I was going through my Martha Stewart book collection recently and realized there are three books I would like to see added to the roster of titles; books that have not yet been published, but that ought to be. The urge for these books was strong enough to inspire me to sit down and design their covers, just for fun. You can see my designs below.
The three books I'm craving are "Kitchen Conundrums", "Good Things" (there hasn't been a second volume since the late 1990s) and a new edition of "The Martha Stewart Living Cookbook" that I would call "Updated Classics" containing recipes from the magazine that were published between 2008 and 2018, inclusive. (The previous MSL Cookbook concludes with the 2007 publication year).
There is a vast pool of content here to be mined and collated by the editors and I think they are necessary editions for my library. What do you think?
Martha Stewart Living food editor Thomas Joseph and his popular video series "Kitchen Conundrums" deserve a book containing all of the helpful hints and solutions to our everyday kitchen problems and questions. I know I would refer to to this volume very often.
I think it's time for another "Good Things" book. The last one was published in 1997, over twenty years ago. I would be pleased if it contained even a fraction of the numerous good things that have been published monthly in the magazine over the last two decades. It would be a great compilation of inspiring and helpful ideas.
The last Martha Stewart Living Cookbook was published in 2007, leaving ten years of recipes from the magazine just waiting to be published in one big volume. I am not sure if there are 700 recipes: perhaps there are more or perhaps less but I would love to see them all in one book. This would act as a companion volume to the other two MSL Cookbooks, giving us a trio of cookbooks containing virtually all of the best recipes from the magazine. We need this book!
(I hope you like my cover designs, too! I had fun with them.)
1.19.2019
1.12.2019
Martha Stewart Living on 2019 A-List of Honorees
Ad Age has added Martha Stewart Living magazine to its "Publishers A-List 2019" honourees. Each year, Ad Age (a global hub for news and conversations about marketing and media communities) names its top magazines to watch for and for the second year in a row Martha Stewart Living has made the cut.
The 2019 January/February issue
Here's what Ad Age says about Martha Stewart Living:
"Former independent magazine Martha Stewart Living has been under the Meredith umbrella since 2015, when the Des Moines, Iowa-based publisher took over operational and editorial control in a licensing deal. Over the years, various Martha wannabes have come and gone, and while we salute Meredith for teaming up with Joanna Gaines, one of the only truly convincing Martha-esque rising lifestyle gurus, we're pleased that four years later, Meredith's partnership with the Martha continues to pay off. Under Editor-in-Chief Elizabeth Graves, MSL continues to be the gold standard of lifestyle glossies, and under SVP/Group Publisher Christine Guilfoyle, ad revenue has held steady (even as the food and shelter-mag categories declined overall in 2018), thanks to new or increased business from brands including Kimberly-Clark, Subaru, Starbucks and Tito's Vodka."
Other honorees include the aforementioned Joanna Gaines and her magazine Magnolia Home Journal, which is also run by Meredith Corp., as well as The New York Times Magazine, Country Living, WSJ, O-The Oprah Winfrey Magazine and The New Yorker. Congratulations!
The 2019 January/February issue
Here's what Ad Age says about Martha Stewart Living:
"Former independent magazine Martha Stewart Living has been under the Meredith umbrella since 2015, when the Des Moines, Iowa-based publisher took over operational and editorial control in a licensing deal. Over the years, various Martha wannabes have come and gone, and while we salute Meredith for teaming up with Joanna Gaines, one of the only truly convincing Martha-esque rising lifestyle gurus, we're pleased that four years later, Meredith's partnership with the Martha continues to pay off. Under Editor-in-Chief Elizabeth Graves, MSL continues to be the gold standard of lifestyle glossies, and under SVP/Group Publisher Christine Guilfoyle, ad revenue has held steady (even as the food and shelter-mag categories declined overall in 2018), thanks to new or increased business from brands including Kimberly-Clark, Subaru, Starbucks and Tito's Vodka."
Other honorees include the aforementioned Joanna Gaines and her magazine Magnolia Home Journal, which is also run by Meredith Corp., as well as The New York Times Magazine, Country Living, WSJ, O-The Oprah Winfrey Magazine and The New Yorker. Congratulations!
1.05.2019
Season 11 of Martha Bakes
The eleventh season of Martha Bakes begins today on PBS! The series was taped at the studio kitchen at Martha Stewart Living headquarters in the historic Starett-Lehigh building in Manhattan. (The kitchen, by the way, can be purchased at The Home Depot). This season Martha will feature a series of guest cooks,
chefs and food experts who will share their knowledge about how many of
the ingredients we use in baking are produced and then used to their best advantage in the baking process, as Martha describes below.
"For this new season, I’ll talk to experts who grow and produce some of the wonderful ingredients in a baker’s repertoire - fruits, nuts, cocoa, milk and more. I’ll also work with some of my favorite bakers to use these delicious elements to make mouthwatering pies, impressive cakes, and the most delectable cookies. This season is packed with great recipes, ideas and information for bakers of all skill levels - you don’t want to miss any of it!"
Modernist baker, Francisco Migoya, makes an unusual and ingenious pressure-caramelized oat sandwich bread in one episode.
Sara Foster shares her flavourful recipe for using cultured dairy to make this delicious-looking buttermilk cardamom pie.
To learn more about the show and the episodes this season, click here. Be sure to check local listings for air times in your area.
"For this new season, I’ll talk to experts who grow and produce some of the wonderful ingredients in a baker’s repertoire - fruits, nuts, cocoa, milk and more. I’ll also work with some of my favorite bakers to use these delicious elements to make mouthwatering pies, impressive cakes, and the most delectable cookies. This season is packed with great recipes, ideas and information for bakers of all skill levels - you don’t want to miss any of it!"
Modernist baker, Francisco Migoya, makes an unusual and ingenious pressure-caramelized oat sandwich bread in one episode.
Sara Foster shares her flavourful recipe for using cultured dairy to make this delicious-looking buttermilk cardamom pie.
To learn more about the show and the episodes this season, click here. Be sure to check local listings for air times in your area.
1.01.2019
The Martha Manual: How to do (Almost) Everything
You may as well start the New Year on the right foot by re-familiarizing yourself with a roster of how-tos. Martha's new book, The Martha Manual: How to do (Almost) Everything, is a good place to start. The book was published today and is available for order. It is hardcover and 400 pages in length: a hefty but not oversized manual chock full of ingenious information.
This book is similar in style to the Homekeeping Handbook but is not quite as encyclopedic or as detailed in scope. The book expands its lesson plans, however, to include subjects such as how to build a campfire and how to pack for a picnic, how to bathe a cat, fold a flag and how to play to certain lawn games, just to name a few of the topics. If you're looking for the more comprehensive of the two books, the Homekeeping Handbook is the one to get but The Martha Manual is an excellent companion and a nice to addition to your homekeeping library. (It also makes the perfect gift for new homeowners or newlyweds).
The book is designed with beautiful colour photography, originally published in Martha Stewart Living magazines. The content includes sections on how to organize, fix and maintain, refresh and embellish, clean and launder, craft and create, garden and grow, host and entertain, enjoy and delight, eat and drink, celebrate and how to care for pets. As you can see, the subjects are quite diverse.
I've just ordered my copy and I hope you'll order yours too!
This book is similar in style to the Homekeeping Handbook but is not quite as encyclopedic or as detailed in scope. The book expands its lesson plans, however, to include subjects such as how to build a campfire and how to pack for a picnic, how to bathe a cat, fold a flag and how to play to certain lawn games, just to name a few of the topics. If you're looking for the more comprehensive of the two books, the Homekeeping Handbook is the one to get but The Martha Manual is an excellent companion and a nice to addition to your homekeeping library. (It also makes the perfect gift for new homeowners or newlyweds).
The book is designed with beautiful colour photography, originally published in Martha Stewart Living magazines. The content includes sections on how to organize, fix and maintain, refresh and embellish, clean and launder, craft and create, garden and grow, host and entertain, enjoy and delight, eat and drink, celebrate and how to care for pets. As you can see, the subjects are quite diverse.
Martha Stewart Living 2018: The Year That Was
I thought I would start out the New Year with a look back at the year that was in the world of Martha Stewart Living magazine. I've been doing this annual review for some years now and I'm always interested to hear how you feel also, so please leave a comment with your opinions about the magazine.
My general assessment for 2018 is that the magazine is hitting a new stride. Under the guidance of editor-in-chief Elizabeth Graves, I think the magazine has found its 'new voice' but has still managed to maintain the classic hallmarks of pre-2005 issues - a period in the magazine's history that is most beloved by longtime readers.
The magazine certainly did go astray in past years, trying to be something other than what it was meant to be: 2013 to 2015, inclusive, were particularly disappointing years for me. The covers became cold and almost random with their lack of styling. The content inside was weirdly off-brand in many cases (a feature article on Botox was very ill-advised) and I noticed spelling errors, grammar errors and what felt to me like a general lack of effort and inspiration from the editorial team.
Every brand goes through its highs and lows, of course - you take the good years with the bad. In 2018 I was quite impressed with the magazine. Some of those old feelings came back: looking forward to seeing each volume on the newsstand and in my mailbox, setting some time aside to read the articles and simply looking forward to the pleasure of turning the pages.

The covers were a real triumph this year. They've recaptured their magic. The new creative director and art director (Abbey Kuster-Prokell and James Maikowski, respectively) have really taken the time, it seems, to reevaluate what makes a good "Martha" cover: thoughtful styling, imaginative composition, a photograph of something inspired and considered and brilliant.
Highlights for me included the September, October, November and December issues. Each one maintained a level of elegance without feeling staid or old fashioned. Having a person on the cover (other than Martha) is a rare occurrence for the magazine, but the cover of the September issue (top left) felt fresh and new and exciting. The October cover felt perfectly moody and dark; November felt homey and quaint but the modern flower arrangement kept the look updated; December with its wreath of wreath cookies was sublimely simple but so impactful, reminiscent, actually, of some of the Martha by Mail catalog covers.
The cover(s) of the April issue was another standout for me. Four covers were issued and each one was beautiful in its own way. The newsstand cover (top left) was my personal favourite but the subscriber cover (top right) was also lovely. (The lower two covers were used for the digital version of the magazine and were included as alternate cover pages in the original magazine). Experiments like this hint at a magazine that still knows how to play and have fun and it was a nice thing to see.
The April issue also saw the launch of a great new initiative called Change the Day, bringing into focus environmental issues and 'change makers' that help the world become a better place in which to live, in one way or another. I really liked that push.
My general assessment for 2018 is that the magazine is hitting a new stride. Under the guidance of editor-in-chief Elizabeth Graves, I think the magazine has found its 'new voice' but has still managed to maintain the classic hallmarks of pre-2005 issues - a period in the magazine's history that is most beloved by longtime readers.
The magazine certainly did go astray in past years, trying to be something other than what it was meant to be: 2013 to 2015, inclusive, were particularly disappointing years for me. The covers became cold and almost random with their lack of styling. The content inside was weirdly off-brand in many cases (a feature article on Botox was very ill-advised) and I noticed spelling errors, grammar errors and what felt to me like a general lack of effort and inspiration from the editorial team.
Every brand goes through its highs and lows, of course - you take the good years with the bad. In 2018 I was quite impressed with the magazine. Some of those old feelings came back: looking forward to seeing each volume on the newsstand and in my mailbox, setting some time aside to read the articles and simply looking forward to the pleasure of turning the pages.

The covers were a real triumph this year. They've recaptured their magic. The new creative director and art director (Abbey Kuster-Prokell and James Maikowski, respectively) have really taken the time, it seems, to reevaluate what makes a good "Martha" cover: thoughtful styling, imaginative composition, a photograph of something inspired and considered and brilliant.
Highlights for me included the September, October, November and December issues. Each one maintained a level of elegance without feeling staid or old fashioned. Having a person on the cover (other than Martha) is a rare occurrence for the magazine, but the cover of the September issue (top left) felt fresh and new and exciting. The October cover felt perfectly moody and dark; November felt homey and quaint but the modern flower arrangement kept the look updated; December with its wreath of wreath cookies was sublimely simple but so impactful, reminiscent, actually, of some of the Martha by Mail catalog covers.
The cover(s) of the April issue was another standout for me. Four covers were issued and each one was beautiful in its own way. The newsstand cover (top left) was my personal favourite but the subscriber cover (top right) was also lovely. (The lower two covers were used for the digital version of the magazine and were included as alternate cover pages in the original magazine). Experiments like this hint at a magazine that still knows how to play and have fun and it was a nice thing to see.
The April issue also saw the launch of a great new initiative called Change the Day, bringing into focus environmental issues and 'change makers' that help the world become a better place in which to live, in one way or another. I really liked that push.
Inside the magazine, too, there were subtle design elements that really stood out to me. In the feature "Chocolate hearts Vanilla" for instance (from the January/February issue) the layout was superb with its contrasting black-and-white borders and backgrounds. It was very visually arresting and, again, it shows the editors care about how they present their ideas and creations.
SEW MUCH MORE
As for the content itself, the magazine seems to be returning to its original core-content areas of expertise: cooking, crafting, gardening, decorating and homekeeping. During what I call the magazine's 'drought' the editors abandoned many of these subjects in various issues, leaving readers such as myself, disappointed. I like knowing that each issue will include a feature on each of those subjects. Now, the magazine has reintegrated those lost content themes in a fairly significant way.
There were three features on sewing in 2018, for instance; the January/February, May and November issues all had features about sewing projects, signalling a return to crafts. Almost each issue, too, contained a gardening feature and the editors took the time to keep those features regional, ensuring that gardens from the east to the west, from the north to the south were included for its readers.
Even the Halloween feature in the October issue wove a sewing element into a pumpkin-decorating project.
Decorating, too, came back in a big way at Martha Stewart Living this year. In some issues there were several decorating features. Among my favourites was "Finishing School" from the September issue, which used a pared-down schoolroom as inspiration for its decorating suggestions. It was a brilliant way to integrate a theme traditionally associated with the month of September: the return to school with a grown-up and modern approach to styling a home. Thoughtfulness. I really do appreciate thoughtfulness!
I must also say that I've been very impressed with the Everyday Food section of the magazine of late. Sarah Carey is doing an excellent job as the magazine's food editor and so many of the culinary creations that have come from the magazine in 2018 are keepers for me. Below are three standouts from the magazine that I personally recommend. (Yes, they're all desserts. Did I mention I have a sweet tooth?) I have tried each one and can personally recommend them as successful, delicious additions to your recipe repertoire. Click on the links below to access the recipe online.
I feel the magazine's food department needs to come up with another cookbook compilation of the magazine's recipes. It's been over ten years since the two volumes of "The Martha Stewart Living Cookbook" were published and there have been so many excellent recipes published since then. Dear food editors...please make this happen!
BUYING VS. MAKING
One note of constructive feedback I would give this year would be to scale back on the buying suggestions and beef up the making suggestions. In many of the magazine's features there are notes on how to buy the things in the photographs.
A perfect example would be the article "Trace Elements" from the May issue.
I was really inspired by that article and I was excited to go to marthastewart.com to download the stencil templates to try one of the projects myself, as I had done in past issues that had used templates for their projects. These templates, however, were for sale by a vendor - and were actually quite costly - putting my desire to try the project securely on the back burner. I miss those free PDF templates that the editors used to create to make it easier for the reader to recreate the craft projects from the magazine. I'd love to see those return.
Each year, too, I somewhat lament the inclusion of the beauty section in the magazine. I suppose as a male reader it simply doesn't appeal to me but I'm sure there are thousands of women who read it word for word. To me, however, vanity never really had a place in Martha's magazine. The idea of Living was not so much about the appearance and style of the person doing the living as it was the lifestyle he or she wanted to create around her. The goal was to teach and inspire both men and women and the approach was genderless. I do recognize that part of 'lifestyle' includes health and wellness and that those subjects, in turn, include feeling good about one's appearance and aging well. It's just a personal thing, but I really don't like reading about beauty products in Martha's magazine. It's the piece of the puzzle that doesn't fit for me.
Overall, the magazine improved greatly in 2018, in my opinion. I felt that I enjoyed it more and was impressed by most of the content, which then made me look forward to the next issue: a very enjoyable place to be as a reader.
What are your thoughts?
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