Field Guide to Cookies by Anita Chu
Two years ago, I discovered a blog called Dessert First, a beautiful and really cool blog about baking. I noticed, because I was especially interested in this blog, that the author was really fascinating: she went to pastry school in the evenings after work and after graduation, she eventually quit her job to work in a bakery-- one in Oakland that I had been meaning to visit. Not only that, but she lived in San Francisco and she had a Chinese last name. I felt a connection, though I realized that just because someone bakes, lives in San Francisco and is Chinese does not make one a kindred spirit. It's silly, but I had this vague idea that if I commented on her blog often enough, she would notice me among her hundreds (hundreds!) of other followers and we would become friends. Just like that. Of course that didn't happen.A year later, I was taking an online writing workshop in feature article writing. One of our assignments was to write a profile of someone we did not know. That meant coming out of our comfort zone to ask someone we didn't know for an interview and then writing the piece. I thought that this would be the perfect excuse to meet this blogger, named Anita. And the perfect excuse to push me out of my comfort zone.
Since Anita is a very nice person, she agreed to meet me at a bakery for the interview, and we talked and ate and drank hot cocoa for about an hour. During that time, she mostly talked about herself, but I also said I was interested in baking and offered to share my lovely, big kitchen for any baking projects she had. She said she was baking out of a postage-stamp-sized apartment kitchen. I also offered to help her get information from Ten Speed Press about submissions, since I have friends there. We did that whole, "yeah, we should get together sometime" thing.
But I was persistent for once in my life. I made it happen. After a few months of email correspondence, we eventually spent a Sunday in my kitchen making cinnamon rolls and lemon bars. Then, I invited her along with me to go the Cheese School of San Francisco class I had been wanting to attend. I was being proactive!
Soon after that, Anita emailed to ask for advice. She had been approached by a publishing company to write a cookie cookbook, and I helped her negotiate her contract. Since the contract had a completely unreasonable deadline, she enlisted three of her friends to help test the recipes. Thus, I spent several months last year baking cookies and feeding my happy friends. Many, many happy friends. The book is Field Guide to Cookies, and came out last winter.
The pocket-sized volume is a brick packed with 100 cookie recipes from around the world, each with a short historical explanation and background information. It's really quite comprehensive, which is surprising for a cookie cookbook. A full-color section in the middle shows pictures of each cookie, and there are several photographs of cookies that I baked, packed in a shoebox, and handed over to Anita, who brought them on a plane to Philadelphia for the photo shoot! If you have a copy, check out the molasses spice cookies and linzer cookies. I made those!
Since she did such a great job on that book, Anita's publisher has asked her to do another Field Guide book for them. This one on candy. When she told me, I immediately offered to help test recipes again! And, well, that's another blog post entirely.
Field Guide to Cookies by Anita Chu
