History

Celebrating 75 Years of Betty Crocker’s “Big Red” Cookbook

A look back at the cookbook that shaped American home cooking for generations.
Three tier wood shelf in a kitchen displaying 6 Betty Crocker cookbook editions from 1950-1991, aside framed images of Betty Crocker headshots through the years.

Betty Crocker’s Big Red remains one of the most recognizable and beloved cookbooks in American culinary history. For decades, it has been a staple on kitchen shelves across the country — at one point even ranking as the second most-purchased book in America behind the Bible. As we mark this milestone anniversary, we’re not just celebrating a cookbook, but a cultural icon that shaped how America cooks at home.

The Birth of an American Kitchen Icon

First published 75 years ago, the Betty Crocker Picture Cookbook emerged at a pivotal moment when home cooking, convenience and standardized methods were becoming essential in American households. Its foundation, however, was decades in the making.

Gold Medal Flour had been publishing recipe cookbooks as early as 1890, helping guide home cooks through new culinary trends. After 1921, Betty Crocker’s signature was introduced on countless pamphlets and booklets, such as the notable 1948 publication of the Betty Crocker Cooky Book. This laid the groundwork for what would ultimately become the iconic “Big Red.”

How “Big Red” Came to Be

The goal behind the first edition was simple but revolutionary: make cooking accessible to everyone. The test kitchens at General Mills developed recipes with painstaking attention to detail, focusing on consistency and success for cooks at all skill levels.