A little bit of this, a little bit of that Gujarati Indian Cookbook
"...precisely replicates my mother's cooking" K Patel, UK
This beautifully designed Gujarati Indian Cookbook covers an extensive range of Gujarati Indian home-cooked recipes with measurements that will help you discover what a little bit of this and a little bit of that truly is.
Created by mother daughter duo Laxmi and Jayshri Ganda from New Zealand, the pair have truly emulated the taste of home.
Awarded the prestigious "Gourmand Best in World Cookbook"
What our customers are saying
The duo behind the world's best Gujarati cookbook
I loved my mum's food, always the one with a spoon to eat, never the one with the frypan wanting to learn. But the time had come and I wanted to learn some of Mum's recipes, as you'd expect my own experimentations weren't tasting the same, so I called upon mum.
In what is a typical Indian mother's response, mum said "just add a little bit of this and a little bit of that", which resulted in an also typical response from me "but how much is that"?
I soon realised that these beloved family recipes were far too precious not to preserve and slowly got Mum on board to document them for future generations and to share with the wider global Gujarati community and you.
The most popular Gujarati Indian Recipes from our cookbook
A Gujarati Indian cookbook from New Zealand born out of love gets awarded the incredible :: Gourmand Best in the World Cookbook ::
GOURMAND WORLD COOKBOOK AWARD
A Little Bit of This, A Little Bit of That' Gujarati Indian Cookbook represented New Zealand against the rest of the World and have been awarded the Best Indian Cuisine Book and Best Spices and Herbs Book at the Gourmand World Cookbook Awards.
‘The Oscars of Food Awards’.
Documenting Authentic Gujarati Cuisine
When Laxmi first moved to Christchurch and had to cook for her husband and the extended Ganda family, she had no cookbook to follow. Much of what Laxmi knew was by observing her mother-in-law and sisters-in-laws rather than reading recipes. "We would just make the recipe up or watch someone do it, then put it together a few times, back in India we cooked on an open flame – we didn't have electricity or gas." she says, before laughing. "Sometimes it works out, sometimes it doesn't." Read the rest of the story here