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can anyone recommend a cookery book for uni student?

48 replies

ssd · 13/08/2018 22:03

who doesn't really like to cook and will be studying abroad?

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PurpleWithRed · 20/08/2018 09:41

Mob kitchen is about to come as a cookbook, follow them on Facebook, very young and studenty but nice looking food. I liked 5 ingredients too and ministry of food is good - but none are worth having if he is happy to eat cheap pizzas for every meal like my ds was.

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prettybird · 20/08/2018 09:33

Maybe put some "esoteric" ingredients like Worcestershire Sauce or Heinz Tomato Ketchup into his suitcase Wink

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fiddlesticks99 · 20/08/2018 08:58

Have a look at www.mobkitchen.co.uk/

They do short videos of food preparation for students, publish their recipes on their web sites and the recipes are always made with fresh ingredients and carefully budgeted. They have a cookery book launching any moment. They produce new videos constantly and can be followed on instagram for day by day ideas and nudges.

It is all surprisingly good.

I have pre-ordered the book for DS but I expect he will just use the online recipes.

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BackforGood · 20/08/2018 00:23

Both mine took student cookbooks with them, but only ever look on-line when they want recipes. I've seen all their cookbooks on the 'give to charity shop' piles.......

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ssd · 16/08/2018 23:27

yes, I was thinking of writing down some of the recipes I use at home, just hope he can find the ingredients there!

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Hizz · 16/08/2018 10:11

Bunloaf That's exactly what I did for my DC. They used those recipes but never used any of the cookery books they were given.
To be honest I don't use cookery books any more, you can find anything you want to cook online.

ssd uni in Sweden sounds fabulous and if he doesn't like to cook I am sure he can still buy ready meals and junk in Sweden!

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BunloafAndCrumpets · 16/08/2018 09:55

I was thinking about this the other day. When I went to uni my mum bought me a cheap student cookbook with recipes for food we never really ate at home in it. What would've been great would've been if she'd written down some recipes of the stuff we ate at home (I didn't really help with cooking at home, whole other subject!). This would then have been stuff we knew I liked, and felt familiar. I plan to do this for my own children.

Appreciate if in another country then finding the ingredients could be tricky, but you could list potential substitutions for them.

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Mindgone · 16/08/2018 08:50

Another big vote for ‘A Girl Called Jack’ lots of great budget recipes, and a good proportion of them vegan. I use this book a lot, as does student DS.

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sashh · 16/08/2018 08:41

Ok sticky chicken wings. I wrote it down for someone

8 Chicken wings
4 cloves of garlic
1 piece of root ginger, about an inch square
juice of one orange (or 2 lemons)
55 ml soy sauce
55 ml or runny honey
1 teaspoon of chilli powder
salt and pepper

Chop the wings in three and throw away the tips (or use to make stock)

Peel anything that needs peeling, crush/chop anything that needs crushing or chipping and juice the fruit.

Add all crushed, chopped,ingredients to the liquid ingredients to make a marinade.

Bake in a hot oven for 30mins - it also BBQs really well.

Play around with the quantities, I love garlic but you might want to use less, or add a bit of cumin.

ssd

There may not be all the ingredients available but the basics, bread, meat, cheese, milk will be available I'm sure.

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LadyMonicaBaddingham · 15/08/2018 19:43

I lived on roasted chicken wings and sausagemeat stuffing when I was a student. I occasionally pushed the boat out and had corned beef hash.

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ssd · 15/08/2018 19:35

...it's a difficult one...

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ssd · 15/08/2018 19:33

thanks for all replies

not sure if I should buy him one as don't really know if the ingredients will be available in Sweden...

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buttybuttybutthole · 14/08/2018 16:08

yes that sounds amazing, I love chicken wings but usually only eat ones that are pre-made!

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whattimeislove · 14/08/2018 14:33

@Sashh - that sounds nice, can you give rough proportions?

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sashh · 14/08/2018 14:11

buttybuttybutthole

If you like wings make a marinade with orange juice, honey, salt, pepper, garlic, ginger and soy sauce.

Leave the wings in it overnight and bung in the oven for 30 mins.

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Hizz · 14/08/2018 13:50

In the summer before they started uni I taught both of mine to cook half a dozen basic meals they enjoyed eating at home - spag bol, chilli, beef stews, goulash etc.

I then typed up the recipes and they took them with them. They were well used. DC2 became vegetarian soon after starting uni and I adapted many of the recipes to veggie.
I also took them shopping around a supermarket and showed them how to choose the best value and freshest food. It sounds blindingly obvious but they both learnt from it.
DC1 ended up in halls with a group who shared cooking and he gradually became quite adventurous. DC2 didn't bother much and lived on pasta.

They were both given "student" cook books which as far as I can see were never opened....

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mummmy2017 · 14/08/2018 13:35

They will live on frozen meals...

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buttybuttybutthole · 14/08/2018 13:19

Sounds good pretty bird...think I will have to treat myself (to the book and the wings!)

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prettybird · 14/08/2018 13:08

When ds has deigned to share Wink the output from "5 Ingredients" had been good Grin NB: There is an introduction where he also says you need 5 store cupboard ingredients (red wine vinegar, Extra Virgin Olive oil and 3 others) but ds refuses to acknowledge that and insists on just the 5 ingredients in the recipe Confused

The chicken wings in a sticky teriyaki sauce were lovely Smile (once I'd managed to find chicken wings, which was surprisingly difficult Confused: found finally in a Chinese supermarket where I got 8 for the princely sum of 98p Shock)

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sashh · 14/08/2018 12:29

Another vote for Delia Smith, I hate her recipes personally but they are so precise it is hard to go wrong. There is an old book of hers, 'One is fun' that gives recipes for an individual, most recipe books have portions for 4.

I gave my copy to a VI form student who was moving from foster care to her own flat age 16.

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Au79 · 14/08/2018 12:28

Any super simple vegan offerings? Dd has taken zero interest in learning from me and is out at work all the time this summer. I used to have vegetarian ones back in the day but they are all loaded with cheese and eggs - don’t know why is was such a big deal being vegetarian back then, that’s nothing compared to what I try to cope with now with my fuss-arse family, one vegan, 2 with (different) allergies, and just plain fussy.

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Nacreous · 14/08/2018 11:38

I liked Sam Stern, and I also really like ministry of food - I’ve had some great recipes from there. I have more than an entire shelf of books though...

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LooseHipsWobbleShips · 14/08/2018 11:36

DS has Nosh for Students too. Really good, easy recipes. There is a vegetarian version and two others in the series. We use it at home in the holidays too for simple recipes.

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buttybuttybutthole · 14/08/2018 11:03

Is 5 ingredients any good? I am a bit of a cook book fiend and this one has passed me by!

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blondeemily · 14/08/2018 10:53

Student Grub by Jan Arkless

Very simple and cheap recipes that even a clueless teenage me managed!

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