Thursday, June 30, 2005

Participatory Book Blogging

Rae over at Bunnyfoot writes a rather insouciant blog I've been enjoying a lot lately, and she invited me to participate in another (aarrgh! dreaded word coming up) meme. Here goes.

total number of cookbooks i've owned: This is embarrassing. I have two bookcases' worth of cookbooks. (But I can explain! My mom recently gave me scads of her old books, and for a couple of years I was a food editor for a newspaper so I got zillions of freebies, many of which I sold to Green Apple Books in SF -- and Rae, I wonder if you bought any of them.)

last cookbook i bought: I bought these two on the same day just weeks before we moved, so they're still in a box in the garage but I can't wait to get my hands on them.
"Wild Fermentation: The Flavor, Nutrition, and Craft of Live-Culture Foods" by Sandor Ellix Katz, Sally Fallon
"The Whole Beast: Nose to Tail Eating" by Fergus Henderson

five cookbooks that mean a lot to me:


which five people would you most like to see fill this out in their blog?
Well, I'd like to ask M.F.K. Fisher, Richard Olney, Waverly Root, Elizabeth David and Mrs. Beeton, but they're all dead...

2 comments:

rae said...

oh, the fermentation book sounds so interesting! i've been doing some pickling with nuka (rice bran - a dying art in japanese homes) recently and had some rather disasterous(let's just say i had to call the plumbers, both liquid and non-liquid) attempts at growing my own sourdough culture from scratch. also had some limited sucess with rejuvelac. i hope you post some results and recipes once you get into those packing boxes. fermentation is very interesting to me...

cookiecrumb said...

ha ha, rejuvelac. The mysteries of rejuvelac are what's been keeping me from trying Roxanne Klein's "Raw" recipes...
Yes, the fermentation book is awesome. Go read about it on Amazon. Meanwhile, I'll go out and root around in the garage... It's a good read as well as a resource. I think you'd like it enough to -- gasp -- buy a copy!