Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Culinobibliomania


I have been doing precious little cooking, and therefore precious little blogging, in the last few weeks. (Stupid life, getting in the way again...) That hasn't stopped me from obsessing about cooking, and, if anything, it has caused an uptick in my barely-controllable cookbook buying habit. It's always an exercise of the will to stop myself from randomly acquiring cookbooks, particularly when there are so many used bookstores within easy walks of work and home, but when I don't actually have time to use them, I'm even more desperately tempted to pick up a new treasure. Whether it's to inspire myself to make an effort or just to use the vicarious thrill of reading about cooking as a substitute for actually doing it, I'm not entirely sure.

By way of illustration, these are the books I've acquired over the last two months. Three of them were holiday gifts, but there's really no excuse for the other five, not that it stops me from trying to rationalize the purchases anyway. The Batali book was because I have sadly few Italian cookbooks, and such a glaring lapse must be remedied. The two baking books are, of course, because my existing resources are really not good enough if I'm going to try to bake-and-blog every Sunday. I owe it to my many (by which I mean probably half a dozen on a good week) readers to provide variety, don't I? The sad part is that I'm pretty sure I haven't made a single recipe out of any of them yet, unless you count the hot chocolate recipe in the Steingarten book -- and I wouldn't, because I acquired the recipe way before I acquired the book.

I suppose, as addictions go, this one is pretty harmless (although His Lordship curses it soundly every time we move, and he has to risk a hernia with each overfilled box). Still, I ought to make more of an effort to use them, or at least to stop picking them up on auto-pilot and then letting them sit on the coffee table, mocking me with my own imprudent impulsiveness. Is there a twelve-step group? Posted by Picasa

5 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

Lady D, would you translate into English the titles of the following books from your list?

Como Hacer Masitas Y Facturas

Secretos de la Panaderia Casera

Cocina para Consentidos I

Thank,

jjg

12:08 PM  
Blogger Lady Disdain said...

Roughly, "Como Hacer Masitas Y Facturas" is "How to make pastries and baked goods", "Secretos de la Panaderia Casera" is "Secrets of Home Baking", and "Cocina para Consentidos I" is, I think, something like "Cooking for Spoiled People I".

All of those were brought back from Buenos Aires by my mom. I really ought to get around to cooking from them.

4:23 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

oooooooo, thanks. Of the three, I'm most curious as to what might be found in the "Secretos de la Panaderia Casera".

-jjg

10:46 AM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

oooooooo, thanks. Of the three, I'm most curious as to what might be found in the "Secretos de la Panaderia Casera".

-jjg

10:46 AM  
Blogger Recetas La Cocina de Elba said...

Hello Lady Disdan.
It's really a pleasure read a blog like yours.
I think am like you just buying cook books, e-books and all just to cook and work in my kitchen, I call my shelf book a Bible kitchen Resources.

9:02 AM  

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