this will help later when you are removing the cake from the tin) a loaf pan - mine is 31 x 7.5 x 8cm so it’s quite long and thin, you can use a loaf tin that is shorter and wider just keep in mind that the middle of the cake might take longer to cook than the timings mentioned in this recipe. 

Grind the pistachios down (using a food processor is best for this) until you have an almond meal like texture. Measure out 1.5 cups of the pistachios and reserve any left overs to use when decorating the cake later. Add the pistachio meal, flour and almond meal to a bowl and whisk to combine and get rid of any lumps. 

Add the margarine and sugar to the bowl of a stand mixer, and cream using the paddle attachment until it is light and fluffy. Add the eggs separately, mixing in between each addition. Then mix in the vanilla extract and the lemon zest. Add the flour mixture with the mixer on low speed, and mix until everything is just combined. 

Transfer the batter to the prepared tin and bake for about 45 minutes, or until a skewer inserted into the centre comes out clean. 

Allow the cake to cool in the tin for 10 minutes, then carefully remove on to a cooling rack. 

Once the cake has cooled, make the icing by whisking together the icing sugar and lemon juice. Add a little more lemon juice if the icing is too dry, more icing sugar if it is too runny. Spread the icing over the cake, allowing it to drip down the sides. Decorate with the remaining pistachio meal. 

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Reference: ‘Molly on the Range’ by Molly Yeh (Rodale, 2016), pp.220-221.

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

Pistachio Loaf Cake

In Cakes & Slices Tags Pistachio, Molly Yeh, Molly On The Range, Loaf Cake
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Challah Doughnuts with Blood Orange Glaze - made by Molly Yeh

Challah Doughnuts with Blood Orange Glaze - made by Molly Yeh

Local is Lovely Workshop, July 2016 - A Photo Recap

Kath September 1, 2016

I feel like I'm always saying this, but it's been a while since I posted anything here. If you follow me on Instagram you will have seen what I've been up to in the past month or so, including attending another wonderful weekend away at a Local is Lovely Workshop. 

I was lucky enough to attend the first ever Local is Lovely Workshop back in November 2014 (posts here and here), and always knew I wanted to go back. When I saw Sophie (Local is Lovely) and Luisa would be teaming up with Molly Yeh (My Name is Yeh), I knew this was a best opportunity to go back to Kimbri Farm. Meeting Molly, and all the other workshop participants was just super lovely. I never tire of meeting new like minded people and listening to how food and photography intertwines their lives. I also never tire of Sophie's amazing food, and the wonderful opportunity of being in the country and having an amazing setting to relax in and shoot great photos (almost no styling needed!). 

I have included a few of my favourite photos from the weekend, and yes, those blood orange challah doughnuts were as good as they looked (Molly has the recipe on her blog just FYI!)!

I would also like to recommend a really great podcast called My Open Kitchen, put together by Sophie Hansen and Skye Manson, which has just released it's first episode. During the first episode Molly is interviewed (which was recorded during the time she was here for the workshop), and its a really great interview. The whole podcast is great to listen to and I for one loved listening to it on the train home from work - a much more enjoyable ride than normal!

Apart from spending time at amazing workshops, I have been working and trying to enjoy baking in our new kitchen as much as possible. I have been in the kitchen so much that I have hardly been on the computer (to edit photos and write blog posts!), in a few weeks! I do have recipes in the works and things ready to post here, I just can't stand spending the whole weekend on the computer and not in the kitchen! Especially as I have four months of not cooking to make up for!

Anyway, I have some delicious things coming to the blog soon (or my version of ‘soon’, I should say), including a blood orange cake which I am quite excited about. I made it a couple of weeks ago and I’m pretty sure I ate most of it myself, which when you see the cake you will understand the seriousness of that statement! 

For now I’ll leave you with my photo recap of the wonderful weekend that was the Local is Lovely Workshop. Don’t forget to check out my Instagram and Instagram Story for what I’m up to in the kitchen in between blog posts!

Rhubarb & Olive Oil Cakes - Made by Molly Yeh

Rhubarb & Olive Oil Cakes - Made by Molly Yeh

Molly icing her cake with tahini buttercream

Molly icing her cake with tahini buttercream

Molly decorating her cake - complete with a marzipan kangaroo!

Molly decorating her cake - complete with a marzipan kangaroo!

The beginnings of challah doughnuts - making the dough

The beginnings of challah doughnuts - making the dough

Challah dough

Challah dough

Molly with her freshly fried doughnuts

Molly with her freshly fried doughnuts

Blood orange glaze

Blood orange glaze

Challah doughnuts with Blood Orange glaze

Challah doughnuts with Blood Orange glaze

Making sourdough

Making sourdough

Finished sourdough 

Finished sourdough 

Beautiful fresh produce from Epicurean Harvest

Beautiful fresh produce from Epicurean Harvest

Molly making Shakshuka

Molly making Shakshuka

Shakshuka with homemade sourdough

Shakshuka with homemade sourdough

In Events Tags Local is Lovely, Local is Lovely Workshop, Sophie Hansen, Molly Yeh, My Name is Yeh, Luisa Brimble, Kimbri, Blue Mountains NSW, Photography, Styling, Blood Orange, shakshuka, challah, doughnuts, Epicurean Harvest, sourdough
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