Baking
There's some debate about cupcakes' continued domination. Ryland, Peters & Small says the trend is "far from over" and is rolling out Holiday Cupcakes and A Zombie Ate My Cupcake this month. But hot on cupcakes' heels are Cake Pops (Chronicle, Sept.), Mini-Cakes: Tiny Treats to Surprise & Delight (Sterling, Aug.), and Macarons: Authentic French Cookie Recipes That You Can Make at Home (Ulysses, Oct.). Subcategories of baking range from chick lit (The Happy Baker: A Girl's Guide to Emotional Baking, Harlequin, Oct., and Sweet Chic: Stylish Treats to Dress Up for Any Occasion, Ballantine, Oct.) to tomes from A-list bakeries like Boston's Flour (Flour: A Baker's Collection of Spectacular Recipes, Chronicle, Oct.) San Francisco's Tartine (Tartine Bread, Chronicle, Sept.), and New York City's Fat Witch (Fat Witch Brownies: Brownies, Blondies, and Bars from New York's Legendary Fat Witch Bakery, Rodale, Sept.). Finally, cookie exchanges are enjoying a resurgence, with multiple books on the topic coming this fall. Best of the bunch? Workman's Cookie Swap (Oct.).
Vegan
Canning and Preserving
Geek Chic
Before there was Alton Brown, there was Harold McGee. The award-winning author of On Food and Cooking is back with Keys to Good Cooking: A Guide to Making the Best of Foods and Recipes (Penguin Press, Oct.). This fall, McGee will be joined by Ideas in Food: Great Recipes and Why They Work (Clarkson Potter, Oct.) and How Baking Works: Exploring the Fundamentals of Baking Science, Third Edition (Wiley, Nov.). We're also psyched for Kenji Alt's The Food Lab: Better Home Cooking Through Science, though Norton's not publishing it until fall 2011.
Next: still more trends in fall cookbooks: seasonal focus, more and less meat, Americana appeal, Italian grandmothers, and more. Click here to continue...