More Home Cooking: A Writer Returns to the Kitchen by Laurie Colwin

    • Categories: Side dish
    • Ingredients: Brussels sprouts; ground cayenne pepper; Angostura bitters; Worcestershire sauce; balsamic vinegar; arugula; walnuts
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Notes about this book

  • nomadchowwoman on January 08, 2010

    Love this book, love Colwin's writing, love some of these recipes very much.

Notes about Recipes in this book

  • Inez Fontenez's succotash

    • jenmacgregor18 on April 21, 2015

      The sofrito really made the dish. This is going in my regular rotation. I used some sofrito I had made in a big batch & frozen in 1/2 cup portions. Since we don't really care for okra, I left that out & added some Anaheim and red & green bell peppers. And I added a little butter at the end to the reduced liquid.

  • Damp gingerbread

    • ellabee on December 23, 2016

      See Food52 post with recipes and ratings for several LC gingerbreads; this one is the winner. https://food52.com/blog/15108-the-definitive-ranking-of-laurie-colwin-s-gingerbreads

    • jenmacgregor18 on December 16, 2019

      Quick & easy. One bowl, mix it with a spoon. This is a lighter gingerbread due to the cane syrup & no molasses. Lovely texture and aroma. Very good gingerbread.

  • Classic shortbread

    • chriscooks on December 23, 2018

      Recipe says bake at 375F for 20 min. Should be 325 for 30 min, which I found in an English cookbook. 375 results in dark edges and undercooked middle.

  • Nantucket cranberry pie

    • LauraG on December 08, 2012

      This is an extremely easy, quick "pie". Chopped cranberries and nuts go in the bottom of the pan, topped with a cookie-dough-like mixture which spreads out in the oven and becomes a crust. It's become part of our Thanksgiving and That Other Holiday celebrations. Very sweet, especially popular with kids (and me).

  • Plum jam

    • Shelmar on September 06, 2019

      Yummy, though John overcooked to make it spread like fruit leather. Make them feel like a worm. A delightful read too.

  • Karen Edwards's version of buttermilk cocoa cake

    • aeader on May 09, 2015

      I was looking for a chocolate cake that used cocoa since I didn't have any chocolate on hand and this fit the bill. It was very quick to make and tasted even better on the second day. The buttermilk keeps it moist without a lot of fat. I baked it in a silicone tube pan and it took a little less than the recommended baking time.

  • Rosemary walnuts

    • Bloominanglophile on November 16, 2025

      Made these to include in a homemade gift basket for a fund-raising auction. Laurie said this recipe is the one out of The Pink Adobe cookbook, but I haven't compared recipes to see if they are exactly the same. I used fresh rosemary instead of dried, and a bit less cayenne than called for. The walnuts were still a bit greasy after baking, so I might lightly take down the amount of butter next time. They were, however, very nice!

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  • ISBN 10 0063062801
  • ISBN 13 9780063062801
  • Published Oct 12 2021
  • Format eBook
  • Page Count 235
  • Language English
  • Countries United States
  • Publisher Harper Perennial

Publishers Text

The food writer’s award–winning second collection of Gourmet magazine columns, featuring recipes, advice & personal anecdotes from the kitchen and beyond.

Lucky readers in the 1970s and ’80s discovered Laurie Colwin’s urbane, witty fiction in The New Yorker, as well as her warm, engaging food writing in Gourmet magazine columns.

More Home Cooking, the second collection of these columns, is an expression of Colwin’s lifelong passion for cuisine and offers a delightful mix of recipes, advice, and personal anecdotes from the kitchen and beyond. She muses over the many charms and challenges of cooking at home in timeless essays including “Desserts That Quiver,” “Real Food for Tots,” and “Catering on One Dollar a Head.”

As informative as it is entertaining, and filled with Colwin’s trademark down-to-earth charm and wit, More Home Cooking is a rare treat for anyone who spends time in the kitchen and feels “like having a great conversation with someone that you love” (Samantha Bee).

Winner of a James Beard Hall of Fame Award

With a new foreword by Deb Perelman of Smitten Kitchen

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