The Picky Eater makes Pate A Choux. |
The recipes are Picky Eater star rated:
*** Fabulous and worth the trouble
** Good relative to the effort
* Worth a try
No Star - Never, ever, ever again!
From Mastering the Art of French Cooking vol. 1 (1961)
**Potage Parmentier (Leek & Potato Soup)
*Soupe A L'Oignon- requires slicing several pounds of onions; guaranteed to make you weep
**Soupe Au Pistou (Provencal Vegetable Soup with Garlic, Basil & Herbs)- one of my earliest attempts, circa 1973 & my first introduction to the French version of pesto, made with dried basil, naturellement!
***Sauce Bechamel & its cousins- Veloute and Mornay
*Sauce Aioli (Garlic Mayonnaise)- guaranteed to spoil after three days
**Piperade (Basque Onion, Pepper, Tomato Ragout)
**Pate Brisee (Pie Crust)- don't forget the fraisage! So much easier made in a food processor.
**Quiche Lorraine
*Pissaladiere Nicoise (Onion Tart with Olives)- Used to make jelly roll pan size for catering. Another onion eye killer.
***Pate A Choux (Cream Puff Paste)
***Petits Choux au Fromage aka Gougeres- the yummiest cheese puffs! I like to add a spoonful of Dijon mustard for contrast.
**Crepes- once made 1000 crepes for....
***Gateau de Crepes a la Florentine- made fifty of these for a backyard wedding with 500 guests in my catering days. My brother ferried the hot crepe gateaux from a rented industrial kitchen to the house for serving.
Dr. Hal's Coq au Vin |
**Coq au Vin (Chicken in Red Wine)- a Dr. Hal favorite. He made it just two weekends ago, telling me "I know that you don't like it, but it's really good."
***Poulets Grilles A La Diable (Chicken Broiled with Mustard And Herbs)- relatively easy for Julia
***Boeuf Bourguignon- another all time Dr. Hal favorite
Paupiettes de Boeuf- very 1950's dinner party style
***Tomates A La Provencale (Tomatoes Stuffed with Bread Crumbs, Herbs, and Garlic)
***Champignons Farcis (Stuffed Mushrooms)
**Souffle Au Fromage- our feeble attempt to interest the Picky Eater in eggs & cheese.A glorious Cheese Souffle |
*Legumes A La Grecque (Vegetables Cooked in Aromatic Broth)- have made a slew of these in my day.
*Celeri-Rave Remoulade (Celery Root in Mustard Sauce)
**Pommes De Terre A L'Huile (French Potato Salad)- still embarrassed about the first time I made this and didn't cook the potatoes all the way through.
***Salade Nicoise- one of my all time favorites!
*Mousse De Foies De Volaille (Chicken Liver Mousse)- chopped chicken liver gone elegante.
**Creme Anglaise (Custard sauce)
The French Chef Cookbook (1968)
Sorry to say that I have never used FCC- no need with access to the other books. Love the still photos of Julia sniffing vanilla beans, tasting for seasoning, and preparing to poach a salmon in a washtub!
The Beef Box- never again! |
***Potage Magali (Mediterranean Tomato Soup with Rice)- Yummy & never fail!
La Paupiette De Gargantua (Giant Stuffed Beef Roll)
Boeuf en Caisse, Surprise (Stuffed, Braised Pot Roast of Beef- Beef Case) aka as "Beef in a Box"- The night I made this recipe as a donation luncheon, Dr. Hal made me swear at least 30 times "Never, never, never again" to any outside catering! he had to cut a 7 lb. piece of top round beef into a box shape and cut out the inside, while I made a roux based sauce. The "surprise" had to be braise for hours (until 2 am in this case) and then I was up at 3 to rip off its cheesecloth cover, worried that it would stick as the meat cooled.
La Tentation De Bramafan (Eggplant Caviar with Walnuts)
*Tuiles Aux Amandes (Lacy Curved Almond Wafers)- guaranteed to singe your fingers!
Julia Child & Company (1978)
***Los Gatos Gateau Cake- rum flavored buttercream and apricot filling sandwiched between layers of almond meringue and iced with more buttercream and sliced almonds. Thank god for parchment paper!
Poulet De Charente A La Melonaise (Chicken Melon)- only fools rush in ...
**Skewered Vegetable Salad- good summer veggie dish
**Apple Turnover- gargantuan size to serve 6. The dessert cousin of the "pantins" listed below.
Chicken Bouillabaisse with Rouille (Garlic & Pimento Sauce)- part of the Lo-Cal Banquet, too lo-cal for me
*Aspargus Tips in Puff Pastry with Lemon Butter Sauce- And this she considers part of an "informal" dinner? Who makes puff pastry for a casual appetizer?
An American Paella In A Chinese-Style Electric Wok- beware of uncooked rice
**Ham Pithiviers (Puff Pastry Tart with Hidden Ham Filling)- worth making puff pastry for this one. Like the Almond Pithiviers, it will have you licking your plate
*Gravlaks (Dilled Fresh Salmon)- be sure to plan ahead, it takes 5 days to cure
***Minimeatballs- yummy mix of ground beef and pork pork sausage in a tangy sauce. One of the best of the genre.
*Bourbon-soaked Chocolate Truffles- too alcoholic and bitter for me
**Homemade Noodles- my first noodle manufacturing experience. Ok, as long as you don't try to jam the dough through the pasta machine (I bent ours).
***Le Gateau Victoire Au Chocolate Mousseline- a chocolate mousse cake of epic proportions. I have only made it once and it was amazing! Requires focus and serving right from the oven- do it for a dinner party when someone else is sharing the cooking duities with you.
**Homemade Pita Bread Pizzas- yummy, but, like all pizzas, very high carb/fat.
Chocolate-Chip Spice & Pound Cake
The Chocolate Bombe- how we love you so! |
Julia Child & More Company (1979)
**Buttermilk-Herb Baking Powder Biscuits
**Celery Root Remoulade - I like to use the sour cream-mustard dressing on other cruciferous vegetables like cabbage.
*******Bombe Aux Trois Chocolats (A Chocolate Mousse Hidden Under a Mold of Chcolate Fudge Cake, Topped with Chocolate Sauce) - we have a bowl and pattern cutouts devoted just to this dessert, our go-to tradition for Christmas. Rich and amazing. Never, ever, ever make this recipe with anything but the best quality chocolate.
*Cobb Salad - hearkens back to Julia's Southern California roots
*French Onion Soup Gratinee - a little over the top to make your own beef stock (I never do)
Gateau of Crepes Layered with Vegetables and Cheese - I once made this for a catering client who cold called me and asked me to make it for her after she had watched Julia make it on tv.
***Caramel Sauce - the BEST!!
*Gazpacho Salad (Layers of Colorful Freshly Cut Vegetables with Bread Crumbs and Garlic Dressing) - a ton of finicky dicing but a nice result. This can take hours if you're making enough for fifty or sixty people.
Plantation Spice Cookies - never became a fixture in my repetoire
Artichoke Scoops with Shellfish - love the egg yolk vinaigrette dressing, but only tried the whole process once.
Pissaladiere Gargantua (Giant Onion and Anchovy Pizza) - used olives instead of anchovies for catering purposes. This really isn't a pizza as it has a pie dough base. Haven't made one of these in years- sort of got sick of it.
From Julia Child's Kitchen (1981)
*Soupe Au Cresson (Watercress Soup)
**Quiche Aux Brocoli
**Pantin Aux Epinards, Simone Beck (Simca's Spinach Turnover with Ham & Mushrooms) also Pantin Au Chester (Cheddar Cheese Turnover)- early adventures in freeform turnovers
***Le Gateau Omni-Omelette (Many-layered Omelette with Multiple Fillings)- I foolishy used to offer a catered "breakfast in bed." Which meant I was up at dawn making omelettes and sneaking into customers' kitchens to leave this omelette, coffeecake, and fruit salad, etc.
**Roulade Au Fromage; Souffle Au Fromage Roule (Cheese Souffle Roll)- Watch out for cracks and craters when you try to roll this baby!
**Poulet Saute Grand'mere (Chicken sauteed with Potatoes, Salt Pork, and Mushrooms)- another opportunity for under-cooked potatoes.
***Supremes De Volaille en Goujons, A La Creme et Aux Champignons (Sliced Chicken Breasts Sauteed, with Cream & Mushrooms)- Yummy, yummy, yummy (and easy once the chicken breasts are boned). My mother and I evolved into speed chicken breast boners- we could do one a minute at our peak.
***Supremes De Volaille Sautees, Andalouse (Chicken Breasts Sauteed, White Wine Sauce with Tomato Fondue & Tarragon)- one of the all time best make ahead dishes for a large crowd.
Dinde Rotie Au Four (Roast Turkey)- I am not a big time meat cooker, and it took only one Thanksgiving turkey roasting experience to happily turn the honor over to my carnivore cooking husband.
Spaghetti Marco Polo (An Unorthodox Main-Course Spaghetti Dish to be Eaten with Chopsticks)- this may be heresy, but don't bother, there are plenty of better pasta recipes out there.
*Tranches D'Aubergine A L'Italienne (Eggplant Pizzas)
Caviar D'Aubergine (Eggplant Caviar: a Puree with Garlic, Sesame, and Lemon)
**Caesar Salad- Made this version once, then switched to the simpler styled salad in Field of Greens. Who needs to deal with coddled eggs?
Pain Francais (French Bread)- almost laborious beyond belief, but I did learn how to properly form round loaves and rolls.
**La Tarte Des Demoiselles Tatin (Upside-Down Apple Tart)- Impressed my future husband with one of these, cooked in an outoor porch oven the first time that he came to lunch.
**Tarte Aux Fraises (Fresh Strawberry Tart)
Fantaisie Glacee Aux Poires (Pear & Meringue Fantasy, Ice Cream Topped with Fruit Poached in Wine)- made individual heart shaped meringue bases for one of my first catering experiments.
***Mousse Au Chocolat- An extraordinary recipe- more complicated than many chocolate mousses- but worth it.
***Gateau Saint-Honore (Ring of Cream Puffs Filled with Pastry Cream and Fruits in Season)- challenging and spectacular!
***Buche De Noel (Christmas Chocolate Log Cake)- from the meringue mushrooms to the roughed up chocolate icing bark to the spun-sugar moss, a labor of love
**Les Madeleines de Commercy- Confirmation of my love-hate relationship with sponge cake.
***Spiced Dough for Gingerbread Houses- probably the recipe I have made more than any other over the last 30 years. I routinely go through 10 pounds of flour, 4 pounds of butter, 8 pounds of powdered sugar, and dozens of eggs for our holiday gingerbread house parties.
**Le Pithiviers (Almond Cream Tart in French Puff Pastry)- one of the yummiest!
Clafouti with Stuffed Pears- New Year's Eve 2001 |
This book brings Julia full circle- combining her French culinary expertise with American recipes, ingredients and traditions. What a great integration! Recipes are simplified but without the loss of quality. This tome seems sadly under appreciated or even noticed.
**Fisherman's Salad
**Chicken Breasts Meuniere - One of the Picky Eater's few attempts at eating meat. We sauteed some chicken breast, cut it up in little bits, put them on her high chair tray and were told that it "tastes too strong"
**Deviled Chicken with Mustard Coating - I prefer cut up chicken pieces to struggling with a butterflied chicken.
The Re-assembled Roast Turkey - Dr. Hal did it once for Thanksgiving, but his loyalty has since switched to Thanksgiving gone the America's Test Kitchen way.
**Boned Stuffed and Roasted Turkey Breast - a dlectable luncheon dish that can be made ahead and roasted close to serving time. I like the Mushroom Duxelles Stuffing.
**Roast Prime Ribs of Beef - Julia's guidelines for roasting a prime rib have saved many a Christmas roast from cremation.
***Stuffed Tomatoes Provencale - a summer standby with barbecued meats
**Feta Peppers (Bell or Chile Peppers Baked with Cheese)
*Wild Rice Braised with Mirepoix & Mushrooms Duxelles
***Ratatouille - my favorite version
**All-Season Bean Salad
**French Potato Salad - a standby
***Salade Nicoise
*Hot Corn Salad - a no-show at our Julia Child dinner; I made it a day or two later.
**Broccoli Quiche - prefer this to spinach
***Free-Form Fresh Apple Tart - minimum effort yields maximum success; you can use a variety of fruits
**Clafouti with Stuffed Pears - deep dish pie shell + custard + poached pears = a fun special occasion dessert
Baking with Julia (1996)
Julia was 84 years when this book was published, and her involvement was as host, coach, and cheerleader. Many of the recipes are a little hardcore at this stage in my life (especially the "Glorious Wedding Cake," in case you want to bake your own), but I have used one or two. The format is much more "coffee table" than her other books, with full page shimmering, mouthwatering color photos.
*Alsatian Onion Tart
***Cheese & Tomato Galette
**Vegetable Cream Cheese
**Salmon Spread
Julia and Jacques Cooking at Home (1999)
Still a new frontier for me!
Clearly, there are many happy but exhausting hours of cooking with Julia left for me!!
What a glorious tour of wonderful recipes. So many wonderful favorites and most stand the test of time in a wonderful way. I agree with you that The Way to Cook is sadly under appreciated compared to some of her other great cookbooks. I am thrilled at your inclusion of the Julia Child and Company Books as these were my entry points into Julia's grand cooking traditions. Thanks so much for publishing this. I'm embarking on my own Julia Child feast next weekend and you have doubly inspired me to go at it!!
ReplyDeleteJulia's recipes always make the effort involved worthwhile. As she would say "Bon appetit!"
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