Champaign Taste is having a bloggy anniversary party for Julia and I just had to join in. Julia's - yes, I never met her, but she's Julia to me - Julia's been a part of my life since I won two prizes in a junior high school French class cooking competition - using her recipes for onion soup and an apple clafouti.
I've posted a couple of her recipes over the past year, for said apple clafouti, and for garlic mashed potatoes. And my very first post was her crack about butter.
Her cookbooks take place of honor on my cookery bookshelf:
- Mastering the Art of French Cooking, volumes 1 and 2
- From Julia Child's Kitchen
- The Way To Cook
- Baking with Julia
I grew up with a cartoon framed in my mother's kitchen - a woman swilling straight out of the sherry bottle while her husband asks "Been watching the French Chef again?".
And my standard pie crust, the one I make with my eyes shut? Straight from Julia:
2 cups flour
1 t. salt
1 T. sugar (if it's for something sweet, leave it out otherwise)
1 stick unsalted butter
3 T. shortening or lard
2-3 T. ice water
Combine in the usual manner.
For her birthday in 1961, her husband Paul wrote a sonnet for her - here 'tis, if you've never had the pleasure.
O Julia, Julia, cook and nifty wench,
Whos unsurpassed quenelles and hot souffles,
Whose English, Norse and German, and whose French,
Are all beyond my piteous powers to praise --
Whose sweetly-rounded bottom and whose legs,
Whose gracious face, whose nature temperate,
Are only equalled by her scrambled eggs:
Accept from me, your ever-loving mate,
this acclamation shaped in fourteen lines
Whose inner truth belies its outer sight;
For never were there foods, nor were there wines,
Whose flavor equals yours for sheer delight.
O luscious dish! O gustatory pleasure!
You satisfy my taste-buds beyond measure.
Julia, thank you and Happy Birthday.
aww, this is lovely! i want to watch a bunch of french chef episodes now.
ReplyDeleteThis makes me want to know more...
ReplyDeleteOh, this is sweet.
ReplyDeleteI always loved watching her show.
Mmmm...apple clafouti. I've always admired the pictures of cherry clafouti, but balked at the thought of pitting all. those. cherries. (I think I remember that you said once that you had some kind of cherry-pitting gadget. But even so.)
ReplyDeletethat sonnet is great.
ReplyDeleteI did meet her. She was involved in the cookbook collection of a library where I worked in college, and I worked on the enormous task of preparing the 1500 cookbooks that she donated so they could be added to library's collection.
ReplyDeleteShe really did sound like that!
Beautiful! I love your post. The memories of the cartoon, the Julia quotes, the poem are all wonderful. Thank you so much for making this a great event.
ReplyDeleteP.S. The roundup will be posted soon (today, that is)!
Love the sonnet.
ReplyDeleteI had thought of you when I heard on the radio that it was Julia's birthday. What a great post.
ReplyDeleteHow fantastic, I just adore the sonnet. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteWhat a special tribute! Awesome to post the sonnet. They sounded like a totally smashing couple of lovebirds - their entire marriage.
ReplyDeleteI loved watching her cook while I was growing up!
Love your blog, btw!
BZ
Come by my site to receive an award!
ReplyDeleteVery nice! The sonnet is a really sweet touch.
ReplyDeleteJust the thought of Julia makes Bossy want to slug some cooking wine. Any excuse, really.
ReplyDelete(they don't make 'em like that anymore)
What a lovely tribute! And thanks for the pie crust recipe!
ReplyDeleteThat poem is fantastic! Lovely tribute.
ReplyDeleteOn another note, I saw your counter.... now that was depressing - 521 days?!? Will we make it that long? Yikes!
That's a cute poem. Paul was so sweet. They were such a wonderful couple. Now I feel like watching the French chef dvds...
ReplyDeleteI'd never seen the sonnet - FABULOUS. Thank you.
ReplyDelete