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Read Harder 2023: Task #11: Read a Cookbook Cover to Cover

Today’s Read Harder task is “Read a cookbook cover to cover.” Which works out great for me, because I only read cookbooks cover to cover. I know they’re designed for dipping in and out of to find recipes that look appealing, and of course when I’m looking for a specific recipe in a cookbook I’ve already read, I go straight to the page I need. But the first time I pick up a new-to-me cookbook, it’s introduction to index, all the way. I like to see the story the writer is telling, the way they move through different meals of the day or different categories of ingredients. (I also used to try to read Choose Your Own Adventure books cover to cover as a kid, and I never put albums on shuffle. I like things orderly!)

I’ve chosen ten recent and new cookbooks that look like they have interesting stories to tell, as well as fun new dishes and techniques to add to my repertoire.

Smitten Kitchen Keepers by Deb Perelman

Smitten Kitchen: Keepers by Deb Perelman

I’ve been reading the Smitten Kitchen blog since blogs were, you know, a thing, so the parasocial attachment is real. She’s still the first place I go when I don’t know what to cook, so I’m excited to add a whole new batch of recipes to that well — especially that pound cake she keeps talking about.

Koshersoul cover

Koshersoul: The Faith and Food Journey of an African American Jew by Michael W. Twitty

I’ve only heard good things about this book, which explores Black and Jewish cuisine and the intersection between them — but also how food and culture shape each other, and the inventive cooking that arises out of migration and diaspora.

The Woks of Life cover

The Woks of Life: Recipes to Know and Love from a Chinese American Family: A Cookbook by Bill, Judy, Sarah, and Kaitlin Leung

Another blog book! This one is by the Leung family, who are behind the popular blog of the same title. Chinese food is a go-to comfort food for me, so anything that can help me get more of it in my life is a plus.

Rise & Run cover

Rise and Run: Recipes, Rituals and Runs to Fuel Your Day: A Cookbook by Shalane Flanagan and Elyse Kopecky

NYC marathon champion Shalane Flanagan and nutrition coach Elise Kopecky’s previous book, Run Fast. Cook Fast. Eat Slow. is one of my favorite cookbooks to reference, so I need to add their latest collaboration to my collection. As a runner, I love their emphasis on flavor and enjoyment instead of counting calories or excising “bad” foods.

On the Curry Trail cover

On the Curry Trail: Chasing the Flavor That Seduced the World by Raghavan Iyer

I know just enough about curry to know that it’s an extremely broad term that my occasional forays into cooking butter chicken have barely scraped the surface of. This cookbook about “the diaspora of curry” — from Asia, Africa, Australia, Europe, and the Americas — sounds enlightening and fascinating.

Africana cover

Africana: More than 100 Recipes and Flavors Inspired by a Rich Continent by Lerato Umah-Shaylor

Speaking of cuisines I know very little about, African cuisine is too often overlooked and ignored in the Western world. Africana has over 100 recipes from all over the African continent, which obviously encompasses a massive range of cultures and flavors, and I’m excited to try as many of them as possible.

The Core of an Onion cover

The Core of an Onion: Peerling the Rarest Common Food — Featuring More Than 100 Recipies by Mark Kurlansky

Okay, this isn’t exactly a cookbook, but it does include 25 recipes, and also I loved Kurlansky’s The Big Oyster, on the history of the oyster industry in New York City, and more importantly, I absolutely love onions. Bring on the alliums!

First Generation cover

First Generation: Recipes from My Taiwanese-American Home by Frankie Gaw

This is another cookbook I keep hearing good things about and another cookbook that arose out of a popular blog — Little Fat Boy — but the main reason I bumped it up on my TBR is because it has the most beautiful dumplings on the cover, and I could eat dumplings every day of my life and never get sick of them.

Cooking at Home cover

Cooking at Home: Or, How I Learned to Stop Worrying About Recipes (And Love My Microwave): A Cookbook by David Chang and Priya Krishna

Okay, this one is cheating a little bit, because I already own it, but I’m including it because it’s designed to be read straight through. What’s included in this book are less recipes and more techniques for how to make lots of basic staples that you can portion out, freeze, reheat, and repurpose to get a wide array of meals on the table quickly. Also, the back and forth notes between Chang and Krishna are charming.

I'll Bring the Cake cover

I’ll Bring The Cake: Recipes for Every Season and Every Occasion by Mandy Merriman

And of course, we have to end with dessert! In the battle between cake and pie, I am always and forever Team Cake. This book gives you a little bit of a shortcut by starting with box mixes, which, let’s face it, are sometimes the tastiest option. And it’s publishing just in time for my birthday! You know, just in case anyone feels like throwing me a party.

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…Okay, I don’t know about you, but I’m starving now. I’m gonna go cook something.

Click here for the full Read Harder 2023 task list, and for previous recommendations, click here.

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Read Harder

Read Harder Task #22: Read a History About a Period You Know Little About

Hello, friends!

Today’s Read Harder task is “Read a History About a Period You Know Little About.” This assignment, which seemed straightforward to me when I took it, got more complicated when I sat down to come up with a list of qualifying books. After all, what about books that cover a period I know a fair amount about, but from a perspective I’m unfamiliar with? Or books that address a specific topic that I know very little about over a long period of history – or conversely, microhistories addressing a very narrow subject that I am again woefully unfamiliar with, but taking place during a period I thought I knew well?

In the end, I came up with a list of books whose summaries made me go “Huh. I didn’t know that!” And even though the “forgotten” parts of history are often obscured because they reflect very, very badly on the dominant (white, ablebodied) culture, meaning that most of these are likely to be hard reads, the fact that I struggled to cut this list down rather than build it up is indicative of one of my favorite aspects of history: there’s always more to learn.

Make sure to get your own Read Harder Book Journal from Book Riot to track your reading for the year!

Black and British

Black and British: A Forgotten History by David Olusoga

As a white American, I know at least the mainstream African American history that’s taught in schools, though the older I get, the more I realize how little I actually know. How much less, then, do I know about the history of Black people in England? This history dates back to Roman Britain, situating Black Britons as part of the history and culture of the nation rather than rare exceptions.

The Other Slavery: The Uncovered Story of Indian Enslavement in America by Andrés Reséndez

This book makes the case that Indian slavery – technically illegal but openly practiced for centuries – was one of the major causes of Native American genocide and one with which we still have not reckoned. Again, I know mainstream (white) American history pretty well. I don’t know about this.

Empress Dowager Cixi

Empress Dowager Cixi: The Concubine Who Launched Modern China by Jung Chang

That subtitle! How could I not want to read it? I know very little about Chinese history in general, so there are centuries to dive into here, but Empress Dowager Cixi lived from 1835-1908 (and ruled China from 1861 on), so that’s the period we’re looking at for this one.

The Unfit Heiress: The Tragic Life and Scandalous Sterilization of Ann Cooper Hewitt by Audrey Clare Farley

The case this book revolves around – the sterilization of a “promiscuous” socialite by her mother in order to control millions of dollars of her inheritance – took place in 1934, and I’ll admit I’m a 1930s history buff – but I know far less about disability history and reproductive rights than I’d like to, and stories like Britney Spears’s only serve to illuminate how sadly relevant this sort of thing still remains.

Churchill's Secret War

Churchill’s Secret War: The British Empire and the Ravaging of India During World War II by Madhusree Mukerjee

You can’t mention that you like history without having a million World War II books chucked your way – but India is almost never mentioned. This book examines the period between 1940 and 1944 and the devastation Churchill’s decisions wreaked on the subcontinent.

The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America by Richard Rothstein

I love urban history, especially that of my native New York, but books on the topic tend to focus on the 19th century and earlier, and rarely address disturbing aspects like the way American governments at every level codified segregation in our cities throughout most of the 20th century.

The Warmth of Other Suns

The Warmth of Other Suns: The Epic Story of America’s Great Migration by Isabel Wilkerson

This history of the migration of almost six million Black southerners to other parts of the country over the years 1915-1970 has been on my TBR for ages, and having now read Isabel Wilkerson’s Caste has just moved it higher up on the list.

Secondhand Time: The Last of the Soviets by Svetlana Alexievich

The thing about historical events that happen when you’re a child is: you’re too little to understand them, but they’re too recent for you to learn about them in school. So it was for me with the end of the Soviet Union when I was seven. All I’ve ever gotten is a vague sense that America and capitalism are just so gosh-darn superior; I have a feeling it’s a little bit more nuanced than that.

And that’s my list of possible reads! Yours will look different, obviously, given the personal nature of this task, but here’s hoping we all learn something new from it.

Don’t forget you can get three free audiobooks at Audiobooks.com with a free trial!

Happy reading!

Jessica

Click here for the full Read Harder 2022 task list, and for previous recommendations, click here.