Best Cookbooks
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315 ratings, 4.52 average rating, 56 reviews
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published
October 16th 2001
(first published 1983)
by Knopf
binding
Hardcover, 752 pages
isbn
0375413405
(isbn13: 9780375413407)
description
“Anyone can cook in the French manner anywhere,” wrote Mesdames Beck, Bertholle, and Child, “with the right instruction.” And ...more
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other reviews (showing 1-20 of 458)
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I’ve had Volume One of Mastering the Art of French Cooking on the shelf for forty years and although I’ve not utilized in quite the way Julie what’s-her-name did by cooking all the recipes and writing a book about it, I have cooked a bit from it but more importantly, I’ve LEARNED so much from it. Julia Child and cohorts were great instructors in processes and whys and wherefores. So I finally got Volume Two just to have them side-by-side on my shelf – haven’t dipped into that one...more
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Read in November, 2006
OK, so coming to America I had heard of Julia Child but other than a vague familiarity I didn't think about her much. Food I think about all the time and it was whilst reading a comment by Anthony Bourdain that when in doubt he turns to Mrs Child that I though for the first time, she sounds interesting. One doesn't think of Julia Child and Anthony Bourdain together. Then about 2 years ago now there was a discussion on a foodie site about making croissants and I became filled with the desire to c...more
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Read in May, 2008
I lucked into an original 1961 copy of this in near-mint condition for $5. It's been sitting around until last weekend when I thought that this would be the source to make the perfect hollandaise. I ended up with a full-on scientific explanation of what the -aise sauces are (the forcing of an egg yolk to hold and suspend an oil! who knew?!) and was then sucked in to reading this cover-to-cover over the weekend. I am near-obsessed with Julia Child the personality (I think some of her origi...more
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3 comments
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recommends it for:
Those who love excessive amounts of butter and cream.
I'm curretly revisiting this one. I had to put it away for a few months due to the weight gain from round one with Julia...butter anyone? This book made me realize how much I love cooking. She breaks the recipes down so anyone can understand. I've made several dishes from the book now and the recipes are hard to truly screw up. Julia Child makes it possible for anyone to feel like a culinary star. Screw Rachael Ray!. Julia will always be the queen. She's like the Oprah of the culinary arts. P.S....more
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food
I bought this cookbook after reading Julie and Julia - the memoir of the gal who sets out to cook every recipe in this cookbook in one year in her tiny Manhattan apartment. The recipe descriptions from that book sounded so delicious that I wanted to try some of them myself. Everything that I have tried so far has been wonderful, but some of the recipes are really time consuming. Be careful to read the entire recipe before starting so that you know what you are in for....alot of the recipes in...more
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This is the book that taught me how to cook. Not only does it contain some really excellent recipes, it also gives detailed instructions for fundamental cooking techniques. Some of the recipes are rather involved, but Julia provides everything you'll need to work your way up to them.
Due to the complexity of some of the recipes and the generally high butter and cream content, I would not use this book for every day cooking. I reserve it for learning new techniques and for special occasions...more
Due to the complexity of some of the recipes and the generally high butter and cream content, I would not use this book for every day cooking. I reserve it for learning new techniques and for special occasions...more
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There are some good ideas/advice on food preparation, and the basic recipes of French cuisine. I find it a bit too out-of-date, in terms of healthy cooking. As a former year-long resident of the Provence and of the Franche-Comte, I love Creme fraiche, but do you have to put butter and cremes etc. into most dishes and sauces? Overall a good introduction to French cuisine and a beautiful hardcover edition that just feels good in your hands (for all of us who like books).
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Read in January, 2006
I bought it because I love Julia but the recipes are a bit dated and the instructions aren't that easy to follow.Julia's The Way to Cook was much easier. Saddest thing is knowing that she did this book (in part) while in France and the recipes were originally in metric (grams...) and she spent so much time converting them for American kitchens. Now so many real cooks use the metric system for weighing (or at least measuring) because it is so much more accurate.
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recommends it for:
people who love butter
I have never done a single recipe from this book because it makes everything sound really, really difficult. Still, it's fun to read if you like butter as much as I do. I tend to read it while I am eating something I have made from a more accessible, less cholesteroly cookery author such as Debbie Madison. A while ago I read Julia's omelet instructions and was, like, "Oh dear! I've been doing everything wrong for all this time!" And then I never made an omelet again.
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Learned so much from this book, but hardly look at it any more (the book and I are almost exactly the same age.) The directions are very detailed and the recipes go on for pages, with line drawings to show techniques. This is a book for people with a serious interest in learning to cook French food of a certain type; it's not a collection of compact recipes like most cookbooks. And yes, this type of cuisine uses a holy metric busload of delicious animal fats.
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I learned to make omelets from this book and Julia's TV show.
Read it with as much attention and delight as a novel.
Is everyone aware of the terrific new Goodreads technology that shows both the hardcover AND the dust jacket for a book? When I saw it just now I wanted to hug Otis and his team. I love it. To find it, this is the ISBM for my edition. 0394401557 (isbn13: 9780394401553)
Read it with as much attention and delight as a novel.
Is everyone aware of the terrific new Goodreads technology that shows both the hardcover AND the dust jacket for a book? When I saw it just now I wanted to hug Otis and his team. I love it. To find it, this is the ISBM for my edition. 0394401557 (isbn13: 9780394401553)
recommends it for:
food lovers.
Essential. Essential. Essential. A timeless classic by noneother than French cooking maestro, the late great Julia Child. From roasting fowl to whipping up hollandaise, this book is a piece of American history. It marks the first ever instructional French recipe collection to change the way Americans thought about food and subsequently, the way Americans ate. Thanks Julia!
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Being curious, been falling in love with French Cuisine and been in some learning stage of making French cookery pushed me to search this book!!
I like it (not sure yet if I'll totally LOVE it) and I enjoy the information given - specially for housewives like me.
The only 'lacking of other star' is that the pictures are hand-illustration, wish it was photographed.
I like it (not sure yet if I'll totally LOVE it) and I enjoy the information given - specially for housewives like me.
The only 'lacking of other star' is that the pictures are hand-illustration, wish it was photographed.
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Some say Jacques Pepin is the only one to learn from, but this book continues to change my life.
The Beef Bourgouinonne recipe, once mastered (and it's pretty easy to accomplish mastery of it), will become a go-to recipe for those days (especially winter ones) where comfort and sophistication are both required.
Forever Julia!
The Beef Bourgouinonne recipe, once mastered (and it's pretty easy to accomplish mastery of it), will become a go-to recipe for those days (especially winter ones) where comfort and sophistication are both required.
Forever Julia!
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True confessions - I don't read cookbooks so much for the recipes... I love the history and the behind the scenes stories and this classic volume truly delivers. It WILL make you hungry, though... and will also make you long for a warm French inspired evening.. especially if you're reading it on a twenty below zero night in Alaska (like me!)
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Trying to learn how to cook with whole sticks of butter and heavy cream? This is the book for you! My next adventure will be croissants. In a perfect world, I would work my way through this book, cover to cover. Since my world isn't made of foie gras, however, I will settle for a few special recipes.
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Read in January, 1997
"While French cooking isn't really to my taste overall, I love this book--I love the techniques taught and the wonderful detail in the teaching aspect of cooking. I do enjoy the vegetable dishes and pastries very much. (Organ meats and lots of eggs just aren't my cup of tea).
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recommends it for:
Serious cooks.
This is book is the second in a trilogy of what I would consider "essentials" for anyone serious about the art of cooking. Read it, use it, love it, it is all you need to "master" modern cookery. A delight! Humorous! It takes the stuffiness and intimidation away from the gourmet.
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Read in January, 2003
THE bible on kitchen skills. You learn how to cook from this book, not just because you are cooking French food, but because the authors take you through every step on how to prepare each recipe.
I've learned more from this book than any other cookbook I've read.
I've learned more from this book than any other cookbook I've read.
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Read in January, 2007
This is a book that I would really like to have time to cook from. Both Martha Stewart and Ina Garten (Barefoot Contessa)cooked every recipe in this cookbook. They both did not have formal culinary training, but learned from this book. How cool is that?!
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