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You are at:Home » The Best Spring 2026 Cookbooks, According to Eater
The Best Spring 2026 Cookbooks, According to Eater
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The Best Spring 2026 Cookbooks, According to Eater

17 March 202615 Mins Read

The days are getting longer, the sun’s shining, and the whisper of ramp season is starting to swirl through the wind, with the abundance of exciting spring produce fast behind it. It was an especially cold, snowy winter in New York City, and because of that, my excitement to cook also felt stuck within a snowdrift at times. That’s to say that I was more excited than usual to read spring’s slate of new cookbooks. The season’s roundup of cookbooks delivered. I was pleased to find obsessive explorations into vodka sauce and chocolate chip cookies, incredibly in-depth explanations of barbecue that’ll push anyone with a grill to up their game, delightfully moody musings on baking and early-20s life, playful tips from a popular Brooklyn chef for perking up store-bought pita, and so much more. I can say with certainty: Reading these books, I’m excited to cook again. I hope they do the same for you.

Obsessed with the Best: 100+ Methodically Perfected Recipes Based on 20+ Head-to-Head Tests
Ella Quittner

Nobody’s doing it like Ella Quittner. Perhaps you’ve seen her visually compelling recipe tests, like an array of 32 distinct chocolate chip cookies — each following a different technique — or 25 takes on vodka sauce on rigatoni laid out with tweezered precision. Quittner, a contributor to the New York Times and an alum of Food52, where she wrote the Absolute Best Tests column, dedicates her debut to “anyone who was told they asked ‘too many questions’ in grade school.” Accordingly, the recipes in Obsessed with the Best are gleaned from her maniacal dedication to recipe testing; her dishes and desserts are rounded out by funny, incisive essays about the feverish societal chase for the “best.” This is a book for anyone who’s ever doubted the rigor behind recipe writing, or who wants validation of their own tendency to spiral into rabbit holes.

The Diaspora Spice Co. Cookbook: Seasonal Home Cooking from South Asia’s Best Spice Farms
Sana Javeri Kadri and Asha Loupy

Javeri Kadri is the founder of spice company Diaspora Co., which offers spices sourced from small farms around South Asia while advocating for sustainability, fair trade, and regenerative practices. Diaspora sees its model as “complicating and deepening what ‘Made in South Asia’ means.” The brand’s official cookbook expands the Diaspora universe by putting the spotlight on the farming families behind its spices and sharing their time-honored recipes (sourced from a roster of all-women contributors, who were paid “as close to US recipe development rates as possible,” Javeri Kadri writes), in addition to lively original recipes from Loupy. It’s a beautiful, colorful cookbook that will bring a new lens to how you think about the turmeric and cumin in your pantry. Javeri Kadri describes Diaspora as coming from “a place of wild hope”; all that hope and joy is palpable here.

Will This Make You Happy: Stories & Recipes from a Year of Baking
Tanya Bush

Tanya Bush, pastry chef at Brooklyn’s Little Egg and co-founder of Cake Zine, once cited Catherine Lacey’s The Möbius Book — a novel on one side, but a memoir if flipped over — as inspiration for her debut cookbook. Bush’s book has a similar fluidity: Read it as a book, or bake from it like a cookbook; choose your own adventure. It’s broken into chapters by season, which follow the pandemic year when Bush pushed through the directionless daze of her early 20s by beginning to bake professionally. These chapters are interspersed with recipes (the ever-popular Little Egg cruller is there, of course) to create what Bush calls a “narrative cookbook,” in which baking and living feel truly enmeshed. Not all of this is neat nor even aspirational: It’s an extension of Bush’s Instagram @will.this.make.me.happy, a brooding archive of baking and having feelings about it (many dishes result in a “no”). It’s a book that finds sweetness in the messiness of life, and yes, sometimes, the soul-affirming power of a little treat.

Revel: A Maximalist’s Guide to Having People Over
Mariana Velásquez

The past few years have seen a boom of hosting-themed cookbooks, as Americans once again heed the call of the house party. Amid this growing niche, Mariana Velasquez’s newest cookbook, which bills itself as “a maximalist’s guide to having people over,” still manages to stand out with its level of glamour. This is not a book for people who want to dump cheap beers into an ice-filled bathtub, but rather, those with a glassware collection; those who want to pull out exactly the right coupes in which to pour Champagne. This is a glitzy guide for the primpers and the preeners, full of lush photography, styling, and Pinterest-worthy spreads.

Still, Velásquez’s recipes are achievable and, at times, whimsical: Consider her “deconstructed pie bar,” in which dough is shaped into chic “piecrust points,” or her omelet fit for a crowd, in which eggs are baked on a sheet and then rolled into a giant, platter-worthy roulade. We all need something to aspire to; Revel is full of ideas.

Soomaaliya: Food, Memory, and Migration
Ifrah Ahmed

Ifrah Ahmed’s debut cookbook is a vibrant ode to Somalia, both the country and its large diaspora, which was born out of mass migration after the 1991 Somali Civil War. Ahmed, who arrived in Seattle as a refugee in 1996, takes on the daunting task of preserving history from a culture whose oral tradition for passing on stories, recipes, and culinary practices has been disrupted. Ahmed’s recipes lean into the specificity of Somali flavors, which come through even in holdovers from the Italian colonial period. Baasto, or pasta, is served with suugo, a sauce of tuna cooked with marinara sauce and xawaash, the essential Somali spice blend that features cumin, coriander, black pepper, cinnamon, green cardamom, cloves, and turmeric.

Ahmed interrogates the idea of cultural preservation on multiple levels. “Forced migration meant we clung to what was most familiar, while trauma made us need to protect and maintain what we once knew, just as we knew it,” she writes. At the same time, Ahmed, who does pop-ups as Milk & Myrrh, once became known for her Somali take on breakfast burritos: eggs and fuul wrapped in canjeero. What makes Soomaliya so exciting is not just its loving preservation, but also Ahmed’s open-minded insistence on the dynamic, evolving nature of culture.

Hello, Home Cooking: Do-Able Dishes for Every Day
Ham El-Waylly

Clarkson Potter, March 31

You can always count on Ham El-Waylly, the head chef and culinary partner at Brooklyn’s party-like seafood spot Strange Delight, to offer such a fun, joyful energy in his cooking videos that it’s actually worth a few minutes to stop scrolling. (He often appears with his wife, the recipe developer and cookbook author Sohla El-Waylly.) El-Waylly’s colorful cookbook debut radiates the same sunny, not-too-serious attitude. His first “real job” was as an ESL teacher in Doha, where he was born and raised, while he was studying to be a chemical engineer, a wild tidbit of lore that may help explain why El-Waylly has such an at-ease approach to instruction.

Despite his background as a fine dining chef, El-Waylly’s recipes here are less restaurant, more chef’s-day-off, like store-bought pita brushed with egg whites, sprinkled with everything bagel seasoning, and baked into a crispy, golden snack. (He also turns pita into cinnamon-glazed breakfast cereal.) El-Waylly’s Egyptian, Bolivian, and Qatari background brings a clever perspective to familiar staples, like maple-glazed bacon spiced like basturma, breakfast tacos filled with “ful medames in the style of refried beans,” and shrimp toast “with the soul of lahm bi ajeen.” With ideas like these, who wouldn’t want to cook at home?

Vitamina T: Your Daily Dose of Tacos, Tortas, Tamales, and More Mexican Street Food Classics
Jorge Gaviria and Fermín Núñez with Allegra Ben-Amotz

Should I book a flight to Mexico? That’s what I thought the instant I finished flipping through Vitamina T, a collaboration between Masienda’s Jorge Gaviria and Austin chef Fermín Núñez — of Suerte, Este, and Bar Toti — that traverses Mexico’s wide array of street food. Named for Mexico’s major street food, most of which begin with the letter “t,” the book is broken into six sections: tostadas, tortas, tacos, tamales, “todo lo demás” (everything else), and “toques finales,” final touches. It’s a playful, transportive book that feels like two friends taking you on the tastiest tour of their favorite taquerias (sorry, had to stay on theme) on a sunny day when everyone’s in a good mood; here, you’ll find images of children, construction workers, and even a nun, all beaming because of that delicious Vitamina T.

Cake From Lucie: Recipes and Techniques from the French Countryside to New York City
Lucie Franc de Ferriere

Clarkson Potter, April 14

One of the “it” girls of the cake zeitgeist, Lucie Franc de Ferriere makes much-imitated cakes. Inspired by her upbringing in the French countryside, her cakes are overflowing with lush florals, striking a balance between the natural and the surreal and between maximalism and restraint. Franc de Ferriere has been the face of a very 2020s phenomenon: bakers who tapped into baking during the pandemic after getting laid off, gained traction via social media, and then found such runaway success that they could build successful brick-and-mortar businesses, as with Franc de Ferriere’s hit NYC bakery From Lucie. She traces her path and details her approachable baking philosophy in the romantically photographed Cake From Lucie, offering a treat even for those who can’t visit the shop.

Eating at Home: The Nourishing Practice of Everyday Cooking
Trinity Mouzon Wofford with Rebecca Firkser

Ten Speed Press, April 14

I love a cookbook that gets a little woo-woo about home cooking: the spiritual value of sitting down for a meal, the guiding practice of methodically chopping and stirring, the restorative nature of slowing down to cook and eat in a world that asks for efficiency, and so on. I suspected I’d found this in Eating at Home as soon as I flipped through and saw the rustic, linocut print illustrations, but I knew I had once I started reading. “I wrote this book because of what everyday cooking really feeds us with: connection,” writes Trinity Mouzon Wofford, who runs the wellness brand Golde. I like these books largely because they feel lived-in and not terribly prescriptive, accommodating the amorphous nature of being a real person who cooks every day and sometimes needs a jolt to find the glimmers in it again.

Eating at Home is exactly this, with recipes that occasionally call for “nice to have” but not essential-to-the-dish ingredients and offers ideas for variation. Little touches give staples new life, like dashi whisked into scrambled eggs. (There’s a Japanese influence throughout: Mouzon Wofford’s husband, Issey Kobori, who did the illustrations, is Japanese.) A chapter on “Component Cooking” represents the book’s broader stance; a helpful list offers ways to make two or three of these components into a quick lunch. It’s the kind of cookbook you don’t just read as a set of steps but internalize as a kind of perspective. You’ll like this if you like Tamar Adler.

More Than Sweet: Desserts with Flavor
Marie Frank

I’m a longtime Instagram fan of the pastry chef and recipe developer Marie Frank, whose coupes of ice cream in flavors like genmaicha-roasted banana and black-sesame cocoa have such an appealing sense of unfussy chic, placed next to a window and photographed with little fuss, exuding an air of, “Oh, this little thing? I just whipped it up.” Frank’s More Than Sweet is achievable and welcoming, even for those of us who don’t have plans of getting an ice cream maker, with bakes like plum galette with Sichuan pepper, mirin-pumpkin custard tart, and jasmine-poached rhubarb.

Frank has a knack for making simple bakes more interesting through smartly deployed, complexifying flavors; consider her blackberry-Darjeeling frangipane. It’s a baking book that’ll speak to anyone who calls themselves “not really a sweets person,” or who finds buttercream too cloying and would rather have salted mascarpone and macerated oranges any day. It shares DNA with Camilla Wynne’s Nature’s Candy and Natasha Pickowicz’s More Than Cake — ambitious books that make you look at sweets a little differently.

The Lao Kitchen: Lao Flavors and Stories Told Through Family Recipes
Saeng Douangdara

Ten Speed Press, April 21

“Lao food is not talked about enough,” Saeng Douangdara says at the start of every video in his popular social media series about Lao foodways. The personal chef and cooking instructor has made it his mission to advocate for Lao cuisine; jeow som, a sour dipping sauce made with fish sauce and lime juice that’s often eaten with steak and sticky rice, is not, as so many people have rebranded it, “crack sauce,” he clarifies. The dearth of Lao cookbooks in the American cookbook world is proof of the necessity of Douangdara’s debut, which is full of vivid imagery of street scenes, farms, and more. At the base of many dishes is padaek, an unfiltered fish sauce that Douangdara calls “the liquid gold unique to Lao cuisine.” In The Lao Kitchen, he shines an even brighter light on the bold flavors of Laos, taking them beyond “funky” alone.

Eaterland: Recipes and Stories from Across the United States
Eater, Sarah Zorn, and Missy Frederick

Of course we’re excited about this one: Eater’s second cookbook, Eaterland, taps into our deep network of restaurants, chefs, and local-expert food writers nationwide for a state-spanning homage to the quirky regional dishes that form the backbone of American dining. You’ll learn about the Pacific Northwest’s salmon sinigang; we have the Filipino migrant workers of Alaska’s fish canneries in the early 20th century to thank for that. You’ll finally understand what makes up a proper Denver omelet, with a recipe from Colorado’s Sam’s No. 3, which has been in the game since 1927. You’ll get the secret for how Jerry’s Restaurant in Texas has made chicken-fried steak since the 1930s; in all that time, the recipe hasn’t changed. Eaterland is a road trip without having to get in the car (which is great, because I hate driving).

Aloha Veggies: Veg-Forward Recipes Celebrating the Flavors of Hawai‘i
Alana Kysar

Ten Speed Press, April 28

I cook primarily vegetables at home, and sometimes feel that I have exhausted every possible way to cook a vegetable that already exists in my brain. For these occasions, I welcome Alana Kysar’s newest cookbook, which applies the techniques and flavors of Hawai‘i’s mainstay dishes to vegetables, often with multiple takes on the same dish (e.g., katsu four distinctly different ways). Here, shoyu chicken — to Kysar, the mark of a good Hawaiian plate lunch spot — becomes shoyu cauliflower with chickpeas, or shoyu kabocha with green onion oil and whipped tofu. Loco moco, which features gravy and a fried egg on a burger, is applied to a tofu burger, a black bean-mushroom burger, a breadfruit-white bean burger, and a black lentil burger — there’s a lot to learn here. Hawaiian cuisine is such an interesting and delicious confluence of global influences, and while Spam and mochiko chicken get lots of attention, Kysar proves that cooking only vegetables doesn’t mean having to give up those compelling Hawaiian flavors.

New School Barbecue: Recipes for Next-Level Smoking and Grilling from Austin’s LeRoy and Lewis
Evan LeRoy and Paula Forbes

When Eater Northeast editor Nadia Chaudhury was leaving Austin after more than 11 years of calling it home, she went to LeRoy and Lewis Barbecue for her last dinner. “I love the way that LeRoy perfects traditional barbecue, but then also pushes [the genre] beyond its typical boundaries,” she told me. Thus, it’s kind of a big deal, she says, that Evan LeRoy has now published a cookbook, a comprehensive guide to meat and smokers that he co-wrote with Texas Monthly’s Paula Forbes (an Eater alum). Let this be your guide to transformative brisket (the process of making brisket alone takes up 14 pages), Sichuan beef ribs, the famous L&L burger with “a bark as sturdy as any brisket,” and bacon ribs that “eat like a fatty, sweet, salty pork belly burnt end.” Hungry yet? Get this for the person in your life who just invested in a smoker, and hope to reap the rewards of their impending experimentation.

Spain My Way: Eat, Drink, and Cook Like a Spaniard
José Andrés with Sam Chapple-Sokol

José Andrés’s excitement to be in Spain exudes from the pages of Spain My Way, which brings the acclaimed chef back to the land of his birth. “It is where I learned to cook, learned to eat, and most importantly, learned to love food,” he writes. Spain My Way is a comprehensive resource for anyone who wants a one-stop shop for not only getting into Spanish cooking but also thinking about it creatively. While, yes, you can expect a classic tortilla de patatas recipe here, you’ll also find a tortilla vaga, or “lazy tortilla” that’s cooked on just one side, two ways: topped with potato chips, piparra peppers, and slices of cured morcilla in the style of Madrid chef Sacha Hormaechea; or topped with potato chips, creme fraiche, and caviar in Andrés’s own way. Memories of and reflections on Andrés’s career appear in essays throughout the book. And despite the aforementioned caviar, the recipes are highly accessible, as long as you have a solid purveyor of tinned fish, cured meat, and manchego.

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