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kenkyusha
08-13-2004, 12:10 PM
The passing of a giant(ess), and while often imitated and a figure of fun, she probably had the most impact on food in the 'States as anyone in recent history.

Be well,
Jigme

TV Cooking Show Host Julia Child Dies

1 hour, 38 minutes ago Add Top Stories - AP to My Yahoo!


By PAUL CHAVEZ, Associated Press Writer

LOS ANGELES - Julia Child, whose warbling, encouraging voice and able hands brought the intricacies of French cuisine to American home cooks through her television series and books, has died. She was 91.

"America has lost a true national treasure," Nicholas Latimer, director of publicity for the famed chef's publisher, Alfred A. Knopf, said in a statement Friday. "She will be missed terribly."


Child died at 2:50 a.m. Friday at her home in an assisted living center in Montecito, a coastal town about 90 miles northwest of Los Angeles, said her niece, Philadelphia Cousins. A statement released earlier by Latimer said Child died Thursday.


"She passed away in her sleep," Cousins said. "She was with family and friends and her kitten, Minou. She had cookbooks and many paintings by her husband Paul around the house."


Child, who died two days before her 92nd birthday, had been suffering from kidney failure, Cousins said.


A memorial service for family members was planned, but Child asked that no funeral be held, Cousins said.


A 6-foot-2 American folk hero, "The French Chef" was known to her public as Julia, and preached a delight not only in good food but in sharing it, ending her landmark public television lessons at a set table and with the wish, "Bon appetit."


"Dining with one's friends and beloved family is certainly one of life's primal and most innocent delights, one that is both soul-satisfying and eternal," she said in the introduction to her seventh book, "The Way to Cook." "In spite of food fads, fitness programs, and health concerns, we must never lose sight of a beautifully conceived meal."


Chipper and unpretentious, she beckoned everyone to give good food a try.


She wasn't always tidy in the kitchen, and just like the rest of us, she sometimes dropped things or had trouble getting a cake out of its mold.


In an A-line skirt and blouse, and an apron with a dish towel tucked into the waist, Julia Child grew familiar enough to be parodied by Dan Aykroyd (news) on NBC's "Saturday Night Live" and the subject of Jean Stapleton's musical revue, "Bon Appetit." She was on the cover of Time magazine in 1966.


Active and a frequent traveler in her 80s, Child credited good genes and a habit begun in her 40s of eating everything in moderation.


Susy Davidson, a consultant who worked with Child on "Good Morning America," called Child's friendship a great gift.


"She's helped me redefine age, No. 1," Davidson once said. "She is the standard by which I judge all professionals. She's always eager to learn something, to try something new. She just has this generosity of spirit."


She was foremost a teacher and never lost sight of the goal set out in volume one of "Mastering the Art of French Cooking": "Anyone can cook in the French manner anywhere, with the right instruction. Our hope is that this book will be helpful in giving that instruction."


Like her friend James Beard, Child was influenced but not battered by the popularity of fast food, low-fat food, health food.


She aimed "The Way to Cook" at a new generation and while it offered plenty of recipes using butter and cream, it left room for experimentation and variation in its blend of classic French and free-style American techniques. It was a hit, with nearly 400,000 copies in print just four months after publication.

She worried, however, that the health craze was overdone.

"What's dangerous and discouraging about this era is that people really are afraid of their food," she told The Associated Press in 1989. "Sitting down to dinner is a trap, not something to enjoy. People should take their food more seriously. Learn what you can eat and enjoy it thoroughly."

Child did not take a cooking lesson until she was in her 30s. And she was in her 50s when her first television series began in 1963.

Born in Pasadena, Calif., Child once said she was raised on so-so cooking by hired cooks.

She graduated from Smith College in 1934 with a history degree and aspirations to be a novelist or a writer for the New Yorker magazine. Instead, she ended up in the publicity department of a New York City furniture and rug chain.

When World War II began, she joined the Office of Strategic Services, the forerunner of the CIA (news - web sites). She was sent off to do clerical chores in Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), where she met Paul Child, a career diplomat who later became a photographer and painter, on the porch of a tea planter's bungalow in 1943.

They married in 1946 and two years later were sent to Paris.

Child enrolled in the famed Cordon Bleu cooking school, motivated at least in part by a desire to cook for her epicure husband. She was considered a bit odd by her friends, who all had hired help in the kitchen.

"I'd been looking for my life's work all along," she told the AP. "And when I got into cooking I found it. I was inspired by the tremendous seriousness with which they took it."

In France, she also met Simone Beck and Louisette Bertholle, with whom she collaborated on "Mastering the Art of French Cooking," which was nine years in the making and became mandatory for anyone who took cooking seriously.

It was published in 1961 and was followed by "The French Chef Cookbook"; "Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Vol. II," with Beck; "From Julia Child's Kitchen"; "Julia Child & Company"; "Julia Child & More Company"; and "The Way to Cook," in October 1989.

She was 51 when she made her television debut as "The French Chef." The series began in 1963 and continued for 206 episodes. Child won a Peabody award in 1965 and an Emmy in 1966, and went on to star in several more series for Boston's WGBH-TV.

Russell Morash, Child's director from the beginning, recalled her as "spontaneous from the outset, a natural television talent — very relaxed but very professional."

"I happened to be the right woman at the right time," she said, noting that John F. Kennedy had a French chef at the White House and more Americans were traveling abroad.

Since the 1980s, she devoted attention to promoting the serious study of food and cooking. She co-founded the American Institute of Wine and Food in San Francisco in 1981 and co-founded the James Beard Foundation in New York City in 1986.

More recently, she teamed with fellow television chef Jacques Pepin for the 1994 PBS special, "Julia Child & Jacques Pepin: Cooking in Concert" and a 1996 sequel, "More Cooking in Concert."

Paul Child died in 1994, and in late 2001, Julia Child, a longtime resident of Cambridge, Mass., moved to Santa Barbara. The couple had no children.

Brian Owens
08-13-2004, 10:55 PM
Originally posted by kenkyusha
The passing of a giant(ess), and while often imitated and a figure of fun, she probably had the most impact on food in the 'States as anyone in recent history.
Thanks for sharing this. She will be missed.

Bon appetit Julia, wherever you are.

Shitoryu Dude
08-13-2004, 11:36 PM
She most likely did more than anybody else to expand America's food and cooking horizons. The entire gourmet cooking industry owes its many hundreds of millions $$$ in sales to her.

The US is essentially a country filled with millions of amateur gourmet chefs.

:beer:

Moniteur
08-13-2004, 11:47 PM
Originally posted by Shitoryu Dude

The US is essentially a country filled with millions of amateur gourmet chefs.

:beer:

thank goodness for that.

I can only imagine where we'd be without her, if the food trends of the 1950's had continued unabated. yikes!!!

Shitoryu Dude
08-14-2004, 12:42 AM
The ironic thing is that, by and large, most people use French cooking techniques to cook Italian and Asian dishes far more than classic French food.

French cooking is all about technique, other cooking styles place more emphasis on ingredients. Bringing the two together is a good thing.

In many ways American traditional cooking has gotten a bad rap - primarily due to the relatively unsophisticated palates of those who were stationed overseas and the snotty attitude of the French toward those who introduced Coke and cheeseburgers to Europe. Having a pack of young men straight from depression era America turning up their noses at stuff merely because it wasn't something they were used to does not endear you to the locals.

Traditional American cousine is actually pretty good stuff - who here wouldn't love to sit down to a dinner of pot roast, mashed potatoes & gravy, buttered corn, and some hot fluffy rolls followed by blackberry cobbler & ice cream?

Brian Owens
08-14-2004, 12:51 AM
Originally posted by Shitoryu Dude
...Traditional American cousine is actually pretty good stuff - who here wouldn't love to sit down to a dinner of pot roast, mashed potatoes & gravy, buttered corn, and some hot fluffy rolls followed by blackberry cobbler & ice cream?
:eek: Harvey, stop it! I'm at work and won't be able to eat for another two hours. :cry:

At that time I'll be pretty much limited to Denny's.

(or, I could ride a bit south and go to 13 Coins. :idea:

Of course, they don't have pot roast, mashed potatoes & gravy, buttered corn, and some hot fluffy rolls followed by blackberry cobbler & ice cream. :( )

Moniteur
08-14-2004, 01:35 AM
Originally posted by Shitoryu Dude
Traditional American cousine is actually pretty good stuff - who here wouldn't love to sit down to a dinner of pot roast, mashed potatoes & gravy, buttered corn, and some hot fluffy rolls followed by blackberry cobbler & ice cream?

Absolutely...well, minus the blackberries - I'll take red raspberries, or cherries, or whatever though..

Speaking of pot roast... have you ever cooked a beef roast, a pork roast, and a pound of German style rope sausage, and a few small onions/carrots all in one pot together? It's a fairly common thing here in Kansas, where a huge percentage of the population is of German descent. It makes the most absolutely amazing gravy. It is simply unbeatable. perhaps pork fat does, indeed, rule?

Alacoque
08-14-2004, 05:06 AM
Hi

So sad that such a great icon of cooking has passed away, but she has left a pretty good legacy. As far as I'm concerned some of the best cooking in the world comes from America. Although it may well be a 'fast food nation' it also is the home of some of the best restaurants in the world.

Chez Panisse and The French Laundry are renowned for unparalelled standards of excellence but although their names sound French their cooking is definitely American and they showcase the best of American ingredients. Alice Waters(Chez Panisse) has influenced chefs all over the world to do the same.

Cajun and Creole cooking of the south is also a unique American cuisine, although it may have been French in origin, it most definitely stands on it own.

And the breakfasts! Pancakes, crispy bacon and maple syrup, yum!

Alacoque

kirigirisu
08-15-2004, 12:50 PM
Originally posted by Alacoque
And the breakfasts! Pancakes, crispy bacon and maple syrup, yum!


I'm a bigger fan of the Irish Cardiac Arrest breakfast.

Takes about five years offa your life at each sitting, but it's effing phenomenal.

Shitoryu Dude
08-15-2004, 12:55 PM
What exactly is the cardiac arrest breakfast?

My perfect breakfast goes like this:

Omelette made to order (usually ham or shrimp with lots of cheese)
sausage links
hashbrowns
sausage gravy
OJ
large mocha
English muffin with strawberry jam

Then I skip lunch and dinner is usually a light snack.

:beer:

kirigirisu
08-15-2004, 01:07 PM
Originally posted by Shitoryu Dude
What exactly is the cardiac arrest breakfast?


If memory serves me right, the Irish Cardiac Arrest breakfast goes like this:

SLABS of Irish Bacon (not those thin pieces of dried up skin and fat)
Irish Sausages (also big and slabby)
Length O'Black Pudding
Length O'White Pudding
About 2 or so Eggs.
Big-arsed fried tomato.
Heaping of fried potatoes

All cooked in butter, of course.

Some Soda bread to soak up all the grease and butter.

Some tea and/or pressed coffee to re-start your heart after it invariably arrests during the meal.

Beans and/or mushrooms are optional. I prefer the mushrooms.

So's the OJ.

Looks a something little like this:

http://www.foodireland.com/recipes/ICS_picture_breakfast.jpg

My perfect breakfast goes like this:

Omelette made to order (usually ham or shrimp with lots of cheese)
sausage links
hashbrowns
sausage gravy
OJ
large mocha
English muffin with strawberry jam


Criminy. That sounds good. Gonna go grab some late breakfast now.

Shitoryu Dude
08-15-2004, 04:04 PM
World class sausage gravy, for those of you sick and tired of lame sausage gravy at places like Denny's.

1 medium sweet onion, diced
1 tablespoon (minimum) dried red pepper flakes
2 tablespoons olive oil, lard or bacon grease/drippings

sautee until the onion turns transluscent. then add

1 pound Jimmy Dean sausage (regular or spicy)

Brown until sausage is cooked. Reduce heat and add

3 to 5 tablespoons of flour.

allow flour to absorb grease and let brown for a minute or two before adding

1 small can of Cream of Chicken soup
1 quart of 1/2 & 1/2

bring heat up to 1/3 and stir frequently. When mixture thickens and the red pepper flakes float to the top it is done. This takes about 10 minutes, and you have to use a spatula to make sure nothing starts to stick to the bottom of your cast iron skillet.

I like to serve this over baking powder biscuits (Jiffy Mix works quite well), hash browns or toast. Buttermilk biscuits are usually too airy to work well and get soggy.

:beer:

Brian Owens
08-15-2004, 04:40 PM
Originally posted by Shitoryu Dude
...Brown until sausage is cooked. Reduce heat and add

3 to 5 tablespoons of flour.

allow flour to absorb grease and let brown for a minute or two...
Personally, I'd remove and set aside all the solids, then slowly add the flour while stirring constantly to create a smooth roux blond or roux brun.

Then I'd add back the solids.

But that's because I watched Julia cooking with Jaques Pepin a lot. :)

Shitoryu Dude
08-15-2004, 07:04 PM
Yes, but in this case you want the flour to also coat the solids while it browns and soaks up the grease - adds flavor. I also whisk the soup and the 1/2 & 1/2 together in a bowl until smooth before adding to the skillet.

I should also mention that a 12 to 14 inch cast iron skillet is required. Please do not use aluminum or glass/pyrex (ever). Steel, copper, cast iron, or enameled cast iron are the only things you should ever cook with on the stove. Baking has its own needs.

If you are serious about cooking, be prepared to spend a couple thousand $$$ for such things as Wusthof knives, All Clad & Le Cruset pots, pans, & skillets, and some Lodge cast iron. Add in a selection of kitchen gadgets and utensils and you have a good place to start from. You will find yourself still buying such things as santoku knives and specialty cookware from time to time. Getting your baking equipment will run another $1000.

Of course, then you will start looking at those $5000 gas ranges at the appliance store.......

:beer:

Brian Owens
08-15-2004, 09:16 PM
Originally posted by Shitoryu Dude ...If you are serious about cooking, be prepared to spend a couple thousand $$$ for such things as Wusthof knives [I have J.A. Henkels], All Clad [yep] & Le Cruset [Not yet] pots, pans, & skillets, and some Lodge cast iron [Lots. I love it]. Add in a selection of kitchen gadgets and utensils [Kitchen Aid stand mixer, Cuisinart F.P., Braun handheld mixer/chopper, Waring blender, National rice cooker, Krups icecream maker, etc., etc.] and you have a good place to start from. You will find yourself still buying such things as santoku knives and specialty cookware from time to time. [I need a bigger kitchen...and a bigger paycheck] Getting your baking equipment will run another $1000. [Don't get me started.]

I love cooking. Julia Child and Graham Kerr were regular TV fare when I was in my teens; Julia, Graham, Jacques Pepin, and Alton Brown are among my favorites now.

I'm going to miss the old gal, but thanks to video tape she'll be with us for many years to come.

Moniteur
08-15-2004, 10:23 PM
Anyone have any experience with that hand hammered, solid copper cookware that is sold by Williams Sonoma? it looks cool, but is hugely expensive. I might have to have a set someday for decoration, if nothing else.

And Harvey, why look small, at an appliance store? I know this great restaurant supply store where I'll be buying my Range/Oven/Hood, fridge and dishwasher.. I'm hoping someday (in about 10 years maybe, (8 years after I graduate law school) to be able to get one of those commercial Viking ranges... 10 or 12 burner... and maybe one of the Viking outdoor grilling station things.. but I'll have to really hope my ship comes in for those..

:D

Shitoryu Dude
08-15-2004, 10:34 PM
I don't have the room for 10 or 12 burners :( - I hope to get one with 6 burners and a convection oven (perhaps a double decker?).

Yes, kitchen must be larger for all my toys =) We currently make do by having two kitchens (one upstairs, one downstairs) and and extra storage area for appliances.

I've tried Henkel knives, Wusthof Classic or Grand Prix are better in my opinion. Anybody here ever try Global knives? My cheap set of knives are Sabatier - they need to be honed more often, but are quite good otherwise.

For dishes that require cast iron, but are acidic, Le Cruset is a must!!

:beer:

Moniteur
08-15-2004, 11:08 PM
Originally posted by Shitoryu Dude
I don't have the room for 10 or 12 burners :( - I hope to get one with 6 burners and a convection oven (perhaps a double decker?).

Yes, kitchen must be larger for all my toys =) We currently make do by having two kitchens (one upstairs, one downstairs) and and extra storage area for appliances.

I've tried Henkel knives, Wusthof Classic or Grand Prix are better in my opinion. Anybody here ever try Global knives? My cheap set of knives are Sabatier - they need to be honed more often, but are quite good otherwise.

For dishes that require cast iron, but are acidic, Le Cruset is a must!!

:beer:

awwww crap. I forgot about convection. I wants..

I've also used henkel and wustof, and I find the wusthof classics and henkel model similar to it, to be in fact, quite similar, though I prefer the wustof as well. If someone were getting them for me as a gift, I'd be happy with either.

never tried global.

Have you seen the Kershaw distributed Shun japanese made pattern welded knives? they look rather cool. I wonder what they're like.

All I can say, is that my ship had better come in, for all the toys I want to buy. big kitchen, big hottub, a couple fun cars... maybe a ballroom/fencing/kenjutsu/kendo/iaido room.... yeah... anyone wanna burn themselves with coffee so we can sue burger king this time?

Brian Owens
08-15-2004, 11:27 PM
Originally posted by Moniteur
Anyone have any experience with that hand hammered, solid copper cookware that is sold by Williams Sonoma? it looks cool, but is hugely expensive. I might have to have a set someday for decoration, if nothing else.
I only have one copper pan. I use it for making caramel, syrups, etc.

Prior to development of sandwich construction I think copper was more needed than it is now. Copper conducts heat very well for its weight, is easy to form, etc.

But my All-Clad (aluminum core and stainless-steel shell) does everything I need and is less expensive and easier to care for.

But copper does look great. Someday I may add some.

Shitoryu Dude
08-15-2004, 11:43 PM
I still have some Revereware copper-bottomed sauce pans - they work quite nicely.

The one thing I loathe is anodized, teflon cookware. So very little of it is any good, even the expensive stuff. About the only thing I can think of to do with it is target practice.

You want a non-stick surface? Use seasoned cast iron. It lasts for decades and is far better to cook with.

:beer: