It used to be that if you picked up a cookbook, you wanted to cook something. If that’s still true, it’s only true sometimes; other times you’re probably in it for the idea. From a humble place of expository instruction, modern cookbook writing has made a narrative leap into the realm of creative nonfiction. Winding introductions coupled with lush photography and impressive PR campaigns suggest that readers aren’t just hungry for dinner but stories, too: stories of a chef, a restaurant, a region of the world, and even a time in history. These are the cookbooks from 2015 that told them best.
Lucky Peach Presents 101 Easy Asian Recipes

From Lucky Peach, the food and culture journal of Peter Meehan and Momofuku chef David Chang, a collection of whimsical Asian-inspired recipes that could make the specials list at one of Chang’s celebrated restaurants: “Rotisserie Chicken Ramen,” “Fried Rice, Two Ways,” “Spicy Mushroom Ragu.”
GP Recommends: “Pesto Ramen” (Page 130).
Donabe: Classic and Modern Japanese Clay Pot Cooking

Home cooking teacher Naoko Takei Moore teams up with Kyle Connaughton, the former head chef of three-star Michelin restaurant The Fat Duck, for Donabe, a lesson in the communal, traditional Japanese cuisine cooked in clay pots. Beautifully shot, the book offers an introduction the necessary tools and ingredients for donabe preparations, along with a range of different recipes, from the elementary level (“Salmon Chowder”) to the more nuanced (“Miso Keema Curry”).
GP Recommends: “Chicken Hot Pot” (Page 68).