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Lateral Cooking

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A ground-breaking book, designed to help creative cooks develop their own recipes, from the bestselling author of The Flavour Thesaurus, and with a foreword by Yotam Ottolenghi. One dish leads to another…

Lateral Cooking is, in a sense, the 'method' companion to its bestselling predecessor, The Flavour Thesaurus – and is just as useful, ingeniously organised and enjoyable to read.

The book is divided into 12 chapters, each covering a basic culinary category, such as 'Bread', 'Sauces' or 'Custard'. The recipes in each chapter are then arranged on a continuum, the transition from one recipe to another generally amounting to a tweak or two in the method or ingredients. Which is to say, one dish leads to another: once you've got the hang of flatbreads, for instance, then its neighbouring dishes on the continuum (crackers, soda bread, scones) will involve the easiest and most intuitive adjustment. The result is greater creativity in the kitchen: Lateral Cooking encourages improvisation, resourcefulness, and, ultimately, the knowledge and confidence to cook by heart.

Lateral Cooking is essentially a practical book, but like The Flavour Thesaurus it's also a highly enjoyable read. The 'Flavours & Variations' sections, for example, draw widely on culinary science, history, ideas from professional kitchens, observations by renowned food writers and personal recollection. Entertaining, opinionated and inspirational, Lateral Cooking will have you torn between donning your apron and settling back in a comfortable chair.

1082 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 20, 2018

125 people are currently reading
2497 people want to read

About the author

Niki Segnit

8 books71 followers
Niki Segnit had not so much as peeled a potato until her early twenties, when, almost by accident, she discovered that she loved cooking. Much as she enjoys haute cuisine, she’s not likely to reproduce it at home, preferring to experiment with recipes from domestic kitchens abroad. Her background is in marketing, specialising in food and drink, and she has worked with many famous brands of confectionary, snacks, baby foods, condiments, dairy products, hard liquors and soft drinks. Since summer 2010 she has written a weekly column on food combinations for The Times. She lives in central London with her husband.

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5 stars
126 (60%)
4 stars
51 (24%)
3 stars
26 (12%)
2 stars
5 (2%)
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2 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 28 of 28 reviews
Profile Image for Frank.
8 reviews2 followers
October 18, 2018
I liked the book but could not recommend it on a Kindle. It is the kind of book you want to hold, flip through and find inspiration. (I got it on Kindle because it would have taken too long to get a physical copy shipped - and it isn't cheap in hardback!)

That said, it is a book to inspire serious cooks, particularly those who want to be experimental and step away from the rigid adherence to the recipe. The book looks at a core recipe and takes you along a continuum, so that you can tweak a bread recipe, for example, by replacing some of the liquid with another form (egg for water) and it will still work (probably!).

Niki writes amusingly too. I found myself laughing a few times and reading out passages to my bemused wife.
Profile Image for Soph.
153 reviews1 follower
March 30, 2019
Perhaps the most useful and readable food book I own. An absolute delight from start to finish.
Profile Image for Toni.
53 reviews14 followers
January 12, 2021
This book close to fundamentally changed my way of cooking and is still one of the books I regularly use. Riding on a wave of cookbooks the last decade oriented more towards process, Segnit follows up on her already mind-blowing Flavor Thesaurus with this cornucopia of dishes. It's like deconstructing 90% of modern home cooking. After working through this book, even just some of it, you will never read and use another cookbook the same way.

Even if I go by another book, I often have this one next by to understand the logic (the book is basically a collection of canonical dishes in their most abstract form and then with all the variations listed as text).

The secret to cookbooks and recipes is that it actually takes skill to cook by the book. Most of the times, you miss one ingredients and need to replace it with something, you are short on time and need to cut a corner etc. Recipes are blueprints, so there's always a translation going on. This book shows the many ways ingredients can be replaced, how there's always leeway in a dish, and how just the smallest changes can take you into new territory. Especially the last part is where creativity can happen. You will find yourself inventing novel dishes, just by applying the logic from this book, with surprising results.

Did I say that Niki Segnit is probably one of the most hilarious and funny food writers out there? We literally laughed out loud reading random passages from this one together at home.

As the scope of the book is not Eurocentric at all, and is actually very straight forward, I would recommend this as top 3 cookbook for any cook who wants to become better, more educated and inspired in the kitchen.
Profile Image for Lucyfedia.
31 reviews11 followers
August 4, 2019
If all of my cookbooks were on fire, this is the one I would burn my hands for. My new favourite and I would recommend it to anyone who is comfortable enough cooking to break away from the traditional recipe layout and bend the rules.

It’s a genius way of helping people develop an instinct for what differentiates two very similar dishes on a spectrum and hence know how they can push and experiment with it.

Everything I have made from it has worked beautifully, the recipes are so simple.

Extra points for the writing style, which is both sassy and hilarious.
Profile Image for Robin Steins.
5 reviews2 followers
September 29, 2025
Great cookbook! A treasure box of recipes and culinary knowledge. Author Niki Segnit has a great sense of humour: her witty writings made me laugh out loud several times.
503 reviews148 followers
January 14, 2020
One of the funniest cookbooks I ever read. I was laughing out loud. It’s a great book for reading about food and Segnit does a great job of taking cooks through a basic approach to a food and showing how other foods relate to it. There are some fully written recipes with all kinds of great substitutions or variations but most of the book is like an encyclopedia with embedded recipes in food entries. So, for example, in the potato gnocchi entry Segnit tells you about the flour potato weight and add flour in patient increments but there is no explicit recipe. It’s a great book for cooks who want to know more and aren’t looking specifically for a big book of recipes.
Profile Image for Nelleke Groot.
108 reviews9 followers
December 30, 2018
Dit is een kookopleiding in boekvorm. Een standaardwerk voor iedere beginnende én ervaren kok. Hoe maak je brood, wat is de basis voor saus? Maar daar blijft het niet hij. Op een vermakelijke manier laat Segnit je zien hoe gerechten ‘werken’ en hoe je zelf kunt gaan experimenteren, bedenken en ontdekken. Spelen met eten, hoera! Samen met de onvolprezen smaakbijbel heb je geen andere kookboeken meer nodig.
Profile Image for Loz.
1,674 reviews22 followers
August 19, 2020
Really enjoyed this! It's goal is to teach the reader method and technique and then skills to riff on that with whatever is available. A true understanding of fundamentals of cooking, to then go play. A unique layout, heavy on words, low on pictures, allows the reader to focus on learning. A great tool, well constructed with joy.
Profile Image for Ellen.
222 reviews2 followers
January 31, 2020
Bridges cooking with humor in a compendium in a very Leonardo daVinci way. From A to B to C to D, she takes you on a deliciously wild ride. Well worth reading the book for the reading alone. Adopting her thought process will, no doubt, make you a more interesting cook.
Profile Image for Kat.
237 reviews7 followers
March 19, 2020
Am I the amalgamation of Elizabeth David/ Rene Redzepi / Hunter S Thompson yet?
Kind of preferred The Flavour Thesaurus to this one (not a criticism in an way) but as a ginger fiend, took to the ginger loaf like a fish to water (the recipe is delicious).
1,916 reviews
October 24, 2020
Although the recipes are fairly conventional this book did make me think. By grouping and linking techniques and outcomes the authors wends their way through a wide array of dishes and presents connections I had not made. I enjoyed the book.
Profile Image for Nick Sanders.
478 reviews4 followers
December 20, 2018
A wonderful addition to her Flavour Thesaurus, and a novel way of looking at food and at cooking.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
473 reviews8 followers
April 12, 2019
Great cook book, one of those rare gems that teaches you about cooking rather than just giving recipes.
Profile Image for Kara.
25 reviews23 followers
April 27, 2019
Fascinating concept. The humour was annoying at times.
3 reviews
April 30, 2019
Niki Seignt does it again a great book that allows you to think wiser in the kitchen and writes a great story too
Profile Image for Christa Maurice.
Author 47 books37 followers
December 10, 2019
Fascinating book, but it really needs to be read in print. You're going to want to flip through it.
Profile Image for Roy Kenagy.
1,271 reviews17 followers
Want to read
December 10, 2019
FRANKLIN 641.5 SE :: READ0 / PURCHASE :: EXAMINED 12/05/2019 :: DISCURSIVE ENTRIES THAT ARE STRAIGHTFORWARD & INFORMED
Profile Image for Jean MacLeod.
Author 9 books79 followers
March 2, 2020
A wonderful endearing book. Definitely worth having in one's cookbook collection. I loved it.
Profile Image for Schopflin.
456 reviews5 followers
May 8, 2020
I read this cover to cover and loved it, frequently laughing out loud. If you liked The Flavour Thesaurus you will like this and, like this, I expect to be using recipes from it in the future.
Profile Image for Tina.
102 reviews
July 5, 2020
skimmed through as it's just so dense and not easy to navigate. Nice illustrations but wish it had more pictures and less content (or was broken into separate volums)
Profile Image for Juli Anna.
3,221 reviews
August 24, 2021
I applaud the innovative form of this cookbook, but it's not the right book for me at this point in my life.
Profile Image for Jasmin Shields.
8 reviews1 follower
August 3, 2023
Borrowed from the library but will be buying a copy in the future along with other Segnit titles.
Profile Image for Martyna.
749 reviews57 followers
November 30, 2025
świetny podręcznik, w którym autorka tłumaczy intuicyjne gotowanie i to, jak połączone są ze sobą różne dania (z całego świata) i smaki.
9 reviews
December 25, 2025
PHENOMENAL!! Can I go higher than five stars?
The lack of photos and pen and ink sketches throughout are so calming and charming. If you are addicted to getting recipes with flashing pictures in your peripheral, I say…free yourself from that bondage! It was so refreshing to go to the cookie section and see a chatty paragraph on biscotti, with simple, intuitive instructions. No rabid advertisers screaming at me, or inane text clogging up the page so I can be screamed at further. Nope, none of that rubbish. Yay!
She doesn't cover every topic, but pretty close! Because of my obsession with this book I noticed vinegar based sauces were missing. If she ever does an expanded edition, after vinaigrettes could be an arrow to relish then pickles. (I already penciled it in my copy) The only critique would be the index is not fully comprehensiive. Some recipes are not listed and it would be nice if the countries referenced had a heading so as to find their recipes easily.
The best cookbook I have ever read. I say read intentionally. I picked this for my family book club, buying copies for all. They merely scratched the surface, and eight months later my sister calls me to say she IS still reading it, but “I gotta say, I think you overestimated us”. So there you go, this book is a tome to live up to.
The text is engaging, funny, and full of insights into food AND human nature. I have underlining and circles and notes on almost every page. The depth of research and charming writing are worth so much more than the price of the book. This is a treasure I will keep mining for years to come.
Profile Image for zeke.
4 reviews
February 29, 2024
A simple, but a genius idea of a book on cooking, 10/10 wholeheartedly recommend. The writing style is very fun too— although the authors British references make no sense to me.
Profile Image for Patricia.
90 reviews1 follower
August 29, 2020
Niki Segnit is fun to spend time with. The first time I borrowed it, I just read it and it really got me thinking.

Second time I tried recipes, and while they were good I didn't find the book as engaging.
Profile Image for Priscila Villalobos.
16 reviews2 followers
August 24, 2024
I baked brioche many times thanks to the advice on this book. I was surprised when I found that pan de muerto and conchas, a traditional mexican bread, is an orange scented brioche! Here you can start with the fundamentals of each type of bread, sauce, pastry, dressings ... and decide your leeway.
Displaying 1 - 28 of 28 reviews

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