Enter Username
Custom Classroom Resources will not be available after August 1st, 2008.

If you would like to access resources you have created for future use, you will need to save them to your local computer.
Review CornerVideos, Books, and Music
Elmo’s Magic Cookbook
Rating: five stars
The Bottom Line
Elmo and Emeril help serve up this delicious treat of a video for Sesame Street fans young and old. All things "food" are explored in a magical story that ultimately delivers the message that cooking is fun and trying new foods is rewarding.
Award of Excellence
Ages: 3 to 6 years   Subject: Early Learning  Publisher: Sony Wonder
Review Sections: Product Overview  Dollar Value
 
 
image. Product Overview

Elmo and Telly host this cooking spectacular with help from a genie, a familiar Sesame Street adult, and two ebullient guest stars, Chef Emeril and Heather Headley.

After discovering a magic cookbook and releasing a genie, Elmo and the gang begin their cooking adventure by making every kid’s favorite dish–ice cream. While Telly is busy cranking the ice-cream maker, the show takes off with more recipes and fun. Viewers watch as kids, monsters, and even Chef Emeril put together a number of kid-friendly dishes–from snack foods crafted into the shape of a dinosaur to pizza with toppings galore! Singer Heather Headley (known as the Queen of Pockets on Sesame Street) shows Elmo and the audience how to make a less likely dish in a children’s cooking lineup (summer rolls), which sets the stage for exploring another important theme of the video–trying new foods.

Though the story takes up most of the video’s 50 minutes, familiar Sesame Street skits and songs that extend the theme are interspersed. The subject of cooking and food gets typical Sesame Street treatment: it is explored from all sorts of angles, and the video is complete with responsible safety tips, a gentle nudge to get kids to try out new foods, and some exposure to international cooking.

Plenty of Sesame Street’s distinct humor can be found in Elmo’s Magic Cookbook, with talking food–and even a cow–demanding recognition for their contributions to the meal, and Grover’s fumbling waiter routine (though in this skit he’s a fumbling pizza delivery monster). The magic cookbook itself has a mind of its own and even bounds around like a frisky puppy, and an exhausted Telly reappears from time to time to update viewers on his progress with the ice cream.

Of course, Elmo’s enthusiasm and inquisitiveness are always refreshing. Little viewers learn new things along with Elmo, since he asks the kinds of questions many young kids ask ("What are ingredients?"). Kids are repeatedly reminded that they need to have an adult present when they cook, and they are encouraged to wash their hands beforehand. While the genie and the cookbook use magic to do much of the grunt work associated with cooking, the message in the end is that kids can cook, too, and they don’t even need magic. Mind you, parents will likely be the ones doing the gathering of ingredients and the cleanup! As is the case with cooking shows designed for adults, the cooking process in Elmo’s Magic Cookbook seems almost effortless.

Parents will appreciate that the ads are neatly tucked away at the end of the video. And, as the credits roll, kids are treated to fantastic food masterpieces–all their favorite Sesame Street monsters sculpted out of food items!

This is an especially engaging Sesame Street video that will tickle kids’ appetites not only for the yummy recipes presented but for the whole cooking experience as well. Complete with a dash of inspiration, a dollop of information, and a huge serving of fun, this video may work a little magic into many preschoolers’ worlds, spurring them to explore cooking and experimenting with new foods.

Dollar Value
This video retails for $12.98 US.

Released: 2001
Reviewed: June 2001