
A great cookbook is a wonderful thing.
Cookbooks have the ability to excite, inspire, tempt, and comfort me all at the same time. A good cookbook can tease me with drool-worthy photography, engage me in a story, or help me figure out what the heck I’m going to make for dinner. Whenever I’m in a cooking rut, I know that I can flip through a few of my favourite cookbooks for instant inspiration.
Below are my most-used cookbooks. I waited to write this post until I was able to really get a feel for these books. Actually, there are a couple books still sitting on my shelf that I haven’t had a chance to try out, so those will be coming up this Summer in Part II. There are also a handful of cookbooks still on my wish list for some Summer reading. Yes, my summer reading includes cookbooks…totally normal, I say. ;)
For now, these are tried and true. Some are fairly new, but already getting quite worn…
I guess I should start where it all began!

As you can see, this cookbook has received a lot of love!
Eat, Drink, & Be Vegan by Dreena Burton was the very first vegan cookbook that I purchased. Actually, when I bought it I wasn’t even a vegan, but just dabbling with this way of eating. I absolutely fell in love with the recipes from Dreena’s Super Charge Me Cookies and vegan gravy to her salad dressings and hide the lentils tomato sauce. ED & BV showed me that a vegan lifestyle was definitely an option in my life and it got my wheels turning.
Cookbook Highlights:
- While there are certainly recipes with soy products like Tofu and Tempeh, there are plenty of recipes without them too. It’s a good mix for someone like me who doesn’t eat tofu and Tempeh.
- Dreena provides helpful notes on the sidebar of the recipes for substitution ideas and helpful hints for ingredients.
- She has an entire chapter devoted to hummus. ‘Nough said. :)
- Most of her recipes are fairly low in sugar and oil. I don’t find myself having to reduce the oil or sugar like I do with other cookbooks.
- She uses a lot of whole grains and whole grain flours in baking recipes, such as spelt, oat, barley, etc. If you are trying to get away from white flour, this is a great start.
- Over 150 recipes and 16 full-colour photographs.
- Dreena has been working hard on her fourth cookbook…I’m already pumped for it!
Up next, Vegan Yum Yum by Lauren Ulm.

Vegan Yum Yum’s blog was one of the first vegan blogs that I started reading back in 2009. I love Lauren’s writing style, fabulous vegan recipes, and breath-taking photography. Her photography was actually one of the reasons why I fell in love with food photography myself. When I found out that she was coming out with a cookbook, I was thrilled.
Cookbook Highlights:
- There is a beautiful photograph for each and every recipe in the book. Some recipes even include a few step by step photos. This is pretty ground-breaking for a vegan cookbook!
- Lauren was featured on the Martha Stewart show for her adorable Knit Night Cupcakes. Yea, she’s pretty major. :)
- It’s a great mix of quick & easy dinner recipes and more lengthy ones. Regardless of their difficulty, they all turn out decadent, fancy, and great for dinner parties or everyday.
- If you are a fan of Tofu and Tempeh, you will find lots of recipes to please your every whim. Since I don’t eat tofu or Tempeh much, there are several recipes that I won’t make, but I still find enough to please me.
- Lauren isn’t shy about using oil or refined flours, so occasionally I will try to adapt recipes to suit my own preferences.
- This is without a doubt, my most used cookbook over the Winter months as there are a lot of comfort foods like warm creamy pastas and casseroles to suit my every craving.

Eric bought me two cookbooks for my Birthday that I have wanted for a while now – Clean Food and Clean Start by Terry Walters.
Clean Food is a seasonal guide to eating close to the source with over 200 recipes. I’ve never come across a cookbook quite like this one! Here’s why:
Cookbook Highlights:
- The recipes are grouped by the seasons- a chapter each for Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter. I just love this organization as it simplifies eating seasonally and locally.
- Clean Food challenges me and gets me out of cooking ruts because there are a lot of ingredients I have never used before, such as Watercress or Arame. For some people, this would be a cookbook nightmare, but I love trying new vegetables or grains because it’s easy to fall into a rut.
- With that being said, I wouldn’t say this is a last-minute cookbook. Most of the recipes require some planning and grocery shopping in advance.
- There’s a very detailed section on grains, vegetables, soy, nut & seeds, oils, and unusual ingredients like Sucanat or Kelp. Whenever I find myself unsure of how to prepare something, I go straight to this cookbook to guide me. This cookbook is extremely detailed and you can tell that so much work went into it.
- This cookbook isn’t vegan, but I would say that most of the recipes are vegan or easily adapted to be vegan! That’s pretty exciting.
- There are no pictures, which makes a visual person like me a bit sad, but I was delighted to see lots of yummy pictures in her second cookbook…

Clean Start is very similar to Clean Food in terms of unique, seasonally organized recipes, however this cookbook has plenty of professional photographs. There’s probably a photograph for every other recipe in this book. It’s about half the size of the Clean Food (with about 100 recipes as opposed to over 200 in Clean Food), but the quality is still very much there. I’m just loving the visual appeal of this book. While I only recently acquired these cookbooks, I’ve already used them a handful of times and I know I will use them time and time again not only for recipes but as a cooking resource. I didn’t realize this initially, but all of the recipes in Clean Start are gluten-free! That is pretty amazing.
Here is a shot of the Clean Food Cookbook interior:

Beautiful. :)
Now, let’s talk sweets for a moment because no kitchen would be complete without a couple dessert cookbooks, no?

Sweet Freedom by my Toronto-based friend, Ricki Heller, is a lovely cookbook for those interested in baking healthier desserts without wheat, eggs, dairy, or refined sugars! In fact, I’ve never come across a cookbook that makes such an effort to use natural sweeteners and whole grain flours quite like this one does. If you are sick of desserts with white flour and gobs of butter, this cookbook will push your boundaries and open you up to a new world of baking.
Cookbook Highlights:
- Over 100 recipes for classic baked goods such as Banana Oat Bars, Ultra Fudgy brownies (yum!), Chocolate Pecan Pie, and Cinnamon Walnut Coffee Cake.
- There are over 30 beautiful photographs
- Ricki provides many helpful hints and recipes notes for substitution ideas or variations
- Each recipe specifies whether it is corn free, gluten free, nut free, or soy free.
- Recipes provide Imperial/Metric measurements
- There is a very detailed guide on ingredients at the beginning of the book.
Finally, Vegan Cupcakes Take Over The World by Isa Chandra Moskowitz and Terry Hope Romero.

If you are a cupcake fan, you will love this cookbook! It has full colour photographs for almost all of the 75 cupcake and frosting recipes that will have you thinking of reasons to bake yet another batch of cupcakes. VCTOTW also won Cookbook of the Year award by VegNews Magazine when it came out. Woot.
Cookbook Highlights:
- Most recipes feature easy to find ingredients and it also provides tips on cupcake baking and decorating (‘How to make kick-ass cupcakes’).
- Fun, witty, and playful writing style throughout the book. (e.g., “Peanut Butter Cupcakes: We also call these Jimmy Carter Cakes because he was a peanut farmer and he loves solar energy. But no one cares about that. What they do care about is that these cupcakes are pushed to maximum peanuty capacity and still remain moist and fluffy. And that is almost as important as solar energy.”)
- Many of the cupcake recipes have a lot of variations that you can try. For example, the Basic Chocolate Cupcake includes variations such as Peanut Butter Chocolate Heavencakes, Peanut Butter Bombes, Chocolate Mocha Cupcakes, German Chocolate cupcakes, and even Chocolate Orange cupcakes! Cool, right?
- Cupcake chapters include: Basic Cupcakes (e.g., Golden Vanilla), Classic Cupcakes (e.g, Carrot Cake), Fancy Cupcakes (e.g., Orange Pudding Cupcakes with Chocolate Ganache), and Frostin’s and Fllin’s (e.g., Coconut Pecan Fudge Frosting).
- Did I mention that sometimes I just sit on the couch and stare at the pretty pictures? Eric calls it my ‘Happy Place’.
So there you have it- six of my most used cookbooks to date! Stay tuned for the Summer edition, Part II…
I’d love to hear about your most-used cookbooks too!
Do you have any cookbooks that you use again and again or have you found any new ones that changed the way you cook? Share below.
Whatever cookbooks I purchase MUST have lots and lots of pictures! I’m a visual person when it comes to food (aren’t we all???!!) and if there are no pictures, chances are I will not make it. I LOVE LOVE LOVE Gwyneth Paltrow’s new cookbook!! It’s my most-used to date.
I completely agree with you..it’s like they say “we feast with our eyes first”! I think that’s why I’ve made so many recipes from this site… props to your photography skillzzz Angela :)! I tend to look for recipes from bloggers rather than go to cookbooks, but after hearing that Gwyneth Paltrow has a cookbook I might just have to give it a shot!
Very informative recaps!
I love looking through cookbooks, but sadly I default to google when it comes to finding a recipe. Why is that?
Maybe you should get a cookbook holder for your countertop. :) That’s what I think I need to try anyway…then it will stay open and convenient!
That’s my problem too. Lack of space in my “kitchen” for even tools – let alone cookbooks. I have a bookshelf I put them on, but I have so many other books to adorn that with. And it’s in the living space…which well, is all-open concept, so same thing really?
Okay, clearly I need more space ;)
Angela – didn’t you base some of your Lentil Loaf off the Clean Food cookbook? Was that a borrowed copy or how did you know that recipe without the book?
Yes I actually found the recipe online (which I linked to in my lentil loaf post). :)
I love all these cookbooks! I plan on getting most of these once I get paid again!
I would say my most used cookbooks are How to Make Everything Vegetarian, How to Make Everything, Joy of Cooking and this little book of vegetarian recipes. Recently, I’ve bought a couple of cookbooks at booksales for muffins, cakes and holiday recipes!
I have one cookbook I go to when I need to go to my happy place– and it’s called the Coffee and Chocolate Bible:)
I go to blogs and websites such as foodgawker and this blog when I feel the need to be inspired! Since I work from home and at my computer all day, I find myself taking several needed breaks searching for cool recipes! :)
Same here! I am going to write a post on my best online resources too….Tastespotting and Foodgawker are high on the list!
Even though I’m not vegan I have a few friends who are. This is definitely helpful when I’m on the lookout for gifts, and I also am interested in adding a few new recipes to my repertoire. Thanks Angela!
I love Vegan Yum Yum and VCTOTW. I know Giada DeLaurentiis isn’t vegan, but I love taking her amazing Italian dishes and making them my own! Love love love her.
She’s amazing, isn’t she?
I just got a copy of Clean Start as a birthday gift yesterday! The photos in it are beautiful, and I can’t wait to start using it.
I really love my King Arthur Flour baking cookbook, and the book Edible, which has stories and recipes from farmers and foodies.
Ive heard great things about both of those cookbooks…I havent had a chance to check them out yet, but I will have to soon!
You had me at “entire chapter devoted to hummus!” YUM! My vegan friend SWEARS by that cookbook =)
Thanks for the delish suggestions! I’ll have to check some of these out! =)
xoXOxo
Jenn @ Peas & Crayons
Angela, I’m blown away! So honored that Sweet Freedom is one of your most-used books. :D Thank you so much for this wonderful review! I also adore the “Clean” books–they are beautiful to look at above all else. And who doesn’t adore Dreena Burton?! I can’t wait until YOU have a book out there so I can swoon over all the recipes in it, too! xo
It was my pleasure Ricki :)
If it walks like a duck and talks like a duck….this is what I’m coming to grips with. I love to eat healthy, members of my family cannot eat, dairy and eggs so naturally I gravitate to vegan recipes. We also have soy, bean and nut allergies so MUCH of vegan recipes I cannot use, but every day I realize how much I enjoy cooking meals that are “clean” and healthy. I’m going to have Boy put some cookbooks on hold at the library for me. I can’t wait to see where these books will take us.
ReBar is in constant and loving use in our kitchen. We’ve had it for years and turn to it for so many stand-by recipes! I also love the Moosewood cookbooks, all of Heidi Swanson’s stuff and, of course, Mark Bittman’s “How to Cook Everything”! I’m not even vegetarian, and my top books are all veg/vegan-inspired!
Great suggestions, thanks!
I LOVE ReBar, too! Well-used in my kitchen. :)
I own two vegan cookbooks — Happy Herbivore and Veganomicon. Both very different styles but good results from both!
One of my fave go-to cookbooks is SO EASY by Ellie Krieger (from the Food Network).
She makes healthy, fresh versions of popular recipes. I’m a flexitarian, and my husband is a meat-eater – but there is such a variety of recipes for both of us. Every recipe that I’ve made has come out delicious.
FUN TIDBIT: I also designed the book cover. ;)
I design cookbook covers, so I know my cookbooks!
:)
Wow thats cool….going to look it up…!
I just got Clean Start and have not made anything yet – have you tried any of the recipes? Honestly, I find myself wanting to make the fall and winter recipes even though it’s summer. Pumpkin muffins I could eat year-round…
yes I have tried a few now and Im loving it!
THank u for the recs!!!!! i love Veganomicon and Appetite for REduction! although veganomicon needs more pics!
The Modern Vegetarian Kitchen is one of my favorites. It’s also grouped by season! All of the desserts are vegan and most of the dishes are either vegan or have vegan variations – great stuff! I also love Healthy Cooking for Two (or just you), even though there is a little more substituting that goes on when I cook from that book.
I looove cookbooks!!! Thanks for sharing some of your favorites!
Thanks Ange! I haven’t tried any of these, actually, except for the cupcake one. You should try out 1000 Vegan Recipes, it is like the ENCYCLOPEDIA of vegan food!
thanks! I havent heard of that one :)
How it all Vegan and the Veganomicon are the main go to’s for me. I’m not vegan but ‘ve gotten the best recipes from them!
I may have to pick up the cupcake book. I’m not a vegan, but a few friends do follow the lifestyle and having the know-how to make goodies for them would be very useful. Thanks for this awesome post!
I keep saying I need to invest in some vegan cookbooks, but haven’t yet! Thanks for this post it was helpful!