Julia Child - The French Chef | Julia Child | Thank you Julia!!!
DVDs:
Julia Child - The ...
Julia Child - The French Chef
Julia Child
Wgbh Boston, 2005
average customer review:
based on 23 reviews
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highly recommended
The archetype for all TV Food shows. The great Julia. Buy It
These `The
French
Chef
' DVDs give us 18 episodes of this landmark
Julia
Child
PBS series organized by course rather than by chronology. Among the first disc's side dishes are early (1960s) black and white episodes mixed in with later (1970s) color episodes. These confirm what we have read in Julia Child's biography that the early shows were Herculean feats of improvisation in front of a live TV camera in an improvised Boston (WGBH) studio, where there was no opportunity to edit out mistakes.
These episodes show how Child really set the standard for the TV cooking show and invented almost all the conventions we see nowadays from the likes of Paula Deen, Giada DeLaurentiis, and Emeril Lagasse (in his no-audience `Essence of Emeril' shows). It also shows where show creators such as Alton Brown and Rachael Ray have created great shows primarily by breaking out of Julia Child's prototype.
While the contemporary TV culinarians still follow Julia's lead, it is amazing to see how so many of Julia's shows still do a better job with their subject. For starters, you get the full 30 minutes of material per episode. You don't get 22 minutes of material with three interruptions for commercials and promotions. You also get complete shows on a single dish, albeit relatively complicated dishes like the classic `Salade Nicoise'. After four years of watching the Food Network virtually on a daily basis, I recall no show, even from the more classicly oriented hosts such as Martha Stewart or Ina Garten, dealing with a complete composed salad.
The `Salade Nicoise' is composed of at least three major and two or three minor tasks. Making the potato salad alone takes practically half the show. And, actually seeing how Miss Julia composes the final presentation is easily worth anything from Ina or Martha.
In contrast, the modern 22 minute culinary shows are often used to demonstrate three or even four different dishes, which leaves very little room for expounding on less common techniques. If nothing else, the art of the swapout has been mastered to the point where one may be surprised to see any real cookng at all. This is one reason why I respect Rachael Ray's demonstrations, as she is clearly always working in real time.
One possible negative aspect of this show is seen on some episodes where Miss Julia gives us the traditional French method which has really been discarded by almost all modern chefs. One example which comes to mind is on her demonstration of trussing a roasting chicken. Every modern American writer I have seen, including even James Beard from 30 years ago, does not bother trussing a chicken in any way. They simply tuck the wing tips under the body and may suggest tenting the breast with aluminum foil or draping it with bacon so it does not become too well done while the slower cooking dark meat finishes.
Even this show, however, has its virtues, as when Julia shows us how to detect when a bird has gone past its prime by checking the bone on the tip of the breast. If it is fully bony, the bird is probably well over a year old. If it is still soft, the bird is still between 9 and 12 months old. I was also pleased to see, on this episode, exactly how the wishbone is extracted and was reassured to see that even so expert a cook as Ms. Julia Child had some difficulty in doing it neatly.
In short, Julia Child had no inhibitions against doing messy kitchen tasks.
If you are a Food Network junkie, or just a foodie, you can't go wrong by acquiring these Disks.
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Thank you Julia!!!
Alright, I admit it: I am a
chef
wannabe. So my reviews of cooking and baking books, DVDs, etc are slanted.
But you will have to admit, that before there was Paul, Jacque, Martha, Mario, Michael, Giada, Bobby and all the other greats, there was, and always will be, the one and only
Julia
. No one greater. This first DVD from her groundbreaking cooking series is a pure joy.
When this series first came out in the 60's, I was a little kid. It was on Saturdays on our local PBS station. I would stop anything I was doing and plop myself in front of the TV and wait for this tall, somewhat accented, unusual lady to teach me another cooking/baking secret of
French
cooking. I was hooked from the moment that I saw her first show. She IS the queen.
This show was the beginning of what would slowly evolve into an incredible food industry, eventually making TV cooking and baking a huge market, and starting the careers of many a chef.
This is a 3-disc set. It comes encased within a jacket that shows many photographs of how the show was really made with set people put into uncomfortable positions in order to invisibly help Ms.
Child
in making her show the success that it was.
The first disc is entitled "Starters and Side Dishes":
1. The Potato Show
2. Your Own French Onion Soup
3. Bouillabaisse a la Marseillaise
4. The Spinach Twins
5. Salade Nicoise
6. French Fries
The second disc is entitled "Main Courses":
1. Beef Bourguignon
2. To Roast a Chicken
3. The Lobster Show
4. To Stuff a Sausage
5. Tripes a la Mode
6. The Whole Fish Story
The third disc is entitled "Baking, Desserts, and Other Classics":
1. Queen of Sheba Cake
2. Cheese and Wine Party
3. Apple Dessert
4. Mousse Au Chocolat
5. The Good Loaf
6. The Omelette Show
She makes cooking and baking a class in which she does not act as if she is perfect. Things happen and perhaps it won't go as smoothly as it should, but if it can happen to her, then you know it is OK to have mishaps occur for you. She made you comfortable in learning and appreciating a different cuisine. Her point was that she loved French cooking and she wanted to share that knowledge with you. Julia was quite an interesting woman who had a rather interesting and privileged upbringing. Suffice it to say that early in her life, she did not even know how to boil water, much less attempt French cooking. But the love of a man named Paul Child, changed everything and that love evolved her life into the woman we came to know and admire. If you are interested in her biography, I suggest "Appetite for Life: The Biography of Julia Child" by Noel Riley Fitch.
She was such a gracious woman, but all who have known her have said that she was an everyday person, who took no pains in letting you know that she was as comfortable in simple surroundings as in fancy ones. You feel that in her manner of talking in this, or any of her series. She was the "grand dame" of the culinary world and we were blessed by her style and presence.
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Love, love, love this DVD!
Like others, I remember the fascination with watching
Julia
Child
on public television as a kid in the 70's, and even beyond (I think it was on cable sometime within the last decade). Recently I felt compelled to purchase this. I own the book "In Julia Child's Kitchen" which most of the recipes for the color TV shows are found, and I had fond memories. I was not disappointed! In fact, I plan to purchase Volume 2. I love the way the discs are divided into appetizers, etc., main courses and desserts. So much information here. Each show is a full 30 minutes. I love how Julia throws other information in along the way (such as the
French
Onion Soup show where she goes into detail about sharpening and caring for knives). Such a warm and wonderful personality, she is always humourous, never condescending. It is funny to watch things "not quite" turn out as planned, and she goes with it. It is a joy to watch!
My only disappointment is that there's not a "Volume 3." There are SO MANY of these shows available, I hope WGBH in Boston will release them in time. (One that I REALLY wish they would release on DVD is the Chicken Breast show which featured Chicken Kiev, I remember this one especially.) Yes, these shows are 30+ years old, and some of the foods are not quite what I would serve today (tripe, anyone?) but regardless there is a wealth of information in addition to the entertainment value. Highly recommended!
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Five Stars for Julia Child and Ruth Lockwood
One may remember
Julia
Child
as more of a perfectionist than she actually was and that these disks make clear. The Queen of Sheba Cake episode alone is worth the price of the set of three DVDs. I have been making this recipe for over four years and was amazed how much more I learned by actually seeing her perform the recipe herself. And she is right, it is the best chocolate cake you will have ever eaten. One wishes that more recipes were included, only two per disk, six in total, the one imperfection in this set. And I must add that they have not colorized the black and white episodes, Bravo!
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Such a Treasure!!!
The
French
Chef
....
Julia
Child
....will forever be a national treasure. Thankfully, technology has made it possible for Ms. Child to teach for generations to come.
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