What makes you decide NOT to buy a book? - Page 6 - Book Recommendations - Eat Your Books

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What makes you decide NOT to buy a book?   Go to last post Go to last unread
#102 Posted : Wednesday, May 18, 2022 6:15:49 PM(UTC)

I strongly prefer books with weights, ideally grams, especially for baking, which is the majority of my books. Good photos are nice to have, and a good index. But it comes down to the recipes and stories. If I don’t like the writing, or there are a lot of recipes I wouldn’t make, I likely won’t buy it. In savory books, for example, a lot of wild meat recipes is a deal breaker often. The exception is international books because I might not make anything but I will learn a lot about the culture.

#88 Posted : Friday, May 20, 2022 12:26:11 AM(UTC)

lauren424;24877 wrote:
I really dislike cookbooks that don't have photos for each recipe. I like to see the presentation!


I dislike cookbooks that have photos of the author plastered throughout instead of the food.

#103 Posted : Friday, May 20, 2022 4:21:09 PM(UTC)

I agree about pictures of the cookbook writer when he or she is not demonstrating a technique.


But why is it so important to have a picture for every recipe, when the pictures are not of the finished product, but "generic" pictures from a photo archive like Shutterstock?

#105 Posted : Sunday, May 22, 2022 9:13:10 AM(UTC)

Recipes that use lots of pork, lots of fats and have lots of calories.

#106 Posted : Sunday, May 29, 2022 9:39:41 AM(UTC)

If when browsing a cookbook I see recipes that tell me to microwave an ingredient, that's the end of it. I know most people in the United States have a microwave, but I haven't had one in 7 years (not by design at first, but certainly by choice since).

#107 Posted : Sunday, May 29, 2022 6:51:25 PM(UTC)

I don't mind if they give instructions for the microwave, or the slow cooker, or the Instant Pot, or the air fryer, or the food processor, just as long as they give instructions for conventional methods as well.

#108 Posted : Sunday, May 29, 2022 8:05:46 PM(UTC)

bittrette;26383 wrote:
I don't mind if they give instructions for the microwave, or the slow cooker, or the Instant Pot, or the air fryer, or the food processor, just as long as they give instructions for conventional methods as well.


Totally agree-- we just do everything on the stove or in the oven.  A heavy Dutch oven does a great job, and the food doesn't all taste the same like it did back when we had a slow cooker.  


I've seen people object to instructions that assume one has a stand mixer-- I don't mind those, because I've always found our hand mixer works fine for that stuff.  We have a stand mixer, but I usually just pull out the handheld beaters-- my husband is the stand mixer guy. 

#109 Posted : Monday, May 30, 2022 4:14:15 PM(UTC)

I am sadly at a state where a lack of bookshelf space prevents purchasing any books. 


I avoid cookbooks that are designed for other geographic locations.  I have a couple and have learned that it's hard to source ingredients and determine substitutes even in ethnically diverse Toronto.


As for photos, I like either photos for every recipe or no photos at all.  The ones with 20 pages of photos in an 800 page cookbook - it just seems like a waste that probably costs me extra.


I wouldn't veto for this but recipes that measure butter in sticks annoy me.  Or cans of tomatoes.  I can deal with imperial, metric and weight measurements.  If anyone here becomes a cookbook writer or editor, please stick to real measurement systems.

#110 Posted : Tuesday, May 31, 2022 9:55:17 PM(UTC)

What even is a ‘conventional method’ today? We have more kitchen tool options than ever before, but at the same time, many folks are downsizing and decluttering. Do you melt chocolate in the microwave, or a double boiler (who under 50 even owns one?) or in a bowl over a pan of boiling water (the poor version of a double boiler or bain marie)? Do you purée a soup or sauce with a stick blender or a regular blender or food processor (either can be messy and potentially dangerous with a hot soup or sauce) or do you press it through successively finer sieves? Do you grind something in a coffee grinder or in your food processor or blender or mortar and pestle? I understand the frustration, but what’s a cookbook author to do? And how much should a cookbook author explain how to do something as opposed to just telling you what to do? I don’t know what the answer is, but I think that reading a cookbook you have to be prepared to have the author tell you how to do something you already know how to do, and to be left scratching your head and doing an internet search.


It does feel like there is room in the market for a pure technique and ingredient tome; a place where you can look up ALL the ways to melt chocolate or purée a sauce or what potatoes you can use to replace Yukon Golds. The Food Lab and The Professional Chef both fill this niche to a degree, but both suffer from inadequate indexes in that regard. As an example, The Professional Chef explains how to cut a mango, but you won’t find it in the index, it’s buried inside the section on fruit salads, so good luck finding it when you need it, even when you do remember which book it was in.

#111 Posted : Wednesday, June 1, 2022 9:37:57 AM(UTC)

We try to help members find technique instructions with our "How to..." filter (located under Recipe Types / Misc in the filters). This is that filter applied to Online Recipes. And apply the Video Recipes filter to get a visual instruction.


The "How to..." tag was added after we had indexed a lot of recipes so if you ever see a recipe in your index that should have the tag applied, just let us know.


Here are instructions on how to cut a mango from Simply Recipes.

#112 Posted : Thursday, June 2, 2022 7:59:11 AM(UTC)

I didn't realize this till after the fact but I think of it now when I'm looking to buy another cookbook...the size of the font. I have a couple books in which not only is the font size teeny tiny but grey in colour...not even black. I'm near sighted and don't need reading glasses. I bought magnifying reading glasses just so I could cook from these books. These books are very pretty to look at but so frustrating when I'm squinting to see is that a 1/2 or a 1/4 teaspoon measure. Now I'm looking for one of those full page sized magnifying sheets that "old people" used to have stuck in the phone book lol.

#113 Posted : Thursday, June 2, 2022 12:28:13 PM(UTC)

Realised yesterday that along with things I've already mentioned in this thread I'd like to add books that only give amounts in cups etc. 


Was thumbing through "The Cook You Want To Be" by Andy Baraghani and just thought.... nope and put it back.

#114 Posted : Thursday, June 2, 2022 5:02:34 PM(UTC)

Conventional methods:


Stovetop, and "low-technology" metal pots and pans. (A double boiler can be bought cheaply and is not bulky.)


Conventional oven: the kind of oven that is typically part of a stove, or works by dry heat like the kind of oven that is part of a gas or electric stove, and accommodates full-size metal and glass cooking vessels like a large roasting pan. Not a microwave or convection oven.


No bulky electric appliances, not even a full-size food processor. Possible exception: a stand mixer, if a hand mixer will also do the job.


The kind that a home cook might use who grew up in the 70's or before. Or who lives in a studio apartment with a kitchenette and one or two small closets.