Cookbook powerhouse Clarkson Potter will have its biggest fall ever this year, with new books from Giada De Laurentiis, Ina Garten, Martha Stewart and Rachael Ray totaling a combined first printing of more than two million copies. But simmering just below the “big four” are legions of imitators, and it's only a matter of time before the next generation of cookbook stars break onto the scene. Giada and company may own bestseller lists, but as Rux Martin, executive editor at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, says, “Until recently it was all Food Network, Food Network, Food Network. Now you don't have to have a TV show to be hot. It's personality, personality, personality that sells.” Here, 10 cookbook authors who aren't quite household names—but, with a little luck, might be soon.

Michelle Bernstein, Cuisine à Latina: Fresh Tastes and a World of Flavors from Michy's Miami Kitchen (Houghton Mifflin, Nov.)

Age: 38

Reminds us of: An Argentine-Jewish Giada De Laurentiis

Signature dish: Fiery oxtail stew served under seared scallops

Why she's got it: Bernstein's mix of Latin, Italian and Jewish makes her unusual. She says, “I don't dream that big,” yet her list of things to do—open a Spanish tapas restaurant and an Italian noodle shop; get chefs in south Florida to use sustainable foods and come together for monthly late-night dinners—is hardly small.

Bio: Chef-owner of Michy's in Miami, Bernstein has twice been nominated for Best Chef of the Southeast by the Beard Foundation. She has a line of pots and tableware debuting on the Home Shopping Network next year and hosts the six-month-old PBS program Check, Please.

Jeff Henderson, aka Chef Jeff, Chef Jeff Cooks: In the Kitchen with America's Inspirational New Culinary Star (Scribner, Oct.)

Reminds us of: Will Smith crossed with Bobby Flay

Signature dish: Friendly Fried Chicken, “one of the first dishes I learned how to cook in prison”

Bio: Henderson, who served 10 years for crack dealing, learned to cook in prison. His memoir, Cooked (Morrow, 2007), is being made into a movie by the team behind The Pursuit of Happyness; Will Smith will star.

Why he's got it: Henderson's mix of food and feel-good inspiration is unique: his docu-reality series, The Chef Jeff Project, debuts on the Food Network in October and features Henderson hiring six at-risk young adults to help him launch a catering company.

Liz Edmunds, aka the Food Nanny, The Food Nanny Rescues Dinner: Easy Family Meals for Every Day of the Week (Palmer/Pletsch, Sept.)

Age: 57

Reminds us of: A down-to-earth Sandra Lee

Signature dish: Arugula pizza with buffalo mozzarella and cherry tomatoes

Bio: Edmunds and her husband raised seven children; she now teaches cooking classes at Sur la Table and consults with families about meal planning. For this, her first book, she landed an interview at Parade.com.

Why she's got it: Edmunds's recipes are for everyday food with a focus on hearty, nutritious meals. “I want to get my message out there and get people excited about how easy this is to do. Cooking for your family on a consistent basis will make your life so great.”

Marilynn Brass and Sheila Brass, aka the Brass Sisters, Heirloom Cooking with the Brass Sisters: Recipes You Remember & Love (Black Dog & Leventhal, Oct.)

Ages: Marilynn, 67; Sheila, 71

Reminds us of: New England versions of Paula Deen

Signature dish: Their mother's chocolate velvet cake

Bio: The sisters have been collecting handwritten recipes for more than 20 years and compiled them into a book, Heirloom Baking, which was a James Beard Award finalist in 2007. They host a PBS special on Boston's WGBH, Brass Sisters, Queens of Comfort Food.

Why they've got it: They tour nationwide, meeting people and getting recipes, and want to continue their series with Heirloom Celebrations. “It's really a labor of love,” says Marilynn, and Sheila concurs, “Ditto!”

Shakara Bridgers, Jeniece Isley and Joan A. Davis, aka the Get 'Em Girls, The Get 'Em Girls' Guide to the Power of Cuisine: Perfect Recipes for Spicing Up Your Life (Fireside, Sept.)

Ages: Bridgers, 32; Isley, 31; Davis, 27

Reminds us of: Younger Sweet Potato Queens

Signature dish: Salmon with brown sugar glaze

Bio: The authors—former businesswomen and avid home cooks—self-published The Get 'Em Girls' Guide to the Power of Cuisine last year and have a two-book deal with S&S; the next book, on entertaining, pubs in May '09. They host Girls' Bite Out, a “culinary lifestyle event” in multiple cities featuring food, drink and lifestyle suggestions for “women of color.”

Why they've got it: They're working on a reality show, The Delicious Life, and want to write more books (they've begun work on GEGG to Losing Weight and Eating Great). Watch for them on the Today show September 18.

Christina Avaness, Living Beyond Organic: Nutritional Knowledge Redefined (Tiara Publishing, Jan.)

Age: 45

Reminds us of: Andrew Weil, if he believed in the Egyptian art of Raphaology medicine

Signature dish: Bison lettuce wraps with spicy dipping sauce

Bio: Avaness helped her husband recover from a heart attack at age 48 through natural healing. He lowered his LDL cholesterol through healthy eating, and Avaness learned so much about the process she wrote a book about it. This will be the first volume of a series.

Why she's got it: Avaness is outgoing and mediagenic; she'll begin filming a TV show, The Food Alchemist, in spring '09, teaches cooking classes in the L.A. area, and has launched www.lborganic.com, which sells specialty foods recommended in the book.

Johnny Iuzzini, Dessert Fourplay: Sweet Quartets from a Four-Star Pastry Chef (Clarkson Potter, Dec.)

Age: 33

Reminds us of: An edgier Alton Brown

Signature dish: Peach soup, next to a poached peach, next to a peach cobbler, “showing how versatile an ingredient can be.”

Bio: Iuzzini grew up in the Catskills, attended culinary school and has worked for heavy hitters Daniel Boulud and François Payard. He won a 2006 Beard Award for Outstanding Pastry Chef of the Year and has appeared in segments for the Food Network, Martha Stewart, Top Chef and other shows.

Why he's got it: Iuzzini thinks differently: he's shooting a food-and-technology—themed TV pilot and wants to open a cocktail bar that “brings the cocktail up to date” using vacuum technology. Paula Deen and Martha Stewart are huge fans.

Jose Garces, Latin Evolution (Lake Isle, Sept.)

Age:36

Reminds us of: A Latin Bobby Flay

Signature dish: Scallop ceviche with black truffle, micro arugula and Meyer lemon

Bio: Born and raised in Chicago by Ecuadoran parents, Garces attended culinary school, worked in top New York kitchens and eventually opened three restaurants in Philadelphia. He was recently profiled in Philadelphia Style and last month, he beat Bobby Flay on Iron Chef America.

Why he's got it: Lake Isle is the small press that “discovered” Rachael Ray. Like Ray, Garces has guy-next-door charm: “TV sounds good,” he says, “but I just want it to be able to be real, not a 'produced' me.

Katie Brown, Katie Brown Celebrates: Simple and Spectacular Parties All Year Round (Little, Brown, Nov.)

Age: 45

Reminds us of: A younger, cuter Martha Stewart

Signature dish: Quick-cooking cinnamon bread

Bio: Brown hosts The Katie Brown Workshop on PBS; writes a New York Times syndicated column, “Domestic Dilemmas”; and just teamed up with superstore chain Meijer for a line of products that will come out in 2010.

Why she's got it: Brown eschews highbrow recipes and ingredients for simple, approachable ones. She filmed the first three seasons of her show in the Hamptons, but is about to begin filming her fourth season at a lower-key apple orchard in the Berkshires.

Sam Stern, Sam Stern's Get Cooking (Candlewick, Nov.)

Age: 18

Reminds us of: Jamie Oliver in training

Signature dish: Crunchy garlic breadcrumb linguine

Bio: Stern, who was raised in Yorkshire and lives in England, has published two books in the U.S., Cooking Up a Storm (Candlewick, 2006) and Real Food, Real Fast (Candlewick, Jan. 2008). He just released a new one in the U.K. for college students.

Why he's got it: He wants “to inspire other teens to cook”; his site (www.samstern.co.uk) features recipes, a blog and more. He'll attend university in fall 2009, but this year he's attending culinary school in Ireland—which could lead to more cooking opportunities.

Stories to Tell
Trend alert: stories and recipes combined into narrative cookbooks. Personality may sell books, but it doesn't hurt to have a good story, too.—L.A.

Urban Italian: Simple Recipes and True Stories from a Life in Food by Andrew Carmellini and Gwen Hyman (Bloomsbury, Oct.)

Wild, Wild East: Recipes & Stories from Vietnam by Bobby Chinn (Barron's, Nov.)

Puglia: A Culinary Memoir by Maria Pignatelli Ferrante, trans. from the Italian by Natalie Danford (Oronzo Editions, Oct.)

You Are Where You Eat: Stories and Recipes from the Neighborhoods of New Orleans by Elsa Hahne(Univ. Press of Mississippi, Oct.)

The Fallingwater Cookbook: Elsie Henderson's Recipes & Memories by Suzanne Martinson with Jane Citron and Robert Sendall (Univ. of Pittsburgh, Oct.)

Milk: The Surprising Story of Milk Through the Ages by Anne Mendelson (Knopf, Oct.)

The Paley's Place Cookbook: Recipes and Stories from the Pacific Northwest by Vitaly Paley and Kimberly Paley with Robert Reynolds (Ten Speed, Oct.)

Sook's Cookbook: Memories and Traditional Receipts from the Deep South by Marie Rudisill (Louisiana State Univ., Sept.)

Chanterelle: The Story and Recipes of a Restaurant Classic by David Waltuck and Andrew Friedman (Taunton, Oct.)