Think about it — every recipe you could ever want is a search away.
Yet cookbooks keep selling in their millions. Jamie Oliver alone has shifted over 50 million copies. Why? Because a cookbook isn't an instruction manual. It's a promise. A vision of a calmer kitchen, a more creative you, a life where dinner actually feels enjoyable.
Cookbooks satisfy our cravings for connection, comfort, identity, and control. They're "comestible self-help" — and that's why they still matter.
That's also why yours could matter to someone.
If you've ever thought "I'd love to write a cookbook one day" but didn't know how to begin, I've built something for you.
Inside my Skool community, How to Write About Food, I've just launched a new module. Months in the making, zero fluff.
You'll learn how to shape an idea that's unmistakably yours, define who you're writing for, uncover the theme that holds it all together, structure it in a way that actually works, and end up with a book ready for publication.
So what’s your cookbook idea? Let me know. I promise I’ll respond.