Cookbooks

Whiskey Opus: The Definitive Guide to the World’s Greatest Whiskey Distilleries

$19.99

No other spirit is as complex as whisky; its appeal is timeless, and its fans can spend a lifetime unraveling its mysteries. The Whisky Opus is the companion for that journey.

Fully revised with all-new images, a fresh design, and updated text that takes in all the cutting-edge new distilleries and whisky trends, The Whisky Opus is a global odyssey that takes the whisky lover from Banffshire to Bangalore.

Yassou: The Simple, Seasonal Mediterranean Cooking of Greece

$16.99

From an Israel cookbook author and TV personality, celebrate the original Mediterranean diet with this “delicious journey” (Adeena Sussman, author of Shabbat and Sababa).

Greek food, born of the land where sun meets sea, is built on the delicious, healthy pillars of abundant fresh vegetables and fish, olive oil, whole grains, legumes, artisanal cheeses, and fruit—accompanied by an occasional glass of wine.

Your Pasta Sucks: A “Cookbook”

$15.99

“Matteo Lane is a liar. In the pages of Your Pasta Sucks, he repeats that he has no business writing a cookbook, all while masterfully (and hilariously) weaving an intricate tale of food and family and schooling the reader in the flavors, traditions, and techniques of Rome, Sicily, and his own Italian-American kitchen.”—Katie Parla, author of Food of the Italian Islands

Your pasta sucks, but it doesn’t have to. Let celebrated comedian and totally legit author Matteo Lane show you how through 30 delicious recipes and laugh-out-loud stories.

Yummy Toddler Food: Dinnertime SOS: 100 Sanity-Saving Meals Parents and Kids of All Ages Will Actually Want to Eat: A Cookbook

$14.99

NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • 100 quick and easy dinners that the whole family will enjoy and take 30 minutes or less to make, from the creator of the leading kid-friendly food site Yummy Toddler Food.

You rush home from work, tired but looking forward to sharing a meal with your family. You’re short on energy—but you need to pick a recipe, chop and prep ingredients, and tend to the kids. How are you supposed to juggle these responsibilities and make a meal that everyone at your table actually wants to eat?

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