---
product_id: 48904818
title: "India: Cookbook"
price: "S/.644"
currency: PEN
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 9
url: https://www.desertcart.pe/products/48904818-india-cookbook
store_origin: PE
region: Peru
---

# Color-coded sections for easy navigation 1000+ authentic Indian recipes 30-page cultural & regional intro India: Cookbook

**Price:** S/.644
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🍽️ Unlock India’s vibrant flavors—your passport to authentic culinary adventure!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** India: Cookbook
- **How much does it cost?** S/.644 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.pe](https://www.desertcart.pe/products/48904818-india-cookbook)

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- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
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## Key Features

- • **Master 1000+ Recipes:** From quick 10-minute chutneys to elaborate pan-Indian thalis, this book fuels your kitchen creativity like no other.
- • **Intuitive Color-Coded Layout:** Each section printed on distinct colored paper for effortless browsing and meal planning.
- • **A Culinary Odyssey Across India:** Explore 30 pages of rich regional history and cuisine insights that elevate your cooking beyond recipes.
- • **Authenticity Meets Practicality:** Recipes grouped by ingredient and dish type to inspire you to try new flavors and avoid the usual chicken curry rut.
- • **Designed for the Confident Cook:** Concise instructions encourage improvisation and mastery, perfect for millennials who love to experiment and impress.

## Overview

India: Cookbook by Pushpesh Pant is a definitive collection featuring over 1000 authentic Indian recipes, organized with a unique color-coded system and enriched by a 30-page introduction exploring regional histories and cuisines. Praised for its depth and practicality, it’s designed for confident cooks eager to explore diverse dishes from quick snacks to elaborate feasts, making it an essential addition for any millennial food enthusiast seeking to elevate their culinary repertoire.

## Description

Buy India: Cookbook Illustrated by Pant, Pushpesh, Sewell, Andy (ISBN: 8601400950531) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders.

Review: This is just an amazing book, full of love for the recipes contained ... - This is just an amazing book, full of love for the recipes contained within it, and Pushpesh Pant must have spent a huge amount of time and effort in putting it together. The publisher has also gone to great effort to make the book characterful. In a 30 page introduction, each region of India is explored, telling the reader a bit about its character, history, and distinctive cuisine. The main part of the book is the recipes, which are well-organised. The main sections are arranged as appetisers, main dishes, pulses, breads, and so on. Within each section, a lot of effort has been taken to group dishes by type, or by main ingredient, depending on what makes most sense. For example, all of the pakora recipes are grouped together into 10 pages. All of the main dishes where okra is the main ingredient are gathered together. This makes it really easy to browse, looking at a dry potato dish from Punjab, or a slightly different Delhi dish of potato and yoghurt, or a potato dish from Kerala involving coconut... you get the idea. To give you an idea of the depth of the book, there are 54 recipes for pickles, chutneys and raita, which vary from requiring a few ingredients, to over 10, and from 10 minutes preparation, to hours. There's something in here for everyone. Want to make a quick half-hour lunch of potato curry with some plain parathas? It's in here. Want to make a pan-Indian thali of ancient and modern dishes? You can do that. Or maybe you'd like to plan an intimate meal centred on a particular region of India, to make it as authentic as possible? I think that the main advantage of the book is that it gives you so many ideas, you aren't going to make the boring chicken curry you always make, you might decide instead to go to the supermarket and buy some taro roots and jackfruits! The paper quality is obviously a conscious design decision to make it have a slightly rough feel, and it is not an indication of poor publishing. Each section is also printed on a different coloured paper, which is a nice touch. People have also commented that the photos should appear by the recipes. I disagree - the idea of having a photo of a bench containing 5 or 6 different plates of food is so you can see them with reference to other dishes. All pictures are labelled with the page numbers where you can find the recipes, and the recipes are labelled with a camera icon and a page number so you can find the photos. It's fine. Finally, those reviews indicating the amount of errors, quite simply I don't believe in them. The errors are there, of course - but they are so infrequent and so obvious that it in no way detracts from the quality of the work as a whole. There are 1,000 recipes - the hit rate with flawless instructions is actually very high. Sure, if you want to go out and buy 10 cartons of yoghurt for the morsel of chicken you are cooking, be my guest. I'm exaggerating a bit - but there's some common sense needed here. Like the recipe that forgets to tell you to combine one main part of the dish with another main part of the dish. Please, this is not NASA, we are not making a moon buggy. We are making a pakora, just spend some time studying the WHOLE recipe before starting it! It's a pleasure to just flick through the book - I've been spending all weekend just browsing the recipes (and cooking some, too), it's been great!
Review: enough recipes to last a lifetime - I have been waiting for this book with anticipation. I have not come across any mistakes or incomplete recipes yet - as mentioned by some of the other reviewers - but there are a whole lot of recipes to go through. This is by far the most complete Indian cookery book I have ever seen. This book + Madhur Jaffrey's Curry Bible are probably the only Indian cookery books you will ever need. It is true that this book seems to be written for experienced cooks. The recipes are very brief so you do need to be confident in technique - confident enough to improvise a little to make the dishes to your own taste. The photos in the book are beautiful, but it could have done with some more. I read the comments from other reviewers about the quality of the paper. The quality is fine. The paper is a coloured uncoated stock and is probably chosen as a design feature more than anything else. one warning - and a downside - read carefully for how many portions the recipes are, as this is not consistent throughout the book. i ended up cooking a huge pan of curry for 6 people!

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | 194,988 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 187 in Indian Food & Drink 1,244 in Food & Travel Writing |
| Customer reviews | 4.7 4.7 out of 5 stars (719) |
| Dimensions  | 19.05 x 5.4 x 28.58 cm |
| Edition  | Illustrated |
| ISBN-10  | 0714859028 |
| ISBN-13  | 978-0714859026 |
| Item weight  | 2.5 kg |
| Language  | English |
| Print length  | 960 pages |
| Publication date  | 28 Sept. 2010 |
| Publisher  | Phaidon Press |

## Images

![India: Cookbook - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/812QfKQ3hBL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ This is just an amazing book, full of love for the recipes contained ...
*by A***R on 8 February 2016*

This is just an amazing book, full of love for the recipes contained within it, and Pushpesh Pant must have spent a huge amount of time and effort in putting it together. The publisher has also gone to great effort to make the book characterful. In a 30 page introduction, each region of India is explored, telling the reader a bit about its character, history, and distinctive cuisine. The main part of the book is the recipes, which are well-organised. The main sections are arranged as appetisers, main dishes, pulses, breads, and so on. Within each section, a lot of effort has been taken to group dishes by type, or by main ingredient, depending on what makes most sense. For example, all of the pakora recipes are grouped together into 10 pages. All of the main dishes where okra is the main ingredient are gathered together. This makes it really easy to browse, looking at a dry potato dish from Punjab, or a slightly different Delhi dish of potato and yoghurt, or a potato dish from Kerala involving coconut... you get the idea. To give you an idea of the depth of the book, there are 54 recipes for pickles, chutneys and raita, which vary from requiring a few ingredients, to over 10, and from 10 minutes preparation, to hours. There's something in here for everyone. Want to make a quick half-hour lunch of potato curry with some plain parathas? It's in here. Want to make a pan-Indian thali of ancient and modern dishes? You can do that. Or maybe you'd like to plan an intimate meal centred on a particular region of India, to make it as authentic as possible? I think that the main advantage of the book is that it gives you so many ideas, you aren't going to make the boring chicken curry you always make, you might decide instead to go to the supermarket and buy some taro roots and jackfruits! The paper quality is obviously a conscious design decision to make it have a slightly rough feel, and it is not an indication of poor publishing. Each section is also printed on a different coloured paper, which is a nice touch. People have also commented that the photos should appear by the recipes. I disagree - the idea of having a photo of a bench containing 5 or 6 different plates of food is so you can see them with reference to other dishes. All pictures are labelled with the page numbers where you can find the recipes, and the recipes are labelled with a camera icon and a page number so you can find the photos. It's fine. Finally, those reviews indicating the amount of errors, quite simply I don't believe in them. The errors are there, of course - but they are so infrequent and so obvious that it in no way detracts from the quality of the work as a whole. There are 1,000 recipes - the hit rate with flawless instructions is actually very high. Sure, if you want to go out and buy 10 cartons of yoghurt for the morsel of chicken you are cooking, be my guest. I'm exaggerating a bit - but there's some common sense needed here. Like the recipe that forgets to tell you to combine one main part of the dish with another main part of the dish. Please, this is not NASA, we are not making a moon buggy. We are making a pakora, just spend some time studying the WHOLE recipe before starting it! It's a pleasure to just flick through the book - I've been spending all weekend just browsing the recipes (and cooking some, too), it's been great!

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ enough recipes to last a lifetime
*by D***R on 4 November 2010*

I have been waiting for this book with anticipation. I have not come across any mistakes or incomplete recipes yet - as mentioned by some of the other reviewers - but there are a whole lot of recipes to go through. This is by far the most complete Indian cookery book I have ever seen. This book + Madhur Jaffrey's Curry Bible are probably the only Indian cookery books you will ever need. It is true that this book seems to be written for experienced cooks. The recipes are very brief so you do need to be confident in technique - confident enough to improvise a little to make the dishes to your own taste. The photos in the book are beautiful, but it could have done with some more. I read the comments from other reviewers about the quality of the paper. The quality is fine. The paper is a coloured uncoated stock and is probably chosen as a design feature more than anything else. one warning - and a downside - read carefully for how many portions the recipes are, as this is not consistent throughout the book. i ended up cooking a huge pan of curry for 6 people!

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Indian cuisines 101
*by P***A on 24 June 2017*

This would be my 10th cookbook regarding the Indian cuisine, I would say am well familiar with the techniques and recipes by now - and I have to say this one's definitely worth the hype. A great variety of dishes, including something I've not seen in other Indian cookbooks - Tribal foods from the North East! Naga pork stew with bamboo shoots, and a couple other unusual things you wouldn't see elsewhere. Also, mr Pant has done a better job at dividing the Indian cuisines into categories. Whereas usual cookbooks just lazily state north-west-south-east, this book divides them into nine and gives background on each. Absolutely worthwhile! Extra love to the masala section. While I would have liked to see included some more regional masala recipes (like for example the Marathi goda masala, or a couple types of Kolhapuri masalas), its a great book for those wanting to familiarize themselves with Indian food and cuisines, and for those already familiar I'd recommend it for its inclusion of adivasi and tribal recipes, and awadhi cuisine which is also more scarcely seen on regular cookbooks pages.

## Frequently Bought Together

- India: The Cookbook
- Japan: The Cookbook
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*Product available on Desertcart Peru*
*Store origin: PE*
*Last updated: 2026-05-03*