The James Beard Foundation released a recommended list of must-have cookbooks a few years ago. I was part of the committee that devised the list, and I argued against "Mastering the Art of French Cooking" (which still made it on the list) for the same reason I don't recommend it today for the average home cook. (The book has become a bestseller because of the movie "Julie & Julia.") "Mastering" may be a classic, but many of its recipes don't reflect how we eat today -- way too much butter and cream, dishes that don't appeal to American palates -- such as aspic or brains -- and methods more time-consuming than most cooks find necessary. And then there are the frozen green beans. (The availability of fresh ingredients has changed dramatically over the years.) But if you have time and energy to spend in the kitchen, the book (and its successor, Volume Two) offers a serious lesson in French cuisine. Here are the choices from the James Beard Foundation.
Must-have cookbooks
• "American Cookery," by James Beard (BBS Publishing Corporation, 1996)
• "Authentic Mexican: Regional Cooking From the Heart of Mexico," by Rick Bayless (William Morrow Cookbooks, 2007)
• "Better Homes and Gardens New Cookbook" (Better Homes and Gardens, 2004)
• "Classic Indian Cooking," by Julie Sahni (William Morrow Cookbooks, 1980)
• "Complete Techniques," by Jacques Pépin and Léon Pererr (Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers, 2001)
• "Essentials of Classic Italian Cooking," by Marcella Hazan (Macmillan, 1995)