As I mentioned in previous posts, I
have a few kids who eat exclusively – or mostly – vegan, and I’ve tried to go a little bit vegan myself. Being a cookbook
collector, I’d like to get a couple that will help me make vegan dishes. So I went to my advisory board (my daughter,
daughter-in-law and Facebook friends) asking for their five "desert-island" cookbooks. I hope to find at least a couple of them at this
weekend’s library book sale.
I already have two vegan/vegetarian cookbooks: “Happy Herbivore Abroad” by Lindsay S. Nixon, a gift from my daughter, published in 2012; and “Ten Talents,” a classic published in 1968 by a Seventh-day Adventist couple, Fred
and Rosalie Hurd.
My informal poll found that most people had favorite authors/series, not just cookbooks. Here are the top-five recommendation of my
expert panel:
- Lindsay S. Nixon's Happy Herbivore series. Highly recommended by my daughter and daughter-in-law. "The recipes are not complicated at all; they're easy, healthy, and cheap."
- "Veganomicon" or other books by Isa Chandra Moskowitz. This was my daughter-in-law's first vegan cookbook, and she still calls it her vegan bible. Other recommendations in the series are "Isa Does It" (good, basic, "how-to" vegan); and "Appetite for Reduction" (concentrates on healthier dishes).
- "Betty Goes Vegan" by Dan and Annie Shannon. Like my mother and grandmother before me, I raised my kids on the Better Crocker Cookbooks, so my daughter has found some comfort foods in this one. "It's a great transition book for new veggies," she said. The author, Annie, started a blog and worked her way through the Betty Crocker Cookbook, veganizing the recipes as she went along. My daughter's two critiques are that it uses a lot of oil and synthetic meat.
- Moosewood series Recipes from the 40-year-old restaurant in Ithaca, New York, like the Seventh-day Adventists early pioneers of American vegetarian cooking, and especially beloved by early adapters. Among the most highly recommended are: "Enchanted Broccoli Forest," "The Daily Special," and "Moosewood Restaurant Favorites."
- "How to Cook Everything Vegetarian" by Mark Bittman. According to my colleague Ryan, "has tons of good recipes and does a really good job of giving you pieces of the meal to combine with other (dishes)."
- "The China Study Cookbook" by LeAnne Campbell
- "Eat to Live" by Dr. Joel Fuhrman
- "Vegetarian Cookbook for Everyone" by Deborah Madison
- "The Vegan Cheat Sheet" by Amy Cramer and Lisa McComsey
I'll be expanding my collection, and sharing with you all as I go along.
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