2007, Grace Fox, Moving from Fear to Freedom: A Woman's Guide to Peace in Every Situation, Harvest House Publishers (2007), →ISBN, page 17:
For instance, mageirocophobia is the fear of cooking. (I'm writing this after 5:00 p.m., and I still don't know what to fix for dinner. Perhaps I should plead mageirocophobia tonight!)
2009 January 14, RAB, “Re: The Wieners Circle (PIC'S)”, in LTHForum[1] (Usenet), retrieved 2010-06-27:
>[quoted text] Health regs are in place for a reason, and as someone who eats out over 850 meals a year, I fully support the efforts to enforce the code. Totally off-topic, but damn! Mageirocophobia?
I am a mageirocophobic. There, I've said it. My mother has mageirocophobia, and her mother wasn't so hot in the kitchen either.
2011, Counter Space: Design and the Modern Kitchen, Museum of Modern Art (2011), →ISBN, page 67:
It evokes a gamut of emotions, fostering creativity and genuine pleasure as well as anxiety—manifested in the extreme as mageirocophobia, the fear of cooking.
2007, Jason Earls, Red Zen, Pleroma Publications (2007), →ISBN, page 106:
The original is an uber-important sequence (occasionally used to battle mageirocophobia): 1, 2, 6, 24, 120, 720, 5040, 55440, 720720…. It is conjectured to be a subset of the highly composites, even though only nine terms are currently known.