
THE UNEXPURGATED JULIA CHILD
Commissioned by the New York Times/2002
Julia Child, who mastered the art of French
cooking well enough to turn it into prime-time entertainment and
who by introducing cassoulet to a casserole culture elevated both
American food and television, died TK in TK. She had celebrated
her 90th birthday in August 2002.
As a cookbook author first and public television
star second, Mrs. Child was a towering figure on the culinary
front for more than 40 years. Most Americans knew her as the
unflappable “French
Chef,” a tall and twinkly character who in demonstrating
classic dishes could make lobster bisque look as easy as toast.
But she was also a rarity in a profession characterized by savage
backbiting: she was respected as much by her most judgmental peers
as by amateurs who would not know a soufflé from a cupcake.
Mrs. Child was not the first dedicated cook
to turn cooking into a spectator sport – James Beard preceded her on television
in 1945, Dione Lucas in 1948 – but she was the first to understand
the seductiveness of a breezy approach to daunting material. Her
up-the-scales signature signoff, “bon appetit!” was
the first French phrase many Americans ever learned to utter with
confidence, much as they came to glorify stew as boeuf bourguignon.
She admitted she was “a natural ham,” and it was clear
that she not only loved the camera but was almost intimate with
it.
Mrs. Child, whose “Mastering the Art of French Cooking” has
sold TK copies in various editions, was a pop icon virtually from
her debut on WGBH in Boston in 1963. She got her start in television
at 50, an age youth-crazed producers today would consider well
past her sell-by date, and made the cover of Time magazine five
years later. Over the decades she was a favorite of comedians,
most famously Dan Aykroyd on “Saturday Night Live,” who
played her boozily bleeding to death while shrieking, “Save
the liver.” Jean Stapleton even portrayed her in a musical
with sung recipes called “Bon Appetit!” in 1989.
But Mrs. Child had a more serious cultural
side. She was the first public television personality to win
an Emmy and also held a George Foster Peabody Award; her other
accolades were as disparate as a National Book Award and the
Legion d’Honneur from the French
government. When she moved from her longtime home in Cambridge,
Mass., to a retirement center in her home state of California,
the Smithsonian Institution in Washington took her famous kitchen:
whisks, stockpots and 800 knives.
For all her expertise at the stove, what made
Mrs. Child such an influential teacher was her good-humored insistence
that cooking was not brain surgery. If you drop the turkey on
the floor, she would famously say, “You’re alone in your kitchen.” Just
pick it up and go on with the dressing. Unlike so many of the “Naked” and
the “bam!” television chefs today, though, she always
put the food before the showmanship. She had real respect for recipes,
and by example she made cooking a respectable profession, for women
as well as men.
Mrs. Child also consistently refused to cut
her cuisine to fit the current fashion. At the height of the
reign of nutrition terror, in the 80s and 90s, when reliable
health information seemed to have the shelf life of a baguette,
she repeated one mantra: “If
you’re afraid of butter, use cream.” Long before anyone
ever put the words French and paradox together, she was advocating
red wine and cheese, and the more the better.
Her career was also marked by an integrity
not often on display in a business in which loyalty to products
lasts only as long as the endorsement dollars. Mrs. Child was
always a star, never a spokesman. She prided herself on not granting
endorsements, because she was “devoted to public television,” and she was
not afraid to mock sponsors of her advertising-free programs. She
once demonstrated how to break off a part on a Cuisinart to make
it less cumbersome to use even as the manufacturer’s representatives
sat in the audience. And she was known to sue to prevent a restaurant
from advertising that it was one of her favorites.
Although she came late to the table, never
even attempting to cook before she married at 34, Mrs. Child
had no hesitation at adopting the French way of eating – in
the case of a pig, every part but the squeal. Her fearlessness
made great television: she roasted ducks, sauteed sweetbreads
and stuffed sausages into casings with grunts of effort. She
stayed with WGBH even after her series became a national success
because it gave her the freedom to cook tripe, kidneys and other
offal that she said would not fry on commercial television.
Mrs. Child, who was as slim as she was tall,
was also French in her insistence on moderation. “People are afraid of French
food because of all the cream and butter,” she said. “But
you don’t see all those big fat people over there that you
see lumbering around Disneyland.”
While she has been credited with inspiring
a boom in French restaurants, an explosion of fancy food markets
and even the arrival of the Food Network, she insisted her original
book and program benefited from “a concatenation of factors” in the early 1960s.
It was an era when Jacqueline Kennedy was raising awareness of
all things French, and travel to France, which used to take a week
by boat, was shortened to mere hours by plane. Duncan Hines cake
mixes and Jell-O “salads” may have been far more prevalent
than chocolate mousse and vinaigrette, but Americans were ready
to embrace French food, at least as it was translated by a charismatic
compatriot.
Mrs. Child wrote her masterwork over the better
part of a decade in collaboration with Simone Beck and Louise
Berthiolle, her partners in a cooking school they called L’Ecole
de Trois Goumandes in Paris. They were so bent on producing home-style
French cooking at its most rigid and exacting that they included
recipes like pressed duck, which required a special machine.
Not surprisingly, the manuscript was rejected by Houghton-Mifflin,
the publisher that had originally contracted for it. Judith Jones
at Alfred A. Knopf read a later, more comprehensive version and
decided it was the detailed, lucid, approachable French cookbook
that she, and all of America, had been waiting for.
The introduction is Mrs. Child at her most
direct: “This
is a book for the servantless American cook who can be unconcerned
on occasion with budgets, waistlines, time schedules, children’s
meals, the parent-chauffeur-den mother syndrome, or anything else
which might interfere with the enjoyment of producing something
wonderful to eat.” The book, she wrote, “could well
be titled ‘French Cooking from the American Supermarket.’’’
As revolutionary as the book was, it might
have only gathered cobwebs in bookstores alongside Escoffier’s Guide Culinaire
if not for Mrs. Child’s way with a whisk on camera. Invited
onto a book review program on WGBH to talk about “Mastering,” she
chose to whip up an omelet, beating the eggs in a giant copper
bowl. Russell Morash, who became her producer, recalled the sight: “I
thought to myself: ‘Who is this madwoman?’’
Viewers were so taken with the frenzy of cooking
and relaxed chatter that she was hired to put together 26 segments,
for $50 apiece. Stations in Pittsburgh, San Francisco, then New
York picked the series up, she said, “and we was made.” With help from
her multitalented husband, Paul, she appeared on a set replicating
a home kitchen and cooked the dishes of the week, then served them
to herself, complete with wine. “The French Chef” became
the longest-running program in the history of public television;
it was followed by “Julia Child & Company,” “Dinner
With Julia” and other series. One critic, John J. O’Connor
in the New York Times, described Mrs. Child as “one of the
few relentlessly real people on television.”
The unlikely star whipped through quenelles and coquilles St.
Jacques with the greatest of ease, moving on smoothly even after
dropping pots or announcing she was about to put a gratin in the
refrigerator instead of in the oven where it belonged. Years later,
she explained her insouciance by saying she had demonstrated those
same dishes many times at her school in France, whose logo she
wore on her signature blue shirt, and she had the technique down
cold.
All her programs were distilled to what she
called fundamental lessons. In browning meat, it was as simple
as “hot oil,
dry meat and don’t crowd the pan.’’ She would
cook chicken fricassee and coq au vin side by side to show that
they were essentially the same dish, one made with white wine,
the other with red. She advised viewers to “plunge right
in” in boning a chicken and to “have the courage of
your convictions” in flipping a potato pancake. No one ever
had to send away for a printed recipe after watching one of her
segments.
When she wrote recipes, they were long and
detailed because, she said, she felt obligated to insure their
success. “A cookbook
is only as good as its worst recipe,” she said. All 10 of
her cookbooks were held up as models of clarity. She was also adamant
that cooking was not like free-form jazz: she intended her recipes
to be followed to the letter. The one bane of her high-profile
career, she once said, was too much mail, especially any letter “from
some stupid woman.”
Mrs. Child also knew the distinction between
chef (skilled overseer of a restaurant kitchen) and cook (herself).
The program was titled “The
French Chef” only “so it would fit in TV Guide on one
line,” she said, adding: “I always hoped we’d
get one.”
Julia Carolyn McWilliams was born August 15,
1912, in Pasadena, Calif. Her father was a wealthy farm consultant
and investor; her mother was a housewife with a cook and maid
who could make not much more than baking powder biscuits, codfish
balls and Welsh rarebit. Julia was the oldest of three siblings,
each so tall that their mother boasted that she had given birth
to “18 feet
of children.” Otherwise, she gave no indication that she
would lead an outsize life.
She attended Smith College at a time when “women could be
either nurses or teachers,” she said, and she “had
some vague idea of being a novelist or a basketball star.” After
graduation in 1934 and a stint as a copywriter in between cocktail
parties in New York, she returned home, on the way to becoming
a slacker decades ahead of her time. According to her biographer,
Noel Riley Fitch, in “Appetite for Life” (Doubleday,
1997), her one real job in her hometown, in advertising and public
relations, ended when she was fired for insubordination, and rightly
so, she always said.
After World War II broke out, she had fantasies of becoming a
spy and signed up for intelligence work with the Office of Strategic
Services and was sent off as a file clerk to Ceylon. There she
met Paul Child, the head of a chart-making division who was 10
years older and several inches shorter. He was also an artist,
a poet and a serious food lover who opened up her taste horizons
on their travels in China.
They married in 1946 and spent a year in Washington before Mr.
Child was sent to Paris by the United States Information Agency.
It was a fateful move, because Mrs. Child by then was struggling
to learn to cook and her husband was suffering the consequences.
French food immediately took her attempts to a higher plane. Out
of those early experiments came her core belief, that cooking was
an art to be studied, not picked up on the fly.
She threw herself into studies at the Cordon Bleu and later joined
the Cercle des Gourmettes, a club where she met Simone Beck and
Louisette Bertholle.
In 1956, after postings in Marseille, Norway and Germany, the
Childs bought a five-bedroom house in Cambridge, drawn to the intellectual
stimulation of a university town. They continued to visit Europe
frequently, maintaining a home near Grasse, in the south of France.
Over the years, Mrs. Child devoted herself
to her television series while writing companion cookbooks, ending
with “Julia and
Jacques Cooking at Home,” in collaboration with Jacques Pepin,
in 1999. For the first books, she would test her recipes upstairs
in the open kitchen in Cambridge, outfitted with a Garland range,
while her husband painted in a studio in the basement. When she
called, he would come up to photograph her latest creation to give
the illustrator something to draw on.
As Mrs. Child aged, her role in more and more
programs was to sit by as other cooks did the sautéing. But her star power
was undiminished: on “Julia Child & Company” she
made Emeril Lagasse look like a mild-mannered professional. She
also had a regular gig on “Good Morning America” on
ABC in the 1980s.
Mrs. Child was a breast cancer survivor, a
cat lover, a fervent advocate of Planned Parenthood and an unabashed
sensualist with a sly sense of humor. One year she and her husband
sent out Valentine’s
cards with a photograph of them together in the bathtub in Paris.
One of her last projects was to be a memoir of her years in France.
She always refused to speak evil of fast food
but admitted she could live without Mexican cuisine. Overall,
she said, she preferred “la
cuisine soigné: long, caring cooking.” Asked what
her favorite meal was, she might mention duck or leg of lamb but
would almost always add: “I love good, fresh food cooked
by someone who knows what he’s doing.”
Mrs. Child’s obsession with promoting the culinary arts
as a profession led to her becoming the first woman inducted into
the Culinary Institute of America’s hall of fame. She helped
establish the American Institute of Wine and Food and, later, Copia:
the American Center for Wine, Food and the Arts in California.
In 1986, after the death of her friend James Beard, she led the
effort to buy his townhouse in Greenwich Village and convert it
into a nonprofit foundation.
She was also active in the International Association of Culinary
Professionals. For her 90th birthday, 20 restaurants across the
country staged dinners in her honor to raise money for the group
for culinary research in France. Along with lending her kitchen
to the Smithsonian, she contributed her huge cookbook collection
to the Schlesinger Library at Harvard.
Paul Child died 1994 after a long hospitalization. She is survived
by TK.
To the end, Mrs. Child maintained her image
as the ultimate bon vivant, a California girl with French tastes.
Whenever she was asked what her guilty pleasures were, she responded: “I don’t
have any guilt.”
Despite decades of rumors about her suspiciously relaxed condition
on the set, though, she always denied a one-bottle-for-me, one-for-the-pot
pattern of cooking. Her husband, in fact, told interviewers that
one of his earliest duties was dyeing water with beef extract
so that it could pass for red wine – the producers could
afford real Burgundy only for the stew, not for the star’s
glass.
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