Spin-Off Cookbook - TV Tropes
- ️Sat Oct 12 2019
This entry is trivia, which is cool and all, but not a trope. On a work, it goes on the Trivia tab.
It was either that or write a novelty cookbook.
If you have a popular work of fiction, you probably have The Merch: adaptations and action figures and shirts and collector's editions and so on. What else will people buy?
A cookbook or recipe book is one option, especially, but not necessarily, if the franchise is known for Food Porn or set in a food related location. The book may or may not be "in-universe"; that is a cookbook that exists in the setting. (If it is, there may be some explanation for why it uses real world measurements and ingredients — especially if the setting is known for Foreign Queasine.) An Edutainment Show will also want to take this opportunity to talk to the kids in the audience about healthy eating, possibly in a Very Special Episode about avoiding wicked junk food.
Sometimes, the cookery book is officially published by the makers of the franchise, or it can be fan-made. If it's fan-made, it's likely to focus on replicating specific meals depicted in the story. In either case it might be a well-designed and thoughtful book that's interesting even to read, or it might be a lazy cash-grab that's just a normal cookbook with fiction-themed recipe names.
There is also a subset of Parody cookbooks with funny parallel Pun Based Titles. They make fun both of the original work and cookbooks in general. The recipe names will most likely be punning, too. If they aren't officially licensed the authors will need legal advice on how to be able to refer to a copyrighted media property without having the license. In some jurisdictions, if you are parodying work X, you don't need permission from the copyright holders of work X.
Sometimes, a recipe or two might appear in the work's tie-in magazine, rather than on a separate cookbook.
Examples:
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Anime & Manga
- Food Wars!, being about cooking, naturally has one: the Tōtsuki Academy Challenge Plate: Shokugeki no Soma Official Recipe Book.
- In 2012, One Piece got one
based (mostly) on the work of in-series Supreme Chef Sanji. As a bonus, the last chapter catalogs what Eiichiro Oda eats during a typical workday. The book would see an American release in 2021, nine years after Japan got it.
- Witch Hat Atelier has a cooking spin-off called "Witch Hat Kitchen." Though the ingredients are fantastical stand-ins for real life produce and the cooking methods involve magic to heat and cool the dishes, the recipes are laid out with step-by-step instructions for creating dishes like pudding, scrambled egg sandwiches, apple tarts, seafood pasta, and sangria.
Comic Books
- The DC Comics Superheroes Super Healthy Cookbook by Mark Salzman, Judy Garlan and Michele Grodner came out in the 1970s. More or less in-universe, with recipes like Perry White's Great Caesar Salad (with tomato and cucumber Daily Planet logos). More recently, there was The Official DC Super Hero Cookbook, which included recipes like Hawkman's Favorite Crispy Chicken, Aquaman's Ice Cream Float, and a Man of Steel Burger.
- Stan Lee Presents the Mighty Marvel Superhero Cookbook, with such gems as "make some pancakes and put syrup over them in the shape of Spider-Man's webbing" and "put some meat between slices of bread" as actual recipes.
- Spider-Man got his own novelty cookbook in 2024, including recipes
like Miles Morales's Arañitas, Aunt May's wheatcakes, and Silk's bulgogi.
- A long-running series of books released in Italy starting from the late Sixties based on Disney Mouse and Duck Comics (which among other things featured a Defictionalization of the Junior Woodchuck's Guidebook) featured Grandma Duck's cookbook.
- In 1992, there was also a Cooking with Asterix cookbook, with Marie-Christine Crabos as the author and, you guessed it, Albert Uderzo as the illustrator.
Comic Strips
- Maw Broon's Cookbook is based on The Broons.
- Maxine's Just Desserts (Stuff Too Good to Feed the Relatives), based on Crabby Road.
- The Peanuts franchise has Peanuts Cookbook and Peanuts Lunchtime Cookbook, both of which features Peanuts reprint on even pages followed by a recipe on odd pages.
Films –- Animation
- Alice in Wonderland: The Official Cookbook by Elena Craig and S.T. Bende is based on Disney's adaptation of the story.
- Coco: The Official Cookbook by Gino Garcia is a book of authentic Mexican recipes themed to the movie.
- The Disney Animated Canon has various spinoff cookbooks, such as Disney Recipes: From Animation to Inspiration, Enchanted Recipes, The Disney Villains Cookbook, and Cooking with Magic: A Century of Recipes, among others.
- Besides the above examples, the Disney Princess franchise has also produced several cookbooks, including The Disney Princess Cookbook, Disney Princess Baking, Disney Princess Tea Party and Disney Princess Healthy Treats, and two specifically themed to The Princess and the Frog: The Princess and the Frog Cookbook and Tiana's Cookbook.
- A Kuzco Kitchen: The Emperor's New Groove Cookbook is another unofficial Disney spinoff.
- Frozen (2013) has four spinoff cookbooks so far. The first three were Frozen Cookbook & Cookie Cutters Kit (mostly recipes for baked goods and desserts), the Frozen Treats Cookbook (recipes for ice cream, popsicles and such), and Anna's Best Breakfast Cookbook. A more ambitious cookbook, Frozen: The Official Cookbook: The Tastes of Arendelle, was released in October of 2024, and features authentic Scandinavian recipes.
- Lilo & Stitch received an official cookbook simply titled Lilo & Stitch: The Official Cookbook on May 23, 2023. It features recipes based on the film's Hawaiian setting, some of which are given "an extraterrestrial twist" and names after the various characters and elements from the film (and some of the sequel material).
- The Nightmare Before Christmas has no less than three spinoff cookbooks: Nightmare Before Christmas Cookbook, The Nightmare Before Christmas: The Official Cookbook and Entertaining Guide, and The Nightmare Before Christmas: The Official Baking Cookbook. There's also Zach Neil's The Nightmare Before Dinner, which is themed to all the works of Tim Burton.
- Turning Red got an unofficial cookbook by Kolby Moore subtitled "Eating Like a Red Panda!".
Films -– Live-Action
- Babe's Country Cookbook by Dewey Gram is a book of vegetarian recipes, all supposedly from Supreme Chef Esme Hoggett's kitchen.
- Back to the Future: The Official Hill Valley Cookbook features "Recipes from the Past, Present, and Future!"
- Beetlejuice (1988) has inspired The Unofficial Beetlejuice! Beetlejuice! Beetlejuice! Cookbook by Thea James and Isabel Minunni, which features creepy recipes appropriate for Halloween parties.
- Hocus Pocus has two spinoff cookbooks: Hocus Pocus: The Official Cookbook by Elena Craig and S.T. Bende, and The Unofficial Hocus Pocus Cookbook by Bridget Thoreson.
- The Unofficial Home Alone Cookbook by Brunton Taylor is subtitled "Delicious Recipes to Enjoy With (and Without) the Family" and "From a 'Lovely' Cheese Pizza to a 'Highly Nutritious' Mac and Cheese Dinner, Tasty Meals Inspired by a Holiday Classic."
- It's a Wonderful Life has three spinoff cookbooks of Christmas recipes and foods or drinks that appear in the film: It's a Wonderful Life Cookbook, It's a Wonderful Life: The Official Bailey Family Cookbook, and Zuzu Bailey's It's a Wonderful Life Cookbook, co-authored by Zuzu's actress Karolyn Grimes.
- The Princess Bride has The Princess Bride: The Official Cookbook by Jenn Fujikawa, and The Unofficial Princess Bride Cookbook by Cassandra Reeder.
- Star Wars cookbooks include Star Wars: The Ultimate Cookbook, Star Wars: Galactic Baking, and the holiday-themed Star Wars: The Life Day Cookbook.
- The Wizard of Oz is another film with two cookbooks: The Wizard of Oz: The Official Cookbook and The Wizard of Oz Cookbook: Breakfast in Kansas, Dessert in Oz.
Literature
- From A Song of Ice and Fire, there is A Feast of Ice And Fire, the official cookbook. It features both authentic medieval recipes and modern recipes for the various foods mentioned in the books.
- Agatha Christie's mysteries have inspired the cookbook Recipes for Murder by Karen Pierce.
- American Girl has a number of cookbooks inspired by their characters, with recipes from various historical or contemporary eras the characters' stories took place.
- The Anne of Green Gables Cookbook by Kate Macdonald features food and drinks that are mentioned in the books, as well as recipes from author L.M. Montgomery's own kitchen.
- Patrick O'Brian's Aubrey-Maturin novels gave rise to Lobscouse and Spotted Dog, a highly entertaining & authentic cookbook full of Napoleonic-era recipes (and of clues as to why Jack Aubrey had trouble keeping the pounds off!).
- Several based on the works of Beatrix Potter:
- Peter Rabbit's Natural Foods Cookbook by Arnold Dobrin has recipes named after the characters but not especially based on the books.
- Peter Rabbit's Cookery Book by Anne Emerson, based directly on the food in the books (although the introduction reassures readers that Jeremy Fisher's Butterfly Sandwiches do not contain butterflies and Samuel Whiskers' Roly Poly Pudding doesn't contain Tom Kitten).
- The Peter Rabbit and Friends Cookbook by Naia Bray.
- The Boxcar Children Cookbook, featuring recipes from the original nineteen books.
- Charles Dickens' books have inspired the cookbooks Dinner with Dickens and Christmas with Dickens, both by Pen Volger, The Charles Dickens Cookbook by Brenda Marshall, and a book of drink recipes, Drinking with Dickens, by the writer's own great-grandson Cedric Dickens.
- There are also two cookbooks themed specifically to A Christmas Carol for the holidays – A Christmas Carol: A Book-to-Table Classic (an edition of the novel with recipes at the end of each chapter) and Mary Cratchit's Recipes.
- The Cozy Mystery genre in general tends to attach recipes to the ends of books, which sometimes end in full cookbooks. Hannah Swensen, The Cat Who... Series and Mrs. Murphy Mysteries are just a few of the many series with cookbooks attached, and there's collaborations featuring multiple authors like The Cozy Cookbook
or Cozy Food
.
- Nanny Ogg's Cookbook by Terry Pratchett, Stephen Briggs and Tina Hannan (Discworld). Largely in-universe, with extra-diagetic "Editor's Notes" about the need to substitute Roundworld measurements and utensils. It's also noted that some recipes have been adjusted to provide "the look but not the taste", including the whole section on dwarfish cooking.
- Encyclopedia Brown Takes The Cake! follows each of its cases with a set of recipes.
- Fifty Shades of Chicken is a parody in a cookbook, spoofing Fifty Shades of Grey. Fifty chicken recipes, each more seductive than the last. This book will have you dominating dinner.
- Harry Potter has an Official Cookbook, Baking Book, and Christmas Cookbook, as well as various fanmade cookbooks, including the Unofficial Cookbook
, College Cookbook, Vegan Cookbook, and Book of Cocktails.
- The Hunger Games has an unofficial cookbook
.
- Jane Austen's novels got The Jane Austen Cookbook by Maggie Black and Dierdre Le Fay. It describes Austen's interest in food, drawing upon both the novels and her letters. It has authentic recipes from late Georgian and Regency England, modernized for today's cooks.
- Other Austen-inspired cookbooks include Tea with Jane Austen by Pen Volger and Jane Austen's Table by Robert Tuesley Anderson.
- Patricia Cornwell has actually written two of these for the Kay Scarpetta novels. The first was a novella called Scarpetta's Winter Table which is actually a mystery in which food plays a large part; the recipes for the meals that feature in the story are detailed on separate pages. A more straightforward example is the recipe book Food to Die For: Secrets from Kay Scarpetta's Kitchen which was published a few years later.
- Two books based on Little House on the Prairie: The Little House Cookbook, which gives recipes for meals mentioned in the books, and The Laura Ingalls Wilder Country Cookbook, which is from her actual recipe notes. Sadly, neither has the recipe for Laura's pieplant pie.
- There are no less than three Little Women' cookbooks that feature 19th century New England-style comfort food: two books just titled The Little Women Cookbook, one by Wini Moranville and another by Jenne Bergstrom and Miko Osada, and another titled Marching to the Table: The Little Women Cookbook, by Autumn Rosewood.
- Mary Poppins in the Kitchen: A Cookery Book with a Story by PL Travers. As the title suggests, this one has a story, in which Mary teaches the Banks kids to cook.
- Balsa's Table is a collection of recipes for meals mentioned in the Moribito and The Beast Player series.
- The Nero Wolfe Cookbook is a collection of recipes for dishes served in the novels.
- Outlander Kitchen: The Official Outlander Companion Cookbook and its sequel Outlander Kitchen: To The New World and Back Again by Theresa Carle-Sanders, which feature "historical, contemporary, and character-inspired dishes from Diana Gabaldon's Outlander universe".
- The Pooh Cook Book, "inspired by" Winnie-the-Pooh and The House at Pooh Corner by A. A. Milne.
- The Redwall Cookbook contains recipes for many of the foods Brian Jacques describes (in mouth-watering detail) in his Redwall novels. The recipes are framed by and featured in a short story about Sister Pansy, a young mouse who works in the Redwall kitchens.
- Roald Dahl's Revolting Recipes feature recipes for the various foods featured in Dahl's books (i.e. snozzcumbers and frobscottle from The BFG, several of Willy Wonka's creations, the chocolate cake eaten by Bruce Bogtrotter in Matilda, etc.)
- The Secret Garden Cookbook by Amy Cotler features Victorian British and Indian recipes.
- The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Cookbook by Monica Bayley features such recipes as "Aunt Em's Chicken and Dumplings" and "Toto's Chocolate Almond Bark."
Live-Action TV
- The Andy Griffith Show has Aunt Bee's Mayberry Cookbook, by Ken Beck and Jim Clark.
- Dining on Babylon 5 by Stephen C. Smith which actually appeared in the series. Compiled by the owner of B5's Fresh Air Restaurant and with contributions from all the main station personnel (with a note explaining the alien recipes have been adjusted to suit human biology).
- Blue Bloods:The Blue Bloods Cookbook, a collection of Irish type dishes that one could imagine being at the Reagans table, written by series star Bridget Monyahan.
- Alice's Brady Bunch Cookbook by Ann B. Davis. This was the actress who played Alice, the Bradys' housekeeper (and cook) on The Brady Bunch.
- Baking Bad is parody cookbook based off Breaking Bad.
- Bridgerton has inspired three unofficial cookbooks The Unofficial Bridgerton Cookbook, The Unofficial Bidgerton Book of Afternoon Tea, and Teatime at Grosvenor Square: An Unofficial Cookbook for Fans of Bridgerton.
- Call the Midwife: The Official Cookbook by Annie Gray features classic British fare and recipes inspired by the show.
- The Crown Cookbook: Recipes Fit for a Queen by Kolby Moore consists of thirty recipes loved by the British royal family.
- Dae Jang Geum's adviser of Korean Royal Court Cuisine, Han Bok-ryeo wrote two books based on the historical show:
- 집에서 만드는 궁중음식 (Royal Cuisine Made At Home)
- 대장금 요리책 전체, with official English version: Jewel in the Palace - Royal Cuisine from Old Korea
- Cooking with Days of Our Lives'' by Paulette Cohn and Dotty Griffith is inspired by the popular Soap Opera.
- Doctor Who:
- The Doctor Who Cookbook by Gary Downie. Recipes were submitted by actors from the show and given Doctor Who inspired names like Castrovalvan Kebabs.
- A second official cookbook came out in 2016, by professional cookery writer Joanna Farrow.
- Game of Thrones has inspired several cookbooks:
- The Unofficial Game of Thrones Cookbook by Alan Kistler.
- Feast of the Dragon is an unofficial cookbook themed to both Game of Thrones and House of the Dragon.
- Game of Scones: All Men Must Dine is a parody cookery book with baking recipes. It's full of Game of Thrones memes like 'Arya Hungry?' or 'Dinner is Coming'. There are recipes for stuff like Red (Velvet) Wedding Cake or Oberyn's Smashing Head Surprise.
- There's also A Feast of Ice and Fire, based on the original book series. (See under "Literature.")
- Mary Ann's Gilligan's Island Cookbook was written by Dawn Wells (who played Mary Ann), Ken Beck, Jim Clark and had a foreword from Bob Denver (who played Gilligan). It had a lot of coconut pie recipes.
- Gilmore Girls has an unofficial cookbook Eat Like a Gilmore, particularly interesting because the main characters are most known for eating out or ordering in, but their rich family are gourmets and their close friends are excellent cooks.
- There's at least four spin-off cookbooks for The Great British Bake Off, all specializing in, what a surprise, baked goods.
- Hannibal has Feeding Hannibal: a Connoisseur's Cookbook, written by the show's food stylist Janice Poon. It contains behind-the-scenes stories behind the creation of the show's Food Porn / Food Gorn as well as recipes to create (human-free) variations of Hannibal Lecter's dishes.
- The I Love Lucy Cookbook by Jenn Fujikawa features classic 1950s-style recipes inspired by the sitcom.
- M*A*S*H got one in the form of "Secrets of The M*A*S*H Mess", written by actor Jeff Maxwell in character as gormless 4077th hash-slinger and orderly Private Igor Stamimsky. The book includes M*A*S*H-themed dishes, most named with a pun (such as "Operation Oatmeal" or "The Battle of Burgoo" or "P'anmunjombalaya") or a Shout-Out to an episode(such as "River of Liver"note or "Sorry 'Bout That, Father Creamed Corn"note or "M*A*S*H Liver Tartare" note ).
- Northern Exposure had an official cookbook, with recipes for foods that had appeared on the series, from Hollin's Cream Pie to Chris's "Mia Culpa Three-Bean Salad" to Adam's Pumpkin Ravioli. The recipes featured comments attributed to the series characters, with introductions by Maurice and Ruth Ann; according to her introduction Ruth Ann and Maggie came up with the idea of putting together an official Cecily cookbook to raise funds for a statue of town founders Cecily and Rosalyn.
- Red Dwarf has "The Abso-smegging-lutely Unofficial Red Dwarf Cookbook", which is filled with recipes based off of meals which appeared on the show such as the fried egg-chili sauce-chutney sandwich.
- Star Trek:
- The Official Star Trek Cooking Manual by Mary Ann Piccard. In-universe, the personal cooking log of Christine Chapel.
- The Star Trek Cookbook by Ethan Phillips and William J. Birnes. In-universe, written as if by Neelix.
- The Late Show with David Letterman:
- Home Cookin' with Dave's Mom, written by Dave's mom Dorothy.
- Dave Letterman's Book of Top Ten Lists and Zesty Chicken Recipes.
- The Walking Dead:
- The Walking Dead: The Official Cookbook and Survival Guide is a cookbook based off the television series.
- The Snacking Dead: A Parody in a Cookbook is a parody cookbook filled with recipes for snacks suited for every occasion and it has tips for cooking under duress — fitting for a zombie apocalypse.
- Stranger Fillings is a parody cookbook based on a Netflix's hit show Stranger Things, filled with punningly-named baked treats.
- Supernatural has Supernatural: The Official Cookbook: Burgers, Pies, and Other Bites from the Road, by Julie Tremaine (who, interestingly enough, isn't in Team Sam or Team Dean... she's in Team Castiel). It consists of recipes of the foods based from the series.
- Wheel of Fortune, of all shows, has its own official cookbook. Many of the foods have punny names based on the show, and a few recipes were even submitted by former contestants.
Professional Wrestling
- The WWE has had several:
- J. R.'s Cookbook: True Ringside Tales, BBQ, and Down-Home Recipes featured recipes mostly submitted by Jim Ross himself.
- Can You Take the Heat? The WWF is Cooking! from 2000 featured recipes themed to the then-current members of the roster (some of which were allegedly submitted by those wrestlers in question), such as Big Boss Man's Pepper Steak (also including a joke recipe based on the storyline it's referencing), the Hardy Boyz' Chicken-Fried Steak, and Al Snow Peas. The desert section included such recipes as Viscera's No-Bake Cookies, Big Boss Man's Refrigerated Dough Cookies (which were infamously just instructions for preparing standard cookie dough), and The Godfather's "Makin' Chocolate Pie Is Easy" Recipe.
Puppet Shows
- Sesame Street:
- The Sesame Street Cookbook by Pat Tornborg
- C is for Cooking and B is for Baking by Susan McQuillan
- Cookie Monster's Foodie Truck: A Sesame Street Celebration of Food by Heather E. Schwartz
- The Muppets had In the Kitchen with Miss Piggy by Jim Lewis, a collection of recipes submitted by celebrities with commentary by Piggy.
Tabletop Games
- Battletech has The Tales from the Cracked Canopy Cookbook, a stretch goal for the Mercenaries Kickstarter campaign. The title is a reference to a ongoing series of short stories that appear in Shrapnel, the official Battletech magazine.
- Candy Land: The Official Cookbook by Kristy Richardson has all sorts of sweet recipes inspired by the board game.
- The Unofficial Cyberpunk Cookbook: Food From The Dark Future of Night City. Its recipes are much simpler than average, fitting the Future Food Is Artificial nature of the setting, though they're still above what most Night Citizens get.
- Heroes' Feast: The Official Dungeons & Dragons Cookbook. Divided into recipes from the cultures of Human, Elf, Dwarf, Halfling and Other, with notes about how more human-palatable or readily available ingredients have been substituted (especially in the Other section, where some recipes involve sapient beings).
- In World of Darkness, both Werewolf: The Apocalypse and Mage: The Ascension received official cookbooks.
Theme Parks
- Disney Theme Parks have several official and unofficial cookbooks for fans who want to make the food they ate at the in-park restaurants at home:
- The Official Disney Parks Cookbook features recipes from multiple parks.
- Delicious Disney: Disneyland and Delicious Disney: Walt Disney World feature recipes exclusively from California and Florida, respectively.
- Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge has an official cookbook too, titled Star Wars: Galaxy's Edge: The Official Black Spire Outpost Cookbook.
- Books not released by Disney include The Unofficial Disney Parks Cookbook, The Unofficial Disney Parks Restaurant Cookbook, The Unofficial Disney Parks Drink Recipe Book, and The Unofficial Disney Parks EPCOT Cookbook.
- Dollywood has The Unofficial Dollywood Cookbook by Erin K. Browne.
Video Games
- Angry Birds: Bad Piggies' Egg Recipes is, as the title makes clear, an Angry Birds-themed cookbook where the key ingredient is eggs.
- The Kickstarter backers of Pillars of Eternity received a special PDF cookbook containing recipes of some of the staples of Dyrwoodian (the country the game is set in) cuisine.
- The Elder Scrolls: The Official Cookbook, by Chelsea Monroe-Cassel, includes recipes based on in-game food (particularly from The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim) and on the lore of the series. In case you're wondering: yes, there's a recipe
for skooma (it doesn't include cocaine).
- Fallout: The Vault Dweller's Official Cookbook by Victoria Rosenthal is the official cookbook for the Fallout series.
- Even though Today's Menu for the Emiya Family is a Slice of Life spinoff of Fate/stay night, the cooking scenes dives into the territory of this trope, with Shirou Emiya explaining steps on cooking.
- That's It! The Unofficial FFXV Cookbook
is a fan project to adapt and compile all the "Recipah's" from Final Fantasy XV. With the game having such intense focus on food (to the point that the dev team spent time camping and cooking just to see what could and couldn't be realistically made) it was a no-brainer.
- Horizon has The Official Horizon Cookbook: Tastes of the Seven Tribes, an in-universe journal of the chef Milduf as he travels the various lands explored in the franchise and studies their cooking.
- Mass Effect has an "Official Cocktail Book'' based around alcohol and light snacks.
- Mother's Cookbook
is inspired by EarthBound (1994) and Mother 3. In addition to defictionalizations of the games' food such as Mach Pizza, there are recipes inspired by the characters, dialogue, attacks, and settings from the games, such as "Lier X. Agerate's Roasted Garlic Bread". Even foods that were changed by EarthBound's localization are featured.
- Overwatch has an officially-licensed cookbook
featuring recipes from the homelands of the game's multinational cast.
- Papa's Cook Book
is a section on the official Flipline Studios blog that has various recipes of foods from the Papa Louie Arcade series such as Blazeberry Wings and Romano Quartet Pizza.
- The Official Stardew Valley Cookbook. Most recipes are named after in-game ones, and some pages mimic in-game text boxes.
- World of Warcraft: The Official Cookbook and its sequel New Flavors of Azeroth, both also by Chelsea Monroe-Cassel, feature recipes inspired by the game from across the realm of Azeroth.
Web Animation
- Bee and Puppycat has one subtitled "Easy Eats", and focuses on recipes featured in the show, as well as some of Bee's favorite foods.
Web Videos
- How To Cook The Victorian Way is a spin-off cookbook for The Victorian Way. It is a guide to the life, times and tastes of Mrs Crocombe, a Victorian cook. Her historical cookery videos have millions of views and fans have been asking for a cookery book since the beginning of the series. It showcases recipes from real Mrs Crocombe's own hand-written book alongside other recipes of the Victorian period.
- Tasting History with Max Miller is a Youtube series based on recreating and trying out historical dishes from various time periods. Its official cookbook is Tasting History:Explore the Past through 4000 Years of Recipes, with each recipe sorted by date and place and with a small essay next to it on its historical significance.
- B. Dylan Hollis is a TikTok and YouTube creator who tries out vintage recipes to see if they really are as terrible as they sound or not. His cookbook, Baking Yesteryear, is a collection of his favorites from the 1900s to the 1980s, and he has a Running Gag on his show of sneaking plugs for it into unexpected places.
Western Animation
- Adventure Time has 'Adventure Time: The Official Cookbook, and the unofficial cookbook Eating Ooo.
- Avatar: The Last Airbender has an official cookbook, simply titled Avatar: The Last Airbender: The Official Cookbook, featuring recipes for food mentioned in the show, but with real-world ingredients.
- Bluey got a tie-in cookbook called "Bluey and Bingo's Fancy Restaurant Cookbook", which defictionalizes recipes seen in the show.
- Bob's Burgers has "The Bob's Burgers Burger Book: Real Recipes for Joke Burgers".
- Daniel Tiger's Neighborhood has "The Official Daniel Tiger Cookbook", which features recipes both inspired by foods seen in the show and inspired by the series.
- The Simpsons has The Unofficial Simpsons Cookbook. It includes recipes based on episodes of the show.
- The Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles Pizza Cookbook by Peggy Paul Casella is based on Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1987).
- Tasty Time with ZeFronk: "Tasty Recipes" was a printable book based on the show that was available on the Playhouse Disney website.
In-Universe
- Binging with Babish is a YouTube channel devoted to recreating meals from various fictional media. Naturally, he ended up making his own cookbook with these various recipes in it.
- Many celebrities publish a branded cookbook, especially women for image reasons. If the book's from a celebrity chef it's likely to have some quality, but if they're just an actress or something, you can expect generic recipes with shaky personal anecdotes.
- Australian Cricketer Matthew Hayden once had one of his recipes published in a celebrity cookbook. He recalls an English fan telling him, "You're shit, Hayden, and so is your chicken casserole!"
- American Football defensive end Jared Allen released a cookbook mostly of game recipes entitled The Quarterback Killer's Cookbook.
- The Garbage Pail Kids trading cards received their own cookbook in September 2022, consisting of the Kids providing recipes for gross-looking food.