Help me buy a Christmas Present

OK. I'm starting to think about Christmas gifts. There's one person who has just started to get into cooking, and I want to get them a nice basic cookbook. I'm thinking either Julia Child's The Way To Cook--my own Bible--or The Joy of Cooking, which a number of other people have recommended.

Which do people prefer? Or, do you have another standard cookbook that you prefer.


Jeffrey Langstraat's picture

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Sour Duck's picture

You can't go wrong with Joy of Cooking

My two cents: you cannot go wrong with "The Joy of Cooking." My mom has had hers for years, and it was well loved and well used.

(I'm sure Julia Child's "The Way to Cook" is excellent as well, I just haven't had any experience with it.)


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Let's begin with capitalism, a word that has gone largely out of fashion. The approved reference now is to the market system. This shift minimizes --indeed, deletes-- the role of wealth in the economic and social system. And it sheds the adverse connotation going back to Marx. Instead of the owners of capital or their attendants in control, we have the admirably impersonal role of market forces. It would be hard to think of a change in terminology more in the interest of those to whom money accords power. They have now a functional anonymity.

But most of the people who use the new designation --economists, in particular-- are innocent as to the effect. They see nothing wrong with their bland, descriptive terminology. They pay no attention to the important question: Whether money "wealth" accords a special power. (It does.) Thus the term innocent fraud.


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