The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Finding cookbooks for everyone on your gift list

- By Wendell Brock For the AJC

Whether you’re shopping for cookbooks to give, or making a list of titles you’d like to receive, we’ve got you covered.

A few of the best

Bombay-born San Francisco Chronicle food columnist Nik Sharma is the food world’s poster boy du jour. “Season: Big Flavors, Beautiful Food” (Chronicle Books, $35) is one of the most celebrated cookbooks of the year, a Cinderella tale of a gay brown kid who came to America to study molecular genetics at the University of Cincinnati and found the kind of freedom he never could taste back home. I tested, and loved, his grandmothe­r’s sweet potato bebinca, and am drooling over his chile-sumac-pomegranat­e nuts, turkey leg roast with mixed citrus and juniper, and apple masala chai cake, all so right for the season. … With “The Noma Guide to Fermentati­on,” Rene Redzepi and David Zilber provide a deeply detailed look at the ferments used at Redzepi’s world-famous Copenhagen restaurant. We’re not talking cheese and beer, but kombuchas, misos, garums, vinegars and so on. This book is weird, wonderful, and can be unintentio­nally comical. It also features a collection of delicious-sounding kombucha recipes (lemon verbena, rose, apple, elderflowe­r, coffee, maple, mango). … Back down to earth, consider “Cook’s Illustrate­d Revolution­ary Recipes: Groundbrea­king Techniques. Compelling Voices. One-of-aKind Recipes.” (America’s Test Kitchen, $45). The compendium celebrates the Boston magazine’s 25 years of providing excellent, meticulous­ly tested, fool-proof recipes for home cooks.

Celebrity circuit

The first thing you see when you open Chrissy Teigen’s “Cravings: Hungry for More” (Clarkson Potter, $29.99) is a photo of the model and her baby in matching, skin-tight one-piece bathing suits cut from fabric printed with tropical foliage and avocados. Quite a look. But, can Mrs. John Legend cook? From the looks of her Thai mom’s crab fried rice to her banana bread, it sure seems so. … In the introducti­on to “Carla Hall’s Soul Food: Everyday and Celebratio­n” (Harper Wave, $29.99), the exuberant TV star says she found inspiratio­n for her olive oil deviled eggs, sweet potato pudding with clementine­s, and fried fish with spaghetti by trying to imagine what her ancestors would cook if they were alive today. Since slaves were banned from drinking red soda, her Juneteenth menus are a riot of strawberri­es, beets, peppers, red onions, watermelon and tomatoes. Rejoice. … Dorie Greenspan is a baking goddess, but with “Everyday Dorie: The Way I Cook” (A Rux Martin Book/Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, $35), she gives us pimento cheese, roast chicken, cabbage rolls and — she can’t help herself — dessert. Fine by me. Her triple-layer parsnip and cranberry cake with sugared cranberrie­s is Sugarplum Fairy material. … Ina Garten of “Barefoot Contessa” is back with “Cook Like a Pro: Recipes & Tips for Home Cooks” (Clarkson, $35), but that doesn’t mean her profession­alcaliber food is hard to fix. She just wants to make sure the warm lobster rolls, short rib hash and eggs, and rum raisin apple strudel with rum glaze exude polish and panache. … With “Ottolenghi Simple” (Ten Speed, $35), Israeli-born Yotam Ottolenghi gets back to basics in 10 ingredient­s or less. In his world, dinner might be caulifower, pomegranat­e and pistachio salad; pizza bianco with potato, anchovy and sage; or lamb meatloaf with tahini sauce and tomatoes.

Short, sweet, quirky

Anita Lo’s “A Modern Cookbook for a Party of One” (Knopf, $28.95) is a book after this forever-single guy’s heart. It gives me joy to think that, from a single chicken, I can make Lo’s smothered chicken leg and a biscuit, Thai white curry with chicken, and chicken tagine with couscous, and still have bird to spare. … Former Chez Panisse chef Cal Peternell’s “Almonds, Anchovies and Pancetta: A Vegetarian Cookbook, Kind of ” (William Morrow, $25.99) focuses on three ingredient­s, yet they impart so much flavor that they satisfy the soul. So, too, do Peternell’s recipe-headers-turned-essays, on topics ranging from his grandmothe­r’s loneliness (baked stuffed vegetables with almonds, currants, saffron and bread crumbs) to the time a friend made pork belly for his birthday (baconwrapp­ed potato gratin). … As it turns out, that friend was Tamar Adler, whose “Something Old, Something New: Classic Recipes Revisited” (Scribner, $27) makes a case that she’s among the most literary of our presentday food writers. At just over 250 pages, it’s a small, meandering book, but I have been nibbling at it for months now, savoring her elegant rumination­s on oysters, eggs, crepes, steak, and such oddities as Ladies’ Cabbage (“as dainty as a moose in pointe shoes”) and Four-Day Spinach.

Asian explorers

Filipino food has been hailed of late as the next big thing, yet that Pinoy wave has yet to reach Atlanta. While we wait, we can take heart in Nicole Ponseca and Miguel Trinidad’s “I Am a Filipino … And This Is How We Cook” (Artisan, $35). As the owner of New York’s Maharlika and Jeepney, Ponseca and her chef-partner, Trinidad, have traveled extensivel­y in the Philippine­s, and this beautifull­y photograph­ed book documents the recipes they adore, from earthy kare kare (oxtail stew) to ultra

vivid halo-halo (shavedice sundae). … The West’s Thai awakening continues with Austin Bush’s “The Food of Northern Thailand” (Clarkson, $40). A blogger and photograph­er who’s lived in Thailand for almost 20 years, Bush offers the “herbal, bitter, fragrant, and/or meaty flavors” of Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai and environs. It’s a dazzling head rush of a book. … It began with a bowl of soup that she read about in a Mandarin textbook. Eleven years later, Georgia Freedman and her husband chased her obsession back to Yunnan, moving from New York to the far southweste­rn Chinese province. “Cooking South of the Clouds” (Kyle Books, $34.99) explores a region that stretches from the frigid Himalayas to the balmy subtropics, encompassi­ng meat-filled and vegetable momos (steamed dumplings) from the north, dai pineapple rice from the south, stir-fried ham with green chiles from the east and chrysanthe­mum greens salad from the west.

And keep in mind

For vegans: Worthwhile reads includeTim­othy Pakron’s astonishin­gly beautiful “Mississipp­i Vegan” (Avery, $35); the 600-recipe reference book, “The Ultimate Vegan Cookbook” (Page Street, $30); Jen Hansard’s “Simple Green Meals” (Rodale, $24.99); and Robin Asbell’s “PlantBased Meats” (Countryman, $23.95).

For Instant Pot lovers: In “Instantly Southern” (Clarkson, $16.99), North Carolina author Sheri Castle shows us how to make chicken and fluffy dumplings; bourbon and cola beef short ribs; and Frito pie, among other regional faves. … Melissa Clark follows up her “Dinner in an Instant” (Clarkson, $22) with “Comforts in an Instant” (Clarkson, $22). Think: lemonvanil­la rice pudding with whipped cream; spicy curried lamb with yogurt; and classic matzo ball soup. … And, Audrey Jones’ “Lose Weight With Your Instant Pot” (William Morrow, $25.99) tells us how to lose weight on the likes of taco mac and cheese, chicken enchilada soup and dark chocolate fudge brownies.

For pie dreamers: I’m smitten with Cathy Barrow’s clever book of one-dish creations, “Pie Squared: Irresistib­ly Easy Sweet & Savory Slab Pies” (Grand Central Life & Style, $28); Brian Noyes’ “Red Truck Bakery Cookbook” (Potter, $25), with recipes from his Virginia pie-truck-turned-bakery empire; and Detroit pie savant Lisa Ludwinski’s “Sister Pie” (Lorena Jones Books/Ten Speed, $25).

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