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The Top Five Low Fat Cookbooks to Help you on your Way to Better Health

Sunday, August 30th, 2009

The Top Five Low Fat Cookbooks to Help you on your Way to Superior Health

If you have prefabricated the commitment to a healthier life you know that it will involve some changes. This is especially true when it comes to the way you eat. Changing the way you take involves making healthier choices when you visit the supermarket, and learning new cooking methods to make your food as tasty as ever.

�The Essential Eating Well Cookbook� puts the emphasis on �good carbs, good fats and great flavors.� This low fat cookbook is a complete package that appeals to those who are in the low carb and low fat style of eating. It is not what you would call a diet book, just a low fat cookbook that can give you plenty of recipe choices with a complete nutritional analysis included.

�Cooking Healthy Across America� is chock full of recipes from around the United States. It features classic fare from your favorite areas of the country that are remade to be healthier for you to eat. This low fat cookbook was place together by the American Dietetic Association. There are even recipes for Bourbon Sauce and fried chicken.

�Cooking Light Annual Recipes 2007� has more than one thousand recipes from the past years publications which is great for recipe clippers who often lose the recipe. This low fat cookbook is packed with menu suggestions, cooking tips and lots of inventive blends for new and familiar ingredients.

�The New American Heart Association Cookbook� is now in its 7th edition. This publication is known as �Big Red.� There are a total of six hundred recipes with one hundred fifty of them never before published. It has appendixes with simple to read advice about checking ingredients and nutrition labels, how to practice low fat cooking as well as a host of advice for intake healthier.

�Betty Crocker�s Low-Fat, Low Cholesterol Cooking Today� especially targets those people who are looking for a low fat cookbook. There are 120 recipes that are not only yummy, but simple to follow. There are plenty of tips on how to limit your intake of fats and bad cholesterol. There are fifty photographs of recipes, plus illustrated step-by-step lessons on how to prepare it.

For more information about Low Fat Cookbook, feel free to visit us at: http://www.about-low-fat.com/article-4-Low-Fat-Cookbook.html

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How to Sell Cookbooks – Old, Rare, Used, Vintage & Antique Betty Crocker, BH&G & Others

Friday, August 7th, 2009

How to Sell Cookbooks – Old, Rare, Used, Vintage & Antique Betty Crocker, BH&G & Others

You might be one of those people who have collected cookbooks over the years that ended up, used or unused, gathering dust on bookshelves or in boxes piled up in the attic, garage or basement. Old, rare, classic, vintage, antique and collectible cookbooks can be a hidden source of instant cash. You can easily learn how to sell these old cookbooks.

And many people underestimate the value that these old, collectible cookbooks have, for example Betty Crocker Cookbooks and Superior Homes & Gardens Cookbooks, and have never even thought about selling them. There are many other old, valuable cookbooks of course. But for the purpose of this article we’ll begin with these two well known cookbook publishers’ cookbooks. They’ll be easier to research.

Do you have any old Superior Homes and Gardens Cook Books? How about Betty Crocker Cook Books from the 1950s, 1960s, or favourite editions from 1959, 1961 or older? Pie or plaid covers? Betty Crocker New Picture Cookbook or Betty Crocker Boys and Girls Cook Books or any others?

Maybe you do have some of these cookbooks now. Maybe you have some at mom’s or grandma’s home or even superior at great-grandma’s house. Perhaps you’ve seen them at garage sales. A lot of old cookbooks can be valuable-worth a lot of money. Even those of lesser value might sell for ten times the original price.

Whether you have cook books with binders, hardcovers, plaid covers, or pie covers, you need to do a tiny research. You’ll need to know the title, year of publication, edition (usually printed inside the book in front) and condition, before you can come up with the TRUE value.

You can begin by gathering as much of these facts as possible. If any of your old books have been signed by the author or in some cases the illustrator, that’ll bring up the price significantly. Then, first of all, go to Google and type in the exact title – for example, ‘Betty Crocker Cookbook’ and the year published, and see what comes up. Then try using the same phrase with cook book as two words. If you have a plaid or pie cover or other distinct cover, then try again adding ‘plaid cover’ or ‘pie cover’. Do it again and type in the edition if known. You might find some others for understanding or that have already sold. Then try again with your variations and add the words – excellent condition, fine condition or good condition.

Next go to eBay and go to the search feature and then ‘completed listings’. Search by the category ‘cookbooks’ and the title of your cookbook and look for similar titles and editions. Only look at those that have sold, to get a feel for the price range. In terms of pricing, ignore the cookbooks that are still for sale. Many factors go into why they didn’t sell. Finding sold duplicates in these cookbook listings will give you a general intent of the range they’ve sold in. The binding, year and condition are just some of the variable factors. You can do the same with your Superior Homes & Gardens Cookbooks. Then try some of the other old, rare, vintage or antique cookbooks that you’ve collected.

The deciding bourgeois for price in each case will be the condition of the cookbook. Condition is everything. Handle your cookbooks carefully. Collectors and buyers anticipate cookbooks to have an occasional spot on them. If they’re fragile, handle them with white cotton gloves. Never place them in airtight bags or containers, because the moisture content in the pages will cause them to mildew. You can bag them but leave them open. In any case protect them.

So you need to decide on the condition of your cookbooks, find the price range of cookbooks that have sold on finished listings and then decide how to price your book. Be very wary of putting any old, rare, vintage or antique cookbooks on eBay for 99 cents or without a reserve price. You don’t want someone travel off with your precious book for just pennies. The sold cookbooks on eBay finished listings have a distinct advantage. You know what people are actually paying for cookbooks and current price ranges.

As for books that list the value of cookbooks, I have them all. But I find them worthless because the values do not reflect what people actually pay for cookbooks or the current prices, whether it is Betty Crocker Cookbooks, Superior Home & Gardens Cookbooks or any others. And the cookbook value books go rapidly out of date as time passes since publication.

Besides eBay there are a lot of other ways to sell your cookbooks on the World wide web or outside of the Internet. There is too much to go into in this short article. There are many other trade secrets. One simple way-there is a free cookbook listing service online, for old, rare, vintage or antique cookbooks where you can list your cookbooks for sale, yes free of charge. Collectors and buyers come to the site. You can continue to sell them using other methods and not move for a buyer to make contact from the site. You can always have your listing removed from the site if it sells or you sell it another way.

You can purchase and sell old cookbooks easily once you become familiar with one cookbook and you’ll probably be healthy to find more of them at garage sales. With this basic knowledge of how to sell cookbooks, you’ve just become a mini-expert on selling cookbooks. So go to your cookbook shelves now and see what you already have and begin from there. Once you’re an expert on Betty Crocker Cookbooks and Superior Homes and Gardens Cookbooks you can begin researching other old, rare, classic, vintage, antique and collectible cookbooks.

Helen Hecker is the author of How to Make Money Selling Cookbooks Online ebook, runs a free, old cookbook, listing service at http://www.SellCookbooks.com
Helps book publishers publish & market their cookbooks at http://www.TwinPeaksPress.com
Runs http://www.HowToMakeBeautifulGiftBaskets.com

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Top 10 Reasons Why Starting Up a Business to Sell Cookbooks Online Is a Good Thing!

Thursday, August 6th, 2009

Top 10 Reasons Why Starting Up a Business to Sell Cookbooks Online Is a Good Thing!

If you’re looking for a good work-at-home World wide web business that’s honest and will make you money, think about selling old, used, vintage, or modern cookbooks. Besides making good money fast, it’s a lot of fun too.

Now to the top ten (and more) ideal reasons why starting a small home-based business selling cookbooks online is a Martha Stewart recipe for a good thing:

You can work from home, part-time, full-time or any time of day, weekends, or whenever you have some free or spare time.

You can set up this new business opportunity fast.

You can sell cookbooks from your existing collection (soon to be called inventory), or from your family or friend’s private cookbook collections.

It’s simple to amass inventory. Cookbooks can be found at garage, yard and estate sales, thrift shops, flea markets, or online, etc.

And it’s cheap to amass inventory — very tiny investment is needed. You can purchase up boxes of cookbooks from garage income and many cookbooks can be picked up free, at the end of the day’s sale, or for as tiny as five for . Cookbooks can also be bought in ‘lots’ from eBay.

You’ll swiftly become knowledgeable about selling cookbooks on eBay and other auction and non-auction sites — you’ll get lots of ideas — useful for selling other items too.

You’ll know which Betty Crocker Cookbooks and Superior Homes and Gardens Cook Books are the best, in high-demand, collectible and truly valuable. You’ll learn the true value of the favourite 1973 Betty Crocker Cookbook pie edition and even church cookbooks.

You’ll have very little, if any, competition. Few people know how to value cookbooks. Often cookbooks that people think are valuable are not.

You’ll be considered an expert by others and can capitalize on your new knowledge in a number of ways, including appraising cookbooks and collections of cookbooks and teaching classes at home.

You can easily add this on as a ‘sideline’ business to an existing full-time or part-time business.

You can branch out from this business and begin a dozen or more other related businesses.

You might be healthy to even enlist the help of your family members.

You’ll easily know which are the ideal cookbooks and recipes to add to your private collection.

You’ll be healthy to easily learn to price cookbooks using the right, not the wrong, resources.

You’ll surprise yourself when you go to garage income and find you’re healthy to pick out the winners nearly immediately.

You’ll be the holder of a one-of-a-kind business and amaze your friends with your new knowledge and expertise. They’ll eagerly want you to value the cookbooks in their collections. Built-in customers.

‘Getting the word out’ (promotion and marketing) for a cookbook-selling business is cheap and simple through both online and offline methods.

And last but not least — it’s just plain fun! If you want to add on to or begin a good and fun work-at-home business and love cook books, this is a great mix.

And if you do love cookbooks as I do, you’ll love buying and selling them even more when you find out valuable, high-demand cookbooks are readily available, and just how profitable they really are.

So think about starting up a new, honest, work-from-home World wide web business that’ll make you money selling cookbooks online. When you mull over all the above ideal reasons to sell cookbooks you’ll know it’s a good thing. And Martha surely knows it’s a good thing.

Helen Hecker heads Twin Peaks Press a 25-years-old PR, marketing, publishing co., publishes: “Helen’s Hecker’s Biz Hotline” for small/home biz, books, selling cookbooks online ebook, gift basket business DVDs. Websites: http://www.sellcookbooks.com

http://www.howtomakebeautifulgiftbaskets.com

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