Nigella Lawson

Nigella Lawson

Author, journalist, broadcaster and television personality

https://www.nigella.com
Nigella Lawson read Medieval and Modern Languages at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford and went on to become Deputy Literary Editor of The Sunday Times, followed by a successful career as a freelance journalist, writing for a range of magazines and newspapers. In 1998 she wrote her first cookbook, How To Eat, The Pleasures and Principles of Good Food, and now has ten bestselling books to her name with over five million sales in the UK alone. Nigella has made several hit TV series which are aired across the globe. In 1998 she was a judge for the Booker Prize and in 2000 she chaired the Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction. She was voted Author of the Year in the British Book Awards 2000. Of her top 10 cookbooks, Nigella notes “There are many more recent books I value, but these are the ones I have been cooking from over decades”.

Most popular

Features & Stories

ckbk’s Australian collection: The evolution of a cuisine

ckbk’s Australian collection: The evolution of a cuisine

To celebrate the arrival of The Bathers Pavillion cookbook on our virtual bookshelves, we’ve taken the opportunity to explore more Antipodean titles in ckbk’s collection and to highlight some of the region’s key chefs, recipes, restaurants, flavors, influences, and cooking trends.
The Staff of Life: ckbk’s bread-baking collection

The Staff of Life: ckbk’s bread-baking collection

With the recent addition of titles such as Bien Cuit and Josey Baker Bread, ckbk’s bread-baking collection now numbers a neat baker’s dozen. The collection covers everything from books for budding bakers, to works aimed at baking pros, plus beautifully photographed recipe collections inspired by bakeries around the world.

Nigella's favorite cookbooks

The Cook's Companion

The Cook's Companion

Stephanie Alexander

A beautiful beast of a book, over 1,000 pages long and weighing in at 2.5 kilos, this Australian classic bulges with ideas, inspiration and recipes that still seem fresh and original 20 years after it was first published.

Available on ckbk now
Jane Grigson's Fruit Book

Jane Grigson's Fruit Book

Jane Grigson

I struggled between choosing this or her Vegetable Book, but in either (and indeed in all her work) Jane Grigson is an unparalleled writer: she brings taste, charm, erudition, wisdom; hers is the most civilised voice in food writing.

Available on ckbk now
Entertaining all'Italiana

Entertaining all'Italiana

Anna Del Conte

Anna Del Conte remains for me the greatest writer on Italian food in English, and this is a book that is as thoughtful as it is practical, and one of the most precious titles in my library.

Nose to Tail Eating

Nose to Tail Eating

Fergus Henderson

Even if I didn’t adore this book for its brio and unpretentiously brilliant recipes, I’d have to nominate it for the beauty of Henderson’s writing.

Available on ckbk now
Classic Home Desserts

Classic Home Desserts

Richard Sax

The canon of home baking in America (and beyond) has always held a particular fascination for me, and this book is an engaging compendium of the genre.