The perfect gift for any follower of Julia Child—and any lover of French
food. This boxed set brings together
Mastering the Art of French Cooking,
first published in 1961, and its sequel,
Mastering the Art of French
Cooking, Volume Two, published in 1970.
Volume One is the classic cookbook, in its entirety—524 recipes.
“Anyone can cook in the French manner anywhere,” wrote Mesdames Beck,
Bertholle, and Child, “with the right instruction.” And here is the book
that, for nearly fifty years, has been teaching Americans how.
Mastering the Art of French Cooking is for both seasoned cooks and
beginners who love good food and long to reproduce at home the savory
delights of the classic cuisine, from the historic Gallic masterpieces to
the seemingly artless perfection of a dish of spring-green peas. The
techniques learned in this beautiful book, with more than one hundred
instructive illustrations, can be applied to recipes in all other French
cookbooks, making them infinitely usable. In compiling the secrets of famous
Cordon Bleu chefs, the authors produced a magnificent volume that continues
to have a place of honor in American kitchens.
Volume Two is the sequel to the great cooking classic—with 257 additional
recipes.
Following the publication of the celebrated Volume One, Julia Child and
Simone Beck continued to search out and sample new recipes among the classic
dishes and regional specialties of France—cooking, conferring, tasting,
revising, perfecting. Out of their discoveries they made, for Volume Two, a
brilliant selection of precisely those recipes that not only add to the
repertory but, above all, bring the reader to a new level of mastery of the
art of French cooking.
Each of these recipes is worked out step-by-step, with the clarity and
precision that are the essence of the first volume. Five times as many
drawings as in Volume One make the clear instructions even more so.
Perhaps the most remarkable achievement of this volume is that it will make
Americans actually more expert than their French contemporaries in two
supreme areas of cookery: baking and charcuterie. In France one can turn to
the local bakery for fresh and expertly baked bread, or to neighborhood
charcuterie for pâtés and terrines and sausages. Here, most of us have no
choice but to create them for ourselves.
Bon appétit!
Julia Child was born in Pasadena, California. She graduated from Smith
College and worked for the OSS during World War II in Ceylon and China,
where she met Paul Child. After they were married they lived in Paris, where
Ms. Child studied at the Cordon Bleu and taught cooking with Simone Beck and
Louisette Bertholle, with whom she wrote the first volume of Mastering
the Art of French Cooking (1961).
In 1963 Boston’s WGBH launched The French Chef television series,
which made Julia Child a national celebrity, earning her the Peabody Award
in 1965 and an Emmy in 1966. Her subsequent public television shows—Julia
Child & Company (1978), Julia Child & More Company (1980),
Cooking with Master Chefs (1993), In Julia’s Kitchen with Master
Chefs (1995), Baking with Julia (1996), and her one-on-one
collaboration with Jacques Pépin, Julia and Jacques Cooking at Home
(1999)—were all accompanied by books of the same names. The Way to Cook,
her magnum opus, was published in 1989, and in 2000 she gave us Julia’s
Kitchen Wisdom, a distillation of her years of cooking experience. Her
memoir, My Life in France, was published posthumously in 2006. She
died in 2004.