Los Angeles Times

The essential cookbooks to send to school with your kid

If you have kids and appreciate cooking, cookbooks and the idea that your offspring might creditably cook their own meals someday, their bookshelves will likely include some cookbook juvenilia. Alice Waters' "Fanny at Chez Panisse: A Child's Restaurant Adventures With 46 Recipes," say, or Mollie Katzen's "Pretend Soup and Other Real Recipes: A Cookbook for Preschoolers & Up." Depending on your tastes, and those of your kid, you may have tried "The Unofficial Harry Potter Cookbook," or to backtrack, "My Very First Book of

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times6 min read
California In A Jam After Borrowing Billions To Pay Unemployment Benefits
California's massive budget deficit, coupled with the state's relatively high level of joblessness, has become a major barrier to reducing the billions of dollars of debt it has incurred to pay unemployment benefits. The surge in unemployment brought
Los Angeles Times8 min read
Free Speech, Campus Safety Collide In USC's Cancellation Of Valedictorian Speech
LOS ANGELES — Five months ago, USC cited safety as a rationale for banning economics professor John Strauss, who is Jewish, from campus after student activists said they felt threatened when he approached them at a protest and said "Hamas are murdere
Los Angeles Times4 min readAmerican Government
Commentary: Don’t Want Biden Or Trump To Have So Much Power? Maybe The US Needs A Poly-presidency
At the Constitutional Convention in 1787, Pennsylvania delegate James Wilson brought up a seemingly un-American idea. He said the executive branch of America’s government should be headed by a single person: a president. Several constitutional delega

Related