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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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A Year of Everyday Bakes

A Year of Everyday Bakes - An Instagram Series

Kath January 3, 2023

A Year of Easy Tasty Bakes to Fill Your Days with Joy and Comfort

In late 2020 I released my first self published book ‘Everyday Bakes’ (now only available as an ebook). It was filled with recipes that fit the following criteria - that when I felt like something nice to eat (i.e. a slice of cake or a biscuit), that I could make something relatively easily and without too much time. That the recipes could be accessible to almost everyone, and that the act of baking didn’t have to be overly complex or intimidating. Baking could be something that is incorporated into everyday life, so that small pockets of joy and comfort could be found whenever they might be needed.

More than two years from the release of ‘Everyday Bakes’ I am still finding that my way of baking is the same. I am looking for bakes that are relatively easy, and that don’t take up too much time or energy, but also also worth it in terms for flavour. 

Everyday Bakes Cookbook

I love a complicated more time consuming bake too, but in reality I don’t often have the time or energy levels to make something like that. I also don’t have enough people to feed to make big layer cakes and grand desserts to justify making them very often. I also understand that bigger more complicated bakes can be quite intimidating and may put of those less confident in their baking skills from attempting baking altogether. 

Recipes like those I shared in my book, can not only fit into your everyday life, but can act as a no pressure way of improving your baking skills and gaining more confidence in your abilities. Starting with more simple recipes will help you learn the foundations of baking, but will also show how accessible it can be to incorporate baking into your everyday life and how relaxing and enjoyable it can be to eat that really tasty slice of cake or biscuit after only a small amount of time in the kitchen - and that you made it yourself!

Everyday Bakes

There are many reasons why baking more simply can be a good way to go. For me it’s a way of keeping something that I really like doing as part of my life at all times, even when I am unwell. Living with chronic illness is utterly debilitating at times and in those moments of extreme pain and when I am unable to do anything, I often get most upset or disappointed that I feel unable to bake anything. If I don’t bake I get restless and agitated, it’s something I need to do. And sometimes when you’re sick, doing something that is just for you, just something you want to do because you want to do it becomes really important. 

Often living with chronic illness means prioritising the things in life that have to be done - like trying to ensure I am well enough to work each week or attend an appointment. Often things I want to be doing have to get pushed to the side to ensure those other things happen. But there comes a point where the things I want to do have to fit into my life too. With baking, I maintain this by focusing on less involved recipes that are worth the time and effort to make because they taste great and will act as a nice and comforting moment on the days where literally nothing else but sitting still is able to happen. 

This is still a work in progress for me, I still overdo it in the kitchen sometimes (I have a habit of making more than one recipe per kitchen session, so even if the recipes are quick and simple I’ve times it by three and exhausted myself anyway!), but it’s important to me to be able to bake and to be able to eat something nice. Sometimes a nice biscuit and one of my favourite teas is the only positive thing in a day filled with pain, medication side effects and the profound disappointment that plans have again been thwarted by my chronic illness.

For others, finding the time, energy or motivation to bake may be similar to mine, come from other things or lack of time due to raising children, demanding jobs, lots of time commuting to said jobs, lack of baking confidence as I mentioned before, or not feeling like baking is accessible to you for whatever reason resonates with your life and circumstance the most. I’m not here to say that if I can do it anyone can, but rather if you like the idea of incorporating baking into your life more, I’d love to show you how. 

Bundt Cake with Pink Icing

So with all that in mind, as part of this series I will aim to share a recipe a week on Instagram throughout 2023 that fits the everyday baking bill, in the hope that it provides accessible inspiration for you to spend a small amount of calm time in the kitchen and enjoy the small moments of joy and comfort that homemade treats can bring. By the end of the 2023 I hope you will have found a few recipes you can turn to over and over again when you just feel like something nice to eat and only have a small amount of time (or energy) to make it happen.

I will still share recipes that are more complicated and time consuming, and of course share when I’ve created fun recipes for clients too. But when it comes to my baking just for me, simple and everyday bakes are where its at, and I hope you enjoy this year of everyday baking with me.

Find me on Instagram @kulinaryadventuresofkath

Shortbread
In From The Mailing List Tags Everyday Bakes, Everyday Bakes Year, Instagram
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cupcake with red wrapper vanilla icing and festive topper

Spiced Christmas Cupcakes with Very Vanilla Buttercream

Kath December 15, 2022

Since I already have quite a few festive recipes on my blog, I decided this year something simple was in order. 

Basic cupcakes like these are great to make when you don’t have time for more complex baking, and they would be a good thing to make with kids as well since the cook time is short (and the decoration options are endless!).

These cupcakes are spiced with the Gewürzhaus Christmas Cake and Pudding Spice which I was gifted in November when I went to visit the new Gewürzhaus store in Sydney’s QVB. It elevates these cupcakes from basic to festive, and provides all the Christmas-y flavour you could need (with very little effort). Other festive spice mixes can be used - a gingerbread style spice mix would also work really well, or a combination of spices such as cinnamon, mixed spice and nutmeg.

The vanilla buttercream is a favourite of mine and has a great vanilla flavour thanks to both vanilla extract and paste. The recipe makes a generous amount so you will have a decent amount of icing on each cupcake, ready to decorate whichever way you please.

Gewurzhaus Christmas cake and pudding spice with cupcake
Spiced Christmas Cupcakes with festive toppers

Spiced Christmas Cupcakes with Very Vanilla Buttercream

Ingredients: 

125g unsalted butter, at room temp

95g caster sugar 

70g vanilla bean sugar

1 tsp vanilla extract

2 eggs 

250g self raising flour

3 tsp Gewürzhaus Christmas Cake and Pudding Spice*

105ml buttermilk

Ingredients for Vanilla Buttercream: 

200g unsalted butter, at room temp 

1 tsp vanilla extract

1 tsp vanilla bean paste

240g icing sugar, sifted

festive sprinkles, to decorate (optional)

festive cupcake toppers, to decorate (optional)

Method: 

Pre-heat oven to 160 degrees Celsius, and line a 12 hole cupcake tray with cupcake cases. 

In the bowl of an electric mixer, beat the butter, sugars and vanilla until light and fluffy.

Beat in the eggs one at a time and mix well. 

Then add half the flour and mix on low speed until combined. Add the milk and mix on low speed until combined. Then add the remaining flour and Christmas Cake and Pudding Spice and gently mix until everything is combined and there are no lumps.

Spoon the mixture evenly amongst the cupcake cases, filling so the cases are about 3/4 full.

Bake for 20 minutes, or until a skewer comes out clean and the cakes spring back to the touch. Remove the cupcakes from the tray and allow to cool on a wire rack.

To make the icing, beat the butter and vanillas in a stand mixer with the paddle attachment for at least 1 minute, or until the butter is light and fluffy. Add the icing sugar and beat for a further minute or two, or until the icing sugar is well combined and the icing is light and fluffy. 

Spread or pipe icing onto the top of each cupcake, and decorate as desired.

Makes 12 cupcakes, will keep for a few days in an airtight container.

*This spice mix is a mixture of cassia, coriander, ginger, clove, nutmeg, so a similar mix of spices could be used in its place. 

Gewürzhaus Christmas Cake and Pudding Spice was gifted by Gewürzhaus.

Spiced Christmas Cupcakes with cup of tea
spiced Christmas cupcakes cut open with cup of tea
In Cakes & Slices, Holidays Tags Cupcakes, Christmas, Gewurzhaus, Christmas Cake and Pudding Spice, cake, Holiday Baking
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Christmas Gift Guide for Foodies 2022

Christmas Gift Guide (for Foodies) 2022

Kath November 28, 2022

Whether you are looking for presents for others, or are just looking for something a bit different for yourself, I hope you find some gift giving ideas below.

These picks are mostly aimed at the food lovers in your life, however I have also added a gift idea that does some good (outside of bringing your recipient joy), that will help others in need. I know this time of year can feel like its all about spending and buying things, but really it can also be about helping others and giving thoughtful gifts to those you love.

  1. I have bought a few of these tea towels by artist Whitney Spicer and Bespoke Letterpress, I think they would be a lovely gift for any foodie. They are available from both Bespoke Letterpress and Whitney Spicer.

  2. I also have my eye on many a thing in Marley and Lockyer’s online store which is filled with beautiful handmade ceramics. They would be a great gift for anyone who loves handmade things and kitchen pieces in particular.

  3. In terms of cookbooks I recently bought a copy of Knead Peace and I think it would make a great gift. A portion of the price of the book goes to help a charity assisting people in Ukraine, and the based on the contributors to the book, I think the recipes will be good! 

    For those who like Christmas baking specifically Advent by Anja Dunk is an excellent choice. I have also heard great things about First, Cream the Butter and Sugar by Emilia Jackson when it comes to cookbooks about baking specifically, so that could be a good one for the bakers in your life.

    I have Salamati by Hamed Allahyari and Dani Valent on my wish list, and I think Mabu Mabu by Nornie Bero would make a great gift and should have a place in every Australian kitchen.

  4. For other gifts, I thought buying a gift subscription to a Substack newsletter or Patreon would be a great idea (maybe the new magazine subscription of our increasingly online world?). In terms of food related subscriptions, I really enjoy the paid Substack newsletters from Something to Eat and Something to Read, The Jewish Table and Emiko Davies’ Newsletter. 

  5. For edible gifts nothing can go past a jar of delicious savoury spread Tumami by Alice or any brand of crema di pistacchio for a really indulgent treat. For the chocolate lover I would recommend the drinking chocolates from Grounded Pleasures - there’s no risk of them melting in transit and they can be enjoyed all year round! 

  6. Finally, for a gift with an impact I would recommend the empowering gifts from Australia for UNHCR. You can purchase gifts that give assistance to refugees around the world with things such as clean water, vaccinations, shelter, thermal blankets, school supplies and much more. There are a variety of options and price points and you can nominate a gift recipient to be notified of your gift to them via email or you can chose to print out a pdf card for them yourself.

Christmas gift guide for foodies
In From The Mailing List, Holidays Tags Christmas Gift Guide for Foodies, Christmas, Whitney Spicer, Bespoke Letterpress, Marley and Lockyer, Knead Peace, Advent by Anja Dunk, First Cream the Butter and Sugar, Salamati, Mabu Mabu, Tumami by Alice, Grounded Pleasures, Australia for UNHCR
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Vanilla Sprinkle Melting Moments

Kath November 3, 2022

I was inspired to make these simple vanilla sprinkle melting moments after eating some delicious biscuits made by The Flour Millers Wife. Em of The Flour Millers Wife is based in Manildra NSW and bakes delicious biscuits that are sold in a few stores across the Central West of NSW. 

I have been following Em on Instagram for a little while, and always thought the biscuits she makes look so good. I managed to find some when I was in Orange recently and they tasted as good as they looked! 

I especially enjoyed Em’s Sprinkle Yo-Yos, which are what gave me the inspiration to make these melting moments. I’m not sure exactly what the difference between melting moments and yo-yos are, or even if there is much of a difference. But since I have adapted my original melting moment recipe to make these, I haven’t altered the name. 

Biscuits by The Flour Millers Wife

Biscuits by The Flour Millers Wife I bought in Orange - Two packets of honey jumbles, white chocolate and cranberry biscuits and the Sprinkle Yo-Yo Biscuits.

My version are very different from Em’s which are much smaller and have a softer crumblier style biscuit, but I think that’s the joy of finding inspiration in what other people bake. It’s not about replicating it exactly, but using it as inspiration to create a new recipe. 

And this way I can enjoy my own melting moments, and still look forward to having some of The Flour Miller’s Wife’s creation next time I am in the Central West! Thank you for the inspiration Em! And keep any eye out for her biscuits if you are around Orange, Molong or Carcoar - and in the mean time, have a go at the recipe below!

Vanilla Sprinkle Melting Moments

Ingredients:                                       

300g unsalted butter, softened

1 tsp vanilla bean paste

1 tsp vanilla extract

100g icing sugar/mixture

420g plain flour

50g custard powder

Ingredients for the filling:

80g unsalted butter, softened

200g icing sugar/mixture

1 tsp vanilla bean paste

Sprinkles/100s and 1000s, to decorate

Method: 

Preheat oven to 145 degrees Celsius, and line three large baking trays with baking paper. 

In the bowl of a stand mixer using the paddle attachment, beat the butter, sugar and vanillas until creamy.

Add the flour and custard powder to the creamed butter, and mix on the lowest speed until a dough forms. 

Roll teaspoonfuls of the dough into balls and place on the prepared trays (you should end up with 40-44 individual dough balls/biscuits) leaving a little space in between each (they won’t spread much when baking). Then lightly press down each ball with the back of a fork so they flatten out a little. Dip your fork in flour if it is sticking to the dough.

Bake for 25 minutes. They will be cooked when the undersides of the biscuits are lightly golden. To ensure a even bake, rotate the baking trays in the oven around half way through. 

Allow to cool on their trays.

Once the biscuits have cooled make the filling by beating all the ingredients except the sprinkles in the bowl of a stand mixer using the paddle attachment or by using a hand held mixer. Mix until light and fluffy and everything is well combined. 

Pair up the cooked biscuits, and turn one from each pair over so the underside is facing up. Spread or pipe the filling on to the underside of one biscuit in each biscuit pair, then gently sandwich the paired biscuits together. 

Pour some sprinkles into a bowl and dip the edges of each sandwiched biscuit into it, pushing the sprinkles into the sides of the filling.

Leave the biscuits for half an hour or so for the filling to firm up a bit (you can do this in the fridge in warmer weather). Biscuits will store well in an airtight container for a few days. 

Makes 40-44 individual biscuits and 20-22 sandwiched biscuits. 

In Biscuits/Cookies Tags Melting Moments, Vanilla, Sprinkles, The Flour Millers Wife, Biscuits/Cookies
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Food Photography Prop Collection and Tips

A Collection of Plates and Cups aka Photography Props

Kath October 11, 2022

As you can see in the images above and below, my photography props have formed a serious collection. 

Some things came from my Grandma’s kitchen, and others I have accumulated over the years both second hand and new.

I have been lucky to find many very creative makers whilst searching for props, and I thought I’d share a few here. 

Whether you are into food photography or not, most of these suggestions are just lovely things to have or use in your home, or give as a really thoughtful gift.

  1. Easy portable backgrounds from Capture by Lucy - This is the only photography specific suggestion! These photography backgrounds from the UK are the best I’ve used, and the last really well (I’m still using the first two I bought in 2017!). They are a great investment if you want a variety of backgrounds to use in your photography.

  2. LouiseM Studio - I came across Louise’s work as she is the ceramicist who makes the butter keepers for Pepe Saya. Louise makes many lovely things, and I particularly like her use of colour. I recently bought a few plates from her - dinner plates that are actually the perfect size to serve a cake on - and I am getting a lot of use out if them.

  3. Daisie Mae - I have been following Meg on Instagram for a while, and recently she opened her online store selling her handmade cushions and lampshades and also some really fun cups and vases. I have two of the pastel cup and saucer sets, and I think they’d be lovely as a daily tea cup and not just a photography prop!

  4. Bridget Bodenham - Bridget probably needs little introduction, she’s been making her ceramics for a while now and if you’ve ever been to a Finders Keepers Market you might have seen her wares there. I really like the individuality of Bridget’s work, but also how every piece is also very functional if you were going to use it day to day.

  5. Bec Fing Designs - I’ve mentioned Bec before I think, but I will again as I really like her bright colourful designs. Bec produces table linen and tea towels from her own hand painted designs, and the tea towels in particular I have found useful for a pop of colourful fabric in my photos.

In From The Mailing List, Food Photography Tips Tags Food Photography, Food Photography Tips, Photography, Props, Styling, Food Styling, Capture by Lucy, LouiseM Studio, Daisie Mae, Bridget Bodenham, Bec Fing Designs
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