- “The Memory of Taste: Vietnamese American Recipes from Phú Quoc, Oakland, and the Spaces Between” by Tu David Phu and Soleil Ho
As readers with good taste will want to know, this cookbook comes with praise from Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist Viet Thanh Nguyen, who writes, “Stripped of Oriental exoticism, this is a cookbook infused with the intense flavors of refugee kitchens and the inauthentic authenticity of the diaspora.” Trained in top-notch restaurants and a “Top Chef” alum, Tu David Phu grew up in California’s Bay Area as the child of Vietnamese refugees, soaking up stories and recipes about his parents’ early lives on the island Phú Quôc. The photo-filled book includes a range of dishes including Com Tam (Broken Rice), Bánh Ít Tran (Sticky Rice Dumplings) and much more.
- “Ottolenghi Comfort” by Yotam Ottolenghi with Helen Goh
The latest from bestselling cookbook author Yotam Ottolenghi focuses on something we can all use a little bit more of right now: comfort. These 100+ recipes created by a team of four chefs aim to hit a sweet spot between nostalgia and novel, with tasty combinations from around the world such as a French-influenced hummus, a kimchi falafel and Indonesian home fries alongside other more traditional tastes. The recipes focus on how eating can bring communities together, and the dishes here — whether variations on oatmeal or oyakodon — celebrate a sense of togetherness as well as delicious, comforting meals.
- “Our South: Black Food Through My Lens” by Ashleigh Shanti
This James Beard Award finalist and former “Top Chef” competitor explores the foods and microregions — as well as her own family’s history — of Appalachia and the American South through her point of view as a Black, queer, female chef. So she offers the flavors and favorites you might be expecting, but she also digs deeper to reframe how readers understand the South – including writing about finding a book by Malinda Russell, who in 1866 became the first Black American to publish a cookbook. As Shanti lays out in the excellent foreword, “Above all, this book exists to amplify your understanding of the complexities of Black food.”
- “Pass the Plate: 100 Delicious, Highly Shareable, Everyday Recipes” by Carolina Gelen
If you’ve encountered Gelen’s Instagram, you know she devises simple, appealing recipes with a minimum of fuss (she calls them, “highly doable”). Having grown up in a small Transylvania town watching TV chefs and learning to cook from her mother (as well as stints working in restaurants here in the States), she’s got a flair for food that’s simple and classic and looks and tastes great. And whether roasting citrus slices to add caramelized depth to a simple salad or tinkering endlessly to craft what she deems a “perfect” chocolate cake, she creates recipes that will have you heading to the kitchen to get started. (For a sense of her charming, funny videos, watch the one where Gelen’s mother delivers frank, sometimes withering opinions of her book.)