Kids’ cookbooks stir the imagination of junior chefs

Priya Krishna’s childhood reads like a dream. Her mother worked in the airline industry, and Priya and her sister grew up traveling the globe with their parents. By the time she was a teenager, she had explored the pyramids of Giza in Egypt, climbed to the top of the Eiffel Tower in France, fished for piranhas in the Amazon rainforest, and sandboarded across dunes in the Sahara Desert in Morocco. She also ate dumplings in China, pozole in Mexico, silky smooth hummus in Egypt, paper-thin crepes in France.

Her globe-trotting, street-food-sampling childhood not only informed Krishna’s career – she’s a food reporter and bestselling cookbook author – but also inspired a fun and energetic children’s cookbook that has quickly become one of my kids’ favorites.

Priya’s Kitchen Adventures: A Cookbook for Kids takes kids on a culinary journey to 12 countries – including Greece, Mexico, France, Peru, Morocco, and Japan – and offers a collection of easy takes on iconic dishes like spanakopita, fried rice, vegetable tagine, and miso ramen. Helpfully, recipes are marked easy, medium, or hard. Krishna breaks down more complex recipes, like pork and chive dumplings, pear and Gorgonzola ravioli, and tarte aux pommes, into clearly written steps illustrated with photos of the process to guide more adventurous junior chefs.

Why We Wrote This

Culinary adventures await in the family kitchen, where kids can learn the basics and be inspired by a quartet of helpful cookbooks. Our reviewer and her children share their favorites.

Our copy of this book, which has sprouted a thick crop of bookmarks to earmark must-try recipes, often keeps my 9-year-old company as he pores over descriptions of far-flung places and international recipes. It has also inspired lively conversations with visiting cousins debating favorite countries to visit and cuisines to sample.

Krishna’s fried rice was easy enough for my kids and me to throw together one recent weekday for lunch, and their enjoyment of it was heightened by the fact that they mostly cooked it themselves. We regularly enjoy crepes with strawberries and Nutella for a special weekend breakfast, and I can’t wait to try the mousse au chocolat, which contains just dark chocolate chips and heavy cream – and looks like a dream.

I’m skeptical of celebrity cookbooks, but David Atherton’s Baking Book for Kids by the winner of the “Great British Baking Show” stole my and my kids’ hearts. I loved Harry Woodgate’s endlessly charming and cozy illustrations that tempted me to tie on an apron and get baking: a little girl curled up on a sofa, dipping her biscuit in a cup of cocoa; a trio of friends lying on a picnic blanket, gazing at the clouds while they munch on spring rolls; a pair of friends enjoying a tea party with their stuffed animals while they pour pretend tea and sample peanut butter-and-jam sandwich cookies. My son noticed and appreciated that the illustrations included children with disabilities joining in the baking fun.

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