NEW YORK, Nov. 19, 2006

The Art Of The Cookbook

How The Appetite For Recipes Spans Centuries, Cultures And Generations

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(CBS)  If the American passion for food is legendary, our appetite for cookbooks is not far behind, as CBS Sunday Morning correspondent Elizabeth Kaledin discovered.

Browse through any book store and the aisles are boiling over with culinary titles. Sales of cookbooks will top 500 million dollars this year.

But the art of recording recipes is not a new phenomenon:

Dating back to the year 840, "The Apicius" is a collection of recipes attributed to the Roman gourmet Marcus Apicius.

Miriam Mandelbaum showed us a copy at New York's Academy of Medicine, painstakingly handcopied on parchment by monks. "It is indeed the oldest cookbook in the West," Mandelbaum said.

It's one of only two originals in the world, and is considered priceless. But you could always pick up an English translation for 8 bucks at Bonnie Slotnick's Rare Cookbook Store in New York's Greenwich Village.

Her tiny little space is overflowing with the unusual and the out-of-print — about four thousands titles, but she hasn’t counted.

"People will come in, look around, and swoon with delight," Slotnik said. "And the next thing they say is, it's terrible. It's an addiction! My wife won't let me in the house with another cookbook. And I always say we resist the disease model here. Be glad that you have a passion for something!"

Her passion was sparked by a frail, time-worn cookbook belonging to her mother who died when Bonnie was just 13.

"My mother had a little booklet advertising butternut bread, which I think still exists," Slotnik said. "And it was a little book of wartime household tips."

Slotnick believes that cookbooks are so popular because they have the power to make both mouths and eyes water. They are a savory stew of meals and memories:

"I just love to see people find a book from their past," she said. "First their tears well up in their eyes, and they just go back to a place where they felt happy and secure."

Kaledin experienced her own food flashback with the discovery of a Peanuts cookbook from her past. "I had this! I used to make Lucy's Lemon Squares! I'm having a moment! Music up!"

To find her stock, Slotnick visits as many used bookstores as possible. Armed with a wish list from devoted customers she hunts for the hard-to-find.

One day Slotnick hopes to leave her books to the Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America at the Radcliffe Institute, part of Harvard University. There are 16,000 books on food in the collection. Marylene Altieri is the curator.

Among their collection is the first American cookbook, published by an American orphan whose real name was Amelia Simmons.

When cookbooks became a major part of the overall collection in the 1960s, like so many other things associated with the kitchen, feminists of the era rebelled.

"There were many women who felt that they had left cooking behind, and that therefore the library that represented women's history should not be dominated by a collection focusing on cookery," Altieri said. "But it wasn't long before people began to realize that this was absolutely essential to understanding the history of women."

And today it is viewed as an invaluable resource — a glimpse into the day-to-day lives of everyone, from freed slaves ("What Mrs. Fisher Knows About Old Southern Cooking," one of the first books published by an African-American woman) to our greatest chefs (such as Julia Child's personal copy of "The Joy of Cooking").

Since 1931, "The Joy of Cooking"'s straightforward recipes have helped millions of Americans find their way around the kitchen. To date more than 18 million copies have been sold.

Irma Rombauer was an unassuming widow from St. Louis who self-published her recipes 75 years ago and managed to turn them into gourmet gold. "The Joy of Cooking" is the bestselling cookbook of all time.

Ethan Becker, the grandson of Rombauer, co-authored the latest edition published by Simon and Schuster (A CBS company). He taught me the fine art of preparing brussel sprouts that even the finicky will devour. He also taught me the secret of the book's success: it makes cooking sound so easy, like anyone can do it.

"Well, that's the whole point," Becker said. "Anybody can do it!"

And that's perhaps the best recipe for happiness.



©MMVI, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Add a Comment See all 14 Comments
by virginiajim November 22, 2006 11:53 AM EST
Was there mention of a bookstore in Morristown, NJ? If so, did anyone catch the name of it?
thanks...
Reply to this comment
by pattyfeeney November 21, 2006 8:32 PM EST
I really would love the recipe for the cranberry mango sauce with maple syrup. How do I get it?
patty
Reply to this comment
by saltyone2-2009 November 21, 2006 12:50 AM EST
I really enjoy CBS's Sunday Morning programme. It is an interesting and thought provoking hour of well balanced information. I would greatly appreciate your emailing me your mango/cranberry recipe so that my enjoyment of your programme can be increased from audio visual and include taste as well.

Mike
Reply to this comment
by mancel1 November 19, 2006 9:38 PM EST
Right now I don't know exactly where it is but I have the Vincent Price cookbook. Would you be interested in having it when I find it???
Thanks, you can e-mail me at bbutterfly@iwon.com
Reply to this comment
by mancel1 November 19, 2006 9:36 PM EST
Right now I don't know exactly where it is But I have the Vincent Price cookbook. Would you be interested in it, when I find it???
thanks, Dorothy
you can e-mail me at bbutterfly@iwon.com
Reply to this comment
by cbssunday November 19, 2006 9:21 PM EST
IF YOU SEND ME THE CRANBERRY-MANGO CHUTNEY, I MAY RECONSIDER MY HUGE DISAPPOINTMENT AT YOUR FIRING DAN RATHER...

IF YOU DARE TOUCH THE SUNDAY MORNING NEWS SHOW, I WILL PERSONALLY GO TO NY TO SLAP THE DAYLIGHT OUT OF LESs MOONvey. WHAT A SPINELESS IDIOT!
Reply to this comment
by les11lie November 19, 2006 6:04 PM EST
Loved the segment about cookbooks, but was surprised that the women were handling the ancient handwritten text (only 2 copies!) with their bare hands. Having worked in a historic house museum, we hardly touched an artifact without our white gloves on. I could just slug my wonderful husband today for talking me into giving away all those vintage cookbooks my late mother had saved. A suggestion for Sunday Morning producers: look into "The Brass Sisters" Sheila and Marilynn whose book "Heirloom Baking" is about homemade/handwritten family cookbooks. They would be great guests.
Reply to this comment
by maggiegreen November 19, 2006 5:06 PM EST
Thank you for the wonderful show on Eat, Drink and Be Merry.

As an editor for the 75th Anniversary Edition of Joy of Cooking, I encourage everyone to make cooking a priority in their lives. The many benefits physically and emotionally are unsurpassed.

Check out the new JOY published by Scribner and released on October 31, 2006. It makes a wonderful addition to the JOY library, and the voice of Ethan Becker and his family ring through loud and clear.

The Joy of Cooking website www.thejoykitchen.com will be up and running soon - come visit us!

Maggie Green
Editor
75th Anniversary Edition
Joy of Cooking
Reply to this comment
by bonbook November 19, 2006 3:39 PM EST
Good morning!
Bonnie Slotnick here.

I don't have a website%u2014if you can't come visit the shop (worth a trip from anywhere, as they say!), please give me a call at 212-989-8962, send a fax to 212-989-8102, or email me directly at: bonnieslotnicbooks@earthlink.net

My shop is at 163 West 10th St, NY, NY 10014. It's at the corner of 7th Ave. I'm usually here 1-7 pm, but it's best to call ahead.
Hope to be hearing from you!

Bonnie
Reply to this comment
by bonbook November 19, 2006 3:38 PM EST
Good morning!
Bonnie Slotnick here.

I don't have a website%u2014if you can't come visit the shop (worth a trip from anywhere, as they say!), please give me a call at 212-989-8962, send a fax to 212-989-8102, or email me directly at: bonnieslotnicbooks@earthlink.net

My shop is at 163 West 10th St, NY, NY 10014. It's at the corner of 7th Ave. I'm usually here 1-7 pm, but it's best to call ahead.
Hope to be hearing from you!

Bonnie
Reply to this comment
by edler5-2009 November 19, 2006 2:44 PM EST
Does Bonnie Slotnik have a webstite? I am looking for a particular cookbook my mom had when we were growing up.
Please advise Thanks!!!
Reply to this comment
by n857-2009 November 19, 2006 2:42 PM EST
I have a few very old and precious cookbooks; about 45 years in my possession. They are in good to excellent condition. I was a collector. I am interested in knowing their value to a collector and may be contacted via email. john.reager@verizon.net
As always, Sunday Morning sparks a renewed interest in so many assorted topics. Thanks
Reply to this comment
by schuehle November 19, 2006 1:30 PM EST
It was a great show as alway, but I have a cook book - 2nd edition by Mrs. Simon Kander,1947, The Settlement Cook Book, The Way to a Man's Heart and it needs a little work done and I would like to contact the person whom the article was about. How can I do this.
Reply to this comment
by crtaibi November 19, 2006 1:16 PM EST
In reguard to your story about rare cookbooks on Sun.11-18-06 where is Bonnie Slotnick's store in Greenwich Village?

Please advise
Thank you crtaibi@hotmail.com
Reply to this comment
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