Hi,
I have Time-Life cookbooks in my library, though not the complete set. I see them often at used book stores and rummage sales. I never buy them, because I am not quite sure what I have and what I am missing.
This evening my memory was jogged on this issue. I found this website
Leggman's Time Life Library, a compendium of Time Life books information:
Cookery Around the World, which consists of 24 volumes
Foods of the World, which consists of 31 volumes.
Recipes from Foods of the World, which consists of 16 wire bound books. A friend commented these are essential if you intend to cook recipes from the series.
The Good Cook Techniques and Recipes, which consists of 28 volumes. It includes the rare book on offal called
Variety Meats.
Time Life Illustrated Library of Cooking, which consists of 10 volumes. It also has a volume on variety meats.
Scroll through the list you will find minor 2-4 book series on food topics as well as a series branded with Williams and Sonoma.
I always thought I may be missing a few books. Now I am certain I am missing much more, though do I really need it? When one series was
Cookery Around the World with another
Foods of the World, I sense one was marketed to European markets and the other to American. I wouldn't be surprised to learn there was serious overlap between the two.
It would be interesting to learn from someone familiar with the various series, which ones are worth pursuing and possibly not.
I have a Better Homes and Gardens Encyclopedia of Cooking from the late 1960's. I have always liked the articles and found the recipes reliable. As I became more aware of the people authoring the sections, like James Beard, I began to value it even more. A few years ago, Saveur listed the series in their annual 100 list.
Regards,