4 New Culinary Titles that Expand What a Cookbook Can Do

Unlike novels or memoirs, cookbooks usually offer little literary mystery. When you pick one up, you know you're in for recipes and instructions, generally well worth it from a sage cook. But on occasion, a cookbook comes along that surprises. Within its pages are deep stories from in and out of the kitchen, history lessons that expand generations and cultures, and admissions of hope found in the symphony of chopping vegetables and peeling fruits. These are the cookbooks we devour at PrimaFoodie. Thankfully, this fall, there's a bounty of these gems just out or on the horizon. These are the new culinary titles that are exciting and inspiring us the most right now. 

My Healthy Dish

By My Nguyen

My Nguyen has millions of followers for a good reason: Her accessible, nourishing take on cooking is based on her honest journey of needing to better care of herself so she could take better care of her two toddlers. So, she chose to get rid of the calorie counting and lean into her intuition, and she takes us along on the journey in her new book My Healthy Dish. Nguyen shares her approachable, intuitive, playful take on home cooking, offering recipes for protein-packed breakfasts and snacks and easy weeknight meals, much of which are inspired by her Southeast Asian heritage. What we love most, though, is how she's helped her kids reach for the veggies. "Once picky eaters who longed for McDonald's, my girls now prefer my cooking to what we get at restaurants," writes Nguyen. "I'm making sure that they get plenty of time to play in the kitchen, too, starting them off on a path to lifelong good health a lot sooner than I did!”


The Bean Book 

By Steve Sando

We've been fans of Steve Sando and his heirloom bean company, Rancho Gordo, for a long time (did you catch his conversation with Nichole on the podcast?), so we jumped when we learned he was coming out with a cookbook. The Bean Book showcases what Sando knows best: growing, sourcing, and cooking with beans—but not just beans; the best heirloom beans. This book is fun, just like Sando. It offers over 100 recipes that incorporate beans in conventional and unexpected ways. (One of our favorites is the Clay-Baked Pacific Cod Gratin with Onions and White Beans.) The best part is that Sando offers a history lesson about each bean variety he cooks, making this book rich in ideas and lessons. 

What Goes with What

By Julia Turshen

We consistently turn to Julia Turshen for her kitchen wisdom by picking up one of her cookbooks (Small Victories is a PrimaFoodie favorite), reading her beloved cooking newsletter, or taking one of her online cooking classes. Her way of making cooking feel creative, adventurous, and empowering is unparalleled. And her dishes are always so satisfying. Her new book, just out this month, Turshen, focuses on the foundations of a meal, offering us readers with charts and recipes to help us build a dish while allowing room for personal iterations. She also weaves in personal essays, making this book both a literary gift and a culinary guide.

Food Is Love

By Palek Patel

Roasted Butternut Squash with Makani Sauce. Roasted Vindaloo Mushroom Wraps. Braised Vegetable Dal. These are just a few of the warming, nourishing dishes chef Palak Patel includes in her new book, Food Is Love. Seeing food as the ultimate act of love, Patel includes stories and recipes from her upbringing in West India and global travels that put love and care as the star ingredients. As she writes, she wants readers to view this book as an "opportunity to create memories with food and be more intentional, present, and open while cooking." She also includes deep dives into spices (a topic we love).