
Episode 34: A Look Back at Illustrated Cookbooks
Cookbook Love Podcast · Maggie Green
Audio is streamed directly from the publisher (traffic.libsyn.com) as published in their RSS feed. Play Podcasts does not host this file. Rights-holders can request removal through the copyright & takedown page.
Show Notes
Welcome back to another episode of the Cookbook Love Podcast. Today's topic is an offshoot of my episode last week with Literary Agent Maria Ribas. We talked about upcoming trends in cookbooks, and Maria mentioned illustrations. It's hard to imagine that illustrations will replace photography, but in this episode, I take a look back to illustrated and hand-lettered cookbooks in my collection. My review of these books led me to the discovery that illustrations serve many purposes in cookbooks: design, instruction of step-by-step processes, identification if ingredients or equipment, or in the case of To The Kings Taste, illustrations that displayed elaborate scenes of medieval dinners and kitchen tasks (such as stomping grapes, or churning butter) created from woodcuts.
Things We Mention In This Episode:
- Smoke and Spice by Cheryl Alters Jamison and Bill Jamison
- Classic Indian Vegetarian and Grain Cooking by Julie Sahni
- Moosewood Cookbook Anniversary Edition by Mollie Katzen
- Enchanted Broccoli Forest by Mollie Katzen
- To The King's Taste by Lorna J. Sass
- Tassajara Cooking by Edward Espe Brown
- Join the waitlist for the next opening of the Cookbook Writers Academy
- Download checklist "Are You Ready to Write a Cookbook"
- Please join our Cookbook Love Podcast Facebook Group
- Instagram @cookbooklovepodcast or @greenapron