Julia Child On France, Fat And Food On The Floor
In a 1989 interview, Julia Child describes the first meal she had in France in 1948 — the start of her lifelong love affair with French cooking. With her signature combination of gusto and charm, Child would spend the rest of her career guiding American amateurs through the intricacies of French cuisine.
Guest
Host
Related Topics
Other segments from the episode on September 1, 2011
Transcript
*** TRANSCRIPTION COMPANY BOUNDARY ***
..DATE:
20110901
..PGRM:
Fresh Air
..TIME:
12:00-13:00 PM
..NIEL:
N/A
..NTWK:
NPR
..SGMT:
Unlocking The Mysteries Of Good Cooking
TERRY GROSS, host:
This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross.
We're going to continue our All You Can Eat series with Harold McGee, an
authority on the science of cooking. He writes about subjects like why
people perceive taste differently; how heat moves in cooking, whether
it's an oven or a microwave and how to take advantage of that; why eggs
solidify and how to best cook them or use them in custards and creams;
why some meats are juicier when cooked at a low temperature; why beans
give you gas; and why it's so hard to roast a whole turkey. Wait until
you hear his suggestion of how to solve that problem.
McGee's books can make you a wiser cook or, as in my case, help explain
why you're not a very good one. He's the author of the bestseller "On
Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen." He writes the
Curious Cook column for the New York Times.
Our interview was recorded last year, after the publication of his
latest book, "Keys to Good Cooking: A Guide to Making the Best of Foods
and Recipes."
Harold McGee, welcome back to FRESH AIR.
Mr. HAROLD McGEE (Author, "Keys To Good Cooking: A Guide to Making the
Best of Food and Recipes"): Thanks, Terry.
GROSS: One of the things I found really interesting about your book that
kind of sounds obvious, but I never thought about it this way before,
you say people perceive flavors differently.
And it's just not - it's not just that we like different things, we're
actually physically equipped differently.
Mr. McGEE: That's right. That's something that we've learned just in the
last, I don't know, 10 or so years. When we taste something, experience
the flavor of something, that involves two of our senses, the sense of
taste, which happens on our tongue, and the sense of smell, which
happens in our nose. And we have receptors on our tongues and in our
nose to detect the chemicals that create flavor, and it turns out that
we all have different sets of receptors and different numbers of
receptors.
And so some of us are more or less sensitive to some flavors. Some of us
can't perceive flavors, certainly flavors. It's kind of like the flavor
equivalent of colorblindness. And so we all live in different worlds
when it comes to tasting foods.
GROSS: Yeah, you say some people have more taste buds than other people
do.
Mr. McGEE: That's right. Again, this is something that we've only really
known for the last 10 years or so. And it goes a long way, I think, to
explaining why it is that people have such strong opinions about what
they like and don't like and how they can vary so much.
GROSS: And cravings.
Mr. McGEE: Yes, although cravings then gets into psychology, which is a
whole other area of variability and interest.
GROSS: I suppose. So while we're talking about taste, you write that the
best time to season food is shortly before serving it and often, like,
when it's at the serving temperature.
I always thought - see, whenever I read your books, I always learn that
I'm even worse cook than I thought.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: Which is saying a lot. But I always figured that if you put in
the spice early, it gives the spice more time to flavor whatever it is
that you're cooking.
Mr. McGEE: Well, that's absolutely true. But it turns out that during
the course of long cooking, with flavors that you've added at the very
beginning, those herbs and spices are modified. Those flavors are
modified, and they do kind of integrate into the dish as a whole, but
they lose some of the freshness that they have when they haven't been
cooked yet.
And so sometimes that's fine. Sometimes, all you want is that kind of
slow-cooked, relaxed, melded flavor. But sometimes you want a little bit
of that herb or spice to be a bit more prominent, a bit more noticeable
on its own. And that's when it's useful to taste at the end and then add
a little bit of whatever it is that you really want to taste to make
sure that it's there.
GROSS: So right before serving?
Mr. McGEE: Yeah, and you're right that doing it at serving temperature
is important because flavor balances change with temperature. Foods
taste different when they're piping hot compared to when they're room
temperature or warm.
And so it's important to wait until the food is around the temperature
that you're going to serve it at and then do the seasoning.
GROSS: While we're talking about spice and flavoring, why is that lemon
juice or vinegar can make flavor brighter? I mean, you say acidity is
especially undervalued as a general flavor booster.
Mr. McGEE: That's right. And it turns out that again, one of the things
we've learned about the experience of flavor is that taste and smell
really work together as a kind of combined sensation for appreciating
foods.
And so the aroma of a food can actually be changed by taste elements
like saltiness and acidity. And so it turns out that when we adjust
things like salt and acid, we're actually helping to make the aroma, the
whole experience of the food, that much more vivid.
And salt and acid are the two tastes in particular that help to bring
out all the other components of a food's flavor.
GROSS: Why does salt help enhance a food's flavor? I mean, you don't
smell salt. I don't think you do, anyway.
Mr. McGEE: That's right. So a couple of things happen. One is that salt
changes the chemistry of the food in such a way that it makes aroma
molecules want to leave the food. And strange as it may sound, the more
an aroma molecule, a flavor, wants to leave the food, the more easily we
can perceive it because it has to get up into our nose for us to notice
that it's there.
So salt does that. Salt helps flavors kind of jump out of the food and
into our nose, and so we sense them more vividly.
And the other thing is that it seems to have an effect in the processing
that the brain does to the experience of flavor. If we eat a food that's
got a certain aroma, and it has no salt, our brain registers that and
kind of gives us not much of a sensation.
But if we add a little bit of salt, then the brain seems to be making a
judgment: Well, you know, there's something useful here nutritionally,
and so pay more attention to that flavor. And so the flavor becomes more
prominent.
GROSS: So is there a difference in terms of how much aroma the salt
releases if you put the salt in while you're cooking or if you just
sprinkle the salt on the salt shaker after the dish is done?
Mr. McGEE: Well, it's true that when you add salt to a food as it's
cooking, it's going to encourage some aroma molecules to leave more
readily than they would otherwise, which means that they end up in the
kitchen air so that the kitchen smells nice while you're cooking, but
the aromas have left the food. And that's maybe not so desirable.
If you add it at the very end, then you don't have that kind of cooking
period loss, and the aroma molecules leave the food when you want them
to leave, which is in the process of eating.
GROSS: And since you value acidity as a flavor booster, and you talk
specifically here about vinegar and lemon, how do you use them in the
cooking process?
Mr. McGEE: Well, at the very end of cooking, when I'm making the last-
minute adjustments to flavor, I simply taste whatever it is, say a pasta
sauce or something like that. And then I actually do go through kind of
a checklist, a mental checklist, because we have only four or five basic
tastes.
And so I just ask: You know, does this have the right balance of salt?
Does it, could it maybe use a little sugar, a little sweetness not to
make it sweet, obviously sweet, but to just kind of round out the
flavor? And the same with acidity.
Acidity is one of the flavors that is mouthwatering. Acidity makes our
saliva flow, and in the process of eating, that's a very pleasant
experience. That's why we talk about food as being mouthwatering, and
acidity can really contribute to that.
So I just try to run through that checklist and make sure that the sauce
has everything that it needs to taste as good as it can taste.
GROSS: Is acidity more mouthwatering than sugar and sweet?
Mr. McGEE: It is, yeah. It causes more saliva flow, you know, to take
mouthwatering absolutely literally. There are two tastes that are
especially mouthwatering. One is acidity and the other is umami, which
is the flavor, the taste of MSG, which we - it's a Japanese term, umami.
The best translation for it, I think, is savory.
It's again this kind of hard-to-define but mouth-filling, mouthwatering
flavor that you get from things likes aged cheeses, tomatoes, meat
stocks, things like that. And that's especially mouthwatering, as well.
GROSS: You mention MSG. I always think of that as just, like, a chemical
that's thrown in to make cheap food taste tastier.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. McGEE: It is that. It is that, but the reason people add it,
manufacturers add it to food to make it taste better is that they
discovered that it's there in foods naturally, and this is their way of
giving you the flavor of or an aspect of the flavor of tomato or
parmesan cheese without actually giving you a tomato or parmesan cheese.
GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guest is Harold McGee. He writes
about the science of food and cooking, and his new book is called "Keys
To Good Cooking."
So you write about how heat moves in cooking, to help us better
understand the principles of what makes our food taste especially good
or what kills the flavor and makes everything tough and bad. So what are
some of the basic principles we should know about how heat moves in
cooking?
Mr. McGEE: Well, the most important thing in the case of something like
meat - meat and fish, and actually eggs and any protein food which is
especially sensitive to heat - is that we're trying to reach
temperatures inside the food around 150 degrees Fahrenheit, something
like that.
And of course, when we're cooking in an oven, the temperatures on the
thermostat go up to 500 degrees, and we're often cooking at 350 or 400,
which is much higher than that 150 that we're aiming for in the center
of the food.
So what that means is that it's very easy to overcook. We're always
using higher temperatures to cook foods than we're actually aiming for
in the centers of the foods themselves. And so it's good to realize
that, and realizing that helps you appreciate the value of low-
temperature cooking.
So you can get some great flavor on a roast, for example, by starting it
at a high temperature in the oven to get some nice browning on the
outside surface of the roast.
But then what you want to do is turn the heat way, way down so that you
cook the meat through much more gently and have a bigger window of
opportunity when the meat is the correct temperature inside, which is
much lower than the cooking temperature.
GROSS: Now why should you start with a high heat as opposed to ending
with a high heat?
Mr. McGEE: That's a very good question. If you sear the meat at the very
beginning, you get the high-temperature cooking out of the way, and then
you can cook as a gentle temperature just as long as you need in order
to get the center just right.
If you do it the other way around, if you cook gently until the center
is just right and then brown at the very end, then you risk, if you
overdo the browning, overcooking the inside. So it is actually
practically easier, I think, to do the high-temperature cooking at the
beginning.
GROSS: Yeah, well, because I'm always in such a hurry, I've murdered a
lot of meals by, you know, just turning up the heat real high, figuring
it's going to cook faster this way.
Mr. McGEE: Yeah, yeah, and it does. If you're cooking at a high
temperature, then it's true that the food is cooking through faster, but
it's much harder to put on the brakes and stop it at just the right
point, and that's why you end up usually overcooking.
GROSS: So the principle here is that you want to pour in the amount of
heat into the food that can be conducted into the center of the food
because otherwise, the outside's going to get tough and burned before
the inside gets hot?
Mr. McGEE: That's right. That's another part of the story. And so
ideally, what you would do is cook the meat at a very high temperature
to begin with, get a nice flavor on the outside, and unfortunately,
that's the only way to get that wonderful browned, roasted flavor is
with very high temperatures.
But then turn the temperature down almost to the temperature at which
you want the meat to end up on the inside because that way, there's no
way to overcook it. If you're shooting for 150 on the inside, and you
cook it at 155, for example, then you're going to have a much better
result than if you cook it at 350 all the way through and end up with
part of the meat, much of the meat in fact, that's overcooked, and only
the very center will end up at just the temperature you're looking for.
GROSS: Okay, so you're talking about the low-temperature, slow form of
cooking meat. But if you look at the Chinese form of cooking, cooking
that's done in the wok is done on a very rapid process. So are they
using a different principle?
Mr. McGEE: Yeah, they are. They're cutting the meat up into very small
pieces that cook through in seconds. And they start with a very hot wok.
The wok is much hotter than the hottest oven is going to be.
And so what happens there is that you preheat the wok very hot, through
in these small pieces of meat that only take 15 or 20 seconds to cook
through, and that's about the same time that it takes for the outside to
brown because of the very high temperature.
And so they hit the perfect balance by means of the strategy, very high
temperature, very small pieces, very quick cooking.
GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guest is Harold McGee. He writes
about the science of food and cooking, and he has a new book, which is
called "Keys To Good Cooking." Let's take a short break here, and then
we'll talk some more.
(Soundbite of music)
GROSS: If you're just joining us, my guest is Harold McGee. He writes
about the science of food and cooking, and he has a new book, which is
called "Keys To Good Cooking."
Do you ever use a microwave, and if so, what do you use it for?
Mr. McGEE: I do use a microwave a fair amount, and I use it for all
kinds of things. Microwaves are another very efficient way to heat foods
because they are generally absorbed most efficiently by water.
And so you can put a ceramic container into a microwave oven, and it
will absorb very little of the energy. Most of the energy goes into the
food itself.
And it turns out when studies have been done on retaining vitamins in
vegetables, for example, that microwave ovens do a much better job than
boiling or even steaming. It's a very good, very quick way to heat
foods, and I do cook vegetables in the microwave.
I cook thin fish fillets in the microwave in just a matter of a minute
or so. It's also a reasonable way to cook something like polenta, which
traditional recipes would have you stand at the stovetop and drizzle the
- bring the pot to a boil and then drizzle the polenta grains slowly
into the pot, stirring all the time to make sure they don't stick to
each other and so on.
In a microwave, you just mix cold water, polenta, put them in the
microwave, turn on the microwave, and basically the polenta grains swell
and absorb the water as they heat up, and you end up with - without
having to worry about all the usual things that you worry on the
stovetop, and you get a very nice polenta.
GROSS: I'm so surprised to hear that you maintain more of the nutrition
of vegetables in a microwave than if you're cooking it on top of a stove
because, you know, most people think of microwaves of, like, zapping the
food and just basically killing it, convenient but not nutritious. And
you're saying the opposite.
Mr. McGEE: Right, and that's - I have to say that of course you can cook
vegetables badly in the microwave by overdoing them, but if you cook
them with as much care as you would cook them boiling for example, so
checking them every once in a while to see what the color looks like and
whether they're, you know, just done, just past crunchy, it does turn
out that because the process is so rapid, microwaves will kill enzymes
in the vegetables that actually degrade the nutritional value.
So if you heat green beans, for example, the - as the temperature goes
up, there are enzymes in the beans that will essentially use up the
Vitamin C that's in those green beans, and if you let the enzyme do
that, it'll do it until there's almost none left.
But enzymes are sensitive to heat, and if you put them in boiling water
and keep the water at the boil, you kill those enzymes and maintain much
of the Vitamin C. The same thing is true in a microwave, where the
energy is going straight into the food immediately, and so it kills
those enzymes very quickly as well but without the problem you have in
boiling of nutrients being leeched out into the water.
In a microwave, you just - often you don't need to add any water at all,
otherwise maybe a tablespoon, and there's no cooking medium in which to
lose the nutritional value. So it stays in the food.
GROSS: In writing about vegetables, you say - and I never knew this -
that the flavor of most vegetables are there to serve as chemical
weapons to deter insects and other creatures from eating them.
Mr. MCGEE: Mm-hmm.
GROSS: That sounded really surprising to me, especially because some of
the like broccoli or zucchini when it's growing isn't particularly
fragrant or anything.
Mr. MCGEE: Well, exactly. It's not fragrant. But then you bite into it
and it's a different story. Zucchini is pretty mild, but broccoli is a
good example. Broccoli and all the members of the cabbage family have a
very distinctive flavor, which is due to chemicals that are there to
deter insects for the most part from eating them.
And so broccoli, raw broccoli for example, is pungent. Mustard greens,
which are exactly in same family, has much, much more pungency, so it is
kind of a spectrum of strengths. But most of the flavors that we enjoy
in strongly flavored vegetables let's say, so cabbage family, onions,
garlic, things like that, are due to defensive compounds that the plants
make in order to prevent creatures from consuming them.
GROSS: Why does the flavor of those vegetables change so much when they
are cooked?
Mr. MCGEE: Well because heat is a form of energy, and whenever we heat
anything, if we heat it enough, we begin to transform the molecules that
make that material up. And the aroma compounds in foods are especially
vulnerable to, or maybe susceptible to, change by heat and air because
we are always cooking in an atmosphere that contains plenty of oxygen.
And so the more we cook a food, the more we're going to transform the
molecules that make it up and so more different the flavor is going to
be.
GROSS: We'll hear more of my interview with Harold McGee in the second
half of the show. His latest book is called "Keys to Good Cooking: A
Guide to Making the Best of Foods and Recipes. Here's a recipe from
Mario Batali set to music by the group One Ring Zero from their upcoming
CD and book combo "The Recipe Project." I'm Terry Gross, and this is
FRESH AIR.
(Soundbite of music)
GROSS: This is FRESH AIR. I'm Terry Gross, back with Harold McGee. He's
an expert on cooking science. His latest book is called "Keys To Good
Cooking: A Guide to Making the Best of Foods and Recipes."
So we asked some of the members of the FRESH AIR staff for some
questions that they want answers to pertaining to science of food and
cooking.
Mr. MCGEE: Mm-hmm.
GROSS: So I've got a couple of those for you.
Mr. MCGEE: Okay.
GROSS: What's the difference between baking powder and baking soda?
Mr. MCGEE: Baking soda is sodium carbonate - bicarbonate. It's a pure
chemical and it's an alkali that reacts with acids to produce carbon
dioxide gas. So it's a very pure material and a single material. Baking
powder is a mixture of baking soda and an acid that will react with it
in order to make carbon dioxide gas together with some cornstarch to
kind of give you more material to work with so that it's easier to
measure out. So baking powder is a complete leavener, baking soda is
half of a leavening combination.
GROSS: Which do you usually use? Does it depend on the recipe?
Mr. MCGEE: Yeah, it depends on the recipe. If the batter, for example,
contains an acid of some kind, like buttermilk is frequently used in
griddle cakes, pancakes, that kind of thing, then the baking soda will
react with the acid in the buttermilk to make bubbles. But if you are
making a pancake recipe with just milk, then you need baking powder
because it doesn't have an acid in the rest of the batter.
GROSS: Okay. Another question. Would you recommend wooden or plastic
cutting boards?
Mr. MCGEE: That has been a long-running controversy between
manufacturers of each, and it turns out that wooden cutting boards are
good in a couple of ways. One is that they're porous and so they tend to
soak up juices - cutting juices from cutting meats and fish, for
example, and that carries the bacteria down into the cutting board where
they're not at the surface anymore. And the other thing is that woods
often contain antibacterial compounds in them and so they help - they're
kind of natural antibiotic in the surface of the wood.
Plastic cutting boards are easier to clean and are safer to put in the
dishwasher, for example. But they also will tend to develop scars and
bacteria can lodge in the scars and cause problems later. So I actually
have a couple of each and use both. And when the plastic cutting board
develops scars, it gets kind of rough to the surface, then I replace it.
GROSS: Okay. When you are thickening a sauce when should you use
cornstarch, when should you use flour and do they work on different
principles?
Mr. MCGEE: Flour contains starch and so that's why it will thicken the
sauce in the same way that cornstarch does. Cornstarch is a pure starch.
Flour has some protein in it as well. And so when you make a sauce with
flour the sauce is quite to the opaque because it contains the proteins
as well as the starch. When you make a sauce with cornstarch it's going
to be not exactly clear but more translucent because it doesn't have the
proteins to get in the way of light passing through the sauce. So you
can use both. They have different appearances and they have different
strengths because one is pure starch, the other is only 70 percent or so
starch, and so you need more flour in order to get the same amount of
thickening.
GROSS: Now, you say that the thing that got you started along this path
of studying the science of food and cooking was when after watching the
great Mel Brooks Western comedy "Blazing Saddles," there's a great scene
where everybody is sitting around eating beans and then, shall we say,
releasing gas. And so you said that that got him to ask you the
questions like why does that happen after you eat beans, and you went
and investigated and that got you down this path of science and cooking.
So answer the question for us.
Mr. MCGEE: Yeah. So it turns out that all seeds have storage foods in
them to nourish the seedling until the seedling is big enough that it
can nourish itself by photosynthesis, and so different seeds use
different foods to feed the seedlings. And it turns out that the bean
family tends to feed its seedlings with carbohydrates, that unlike
starch or sugar our bodies are not capable of digesting. We can handle
starch and sugar molecules just fine but we cannot deal with these
oligosaccharides, as they're called. And so what happens when you can't
digest something, well, it just stays in your digestive system instead
of being absorbed. And it turns out that the bacteria that live in our
large intestine are perfectly capable of digesting these
oligosaccharides and when they do so, they generate a variety of gasses
actually, hydrogen, methane, and that's why we end up with gas when we
eat beans.
GROSS: Does cooking the beans help at all?
Mr. MCGEE: It does, because it can break those oligosaccharides down
into smaller subunits that our bodies can actually deal with and also
just transform some of them into other molecules that don't cause the
same problem. So cooking does indeed help.
GROSS: One piece of advice I want to ask you about from your book
regarding turkeys is you say it is very difficult to roast a whole bird
and do it well. Why is that?
Mr. MCGEE: It's because the whole bird has two very different kinds of
meat on it, the breast meat and the leg meat. Breast meat is very
delicate and really dries out very easily above 150 degrees. The leg
meat has a lot more connective tissue, it's fattier, and it's actually
much better at something more like 165 or even 170 degrees. But they're
both on the same bird. They're both in the same oven when you are
cooking the bird whole, and so the question is, how can you possibly get
two different donenesses is in two different parts of the same bird? It
takes some thought and planning and some tricks to come as close as you
can.
GROSS: Share one trick with us.
Mr. MCGEE: Take the bird out ahead of time and let the legs warm up a
little bit while you keep the breasts covered with ice packs. That way
you keep the breasts cold, the legs warm up by maybe 10, 20 degrees, and
that way when you put the bird in the oven, you've already built in a
temperature differential. The breasts are going to end up at a given
time less cooked than the legs, and that's exactly what you want.
GROSS: Wow, that was going to look a little weird.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MCGEE: It looks weird, yeah, to begin with, especially if you use an
ace bandage to hold the ice packs in place...
(Soundbite of laughter)
Mr. MCGEE: ...because they're kind of slippery and - so that's what I
do. So, yeah, it does look a little peculiar, but what you care about is
what the bird looks like when it comes out.
GROSS: Well, Harold McGee, thank you for the explanations and the
advice. Thank you so much for talking with us.
Mr. MCGEE: Pleasure. Thank you, Terry.
GROSS: My interview with Harold McGee was recorded last year after the
publication of his book "Keys to Good Cooking: A Guide to Making the
Best of Foods and Recipes."
I still haven't tried that ace bandage thing.
Coming up, we listen back to our 1989 interview with Julia Child.
This is FRESH AIR.
..COST:
$00.00
..INDX:
139784609
*** TRANSCRIPTION COMPANY BOUNDARY ***
..DATE:
20110901
..PGRM:
Fresh Air
..TIME:
12:00-13:00 PM
..NIEL:
N/A
..NTWK:
NPR
..SGMT:
Julia Child On France, Fat And Food On The Floor
TERRY GROSS, host:
While planning our All You Can Eat series, we decided to save a place at
the table for Julia Child.
Ms. JULIA CHILD (Chef): Welcome to "The French Chef." I'm Julia Child.
You know, the egg can be your best friend if you just give it the right
break. And I'm not talking just about breakfast eggs but eggs for
brunch, eggs for lunch, eggs for appetizers, for company, and eggs for
elegance.
Now, take, for instance, l'oeuf en cocotte, or eggs baked in little
dishes like this, or little, these are called little ramekins...
GROSS: That was Julia Child on her public TV show "The French Chef,"
which made her the first famous TV chef. She introduced millions of
Americans to French cuisine. Her 1961 book "Mastering the Art of French
Cooking" helped launch her public TV career, which lasted nearly four
decades.
Her longtime editor, Judith Jones, said Child changed the way cookbooks
are written, addressing them to home cooks rather than professional
chefs.
Child died in 2004 at the age of 91. I spoke with her in 1989.
Ms. CHILD: I grew up in the teens in the '20s when most people had,
middle-class people had maids or had someone to help. And we had very
sensible New England type food because my mother came from New England,
you know, roasts and vegetables and fresh peas and mashed potatoes. But
nobody discussed food a great deal because it just wasn't done. And
there was no wine served at the table, at least not in my family, who
were very conservative. We always ate very well but it wasn't talked
about.
GROSS: Well, your family had a cook. Did your mother cook it all and did
you like to cook at all?
Ms. CHILD: No, she really didn't cook at all. She knew how to make
baking powder biscuits and Welch rabbit.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Ms. CHILD: That's all she knew how to make. And I didn't do any cooking
then at all.
GROSS: When you graduated from college, you went to New York...
Ms. CHILD: Mm-hmm.
GROSS: ...with the hopes of becoming a novelist or writing for a
magazine. Why did you...
Ms. CHILD: (Unintelligible)...
GROSS: Yeah?
Ms. CHILD: Or writing for The New Yorker, at least getting into Time or
Newsweek. Nobody wanted me for some strange reason.
GROSS: Mm-hmm.
Ms. CHILD: And then along came the war and I got into the - I went down
to Washington and eventually got into the Office of Strategic Services,
the OSS.
GROSS: Did you want to be a spy?
Ms. CHILD: I did want to be a spy. And I thought I'd be a very good one
because no one would think that someone as tall as I would possibly be a
spy.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Ms. CHILD: But of course I ended up doing office - menial office work. I
was in the files the whole time. Actually, though, it was fascinating as
an organization to be in, and at least I knew everything that was going
on.
GROSS: Well, you were telling us how being in the OSS lead you overseas.
Ms. CHILD: Mm-hmm.
GROSS: You lived for a while in China. I think you lived for a while in
India as well.
Ms. CHILD: Yeah, Solon. It was Solon and China.
GROSS: And then after the war you're telling us you went to Washington
and then went back to Paris.
Ms. CHILD: Mm-hmm.
GROSS: Went to Paris and lived there. This was in the late 1940s.
Ms. CHILD: Mm-hmm.
GROSS: So you had wonderful food in Paris.
Ms. CHILD: Oh, it was just marvelous. It was still the old classical
cuisine. It was just, just delicious. I've never had such good food
again as we had been.
GROSS: Well, how did eating wonderful food lead you to want to start
preparing wonderful food?
Ms. CHILD: I was very much impressed with the food and I just - having
started in cooking after we got married, I thought that I would go to
the Cordon Bleu, they had kind of classes for what we called
fluffies(ph). What it did at that same time, they were having some
classes for the GIs on the Bill of Rights and I decided after doing a
little bit that I would really like to do much more serious delving into
cuisine so that I was able to join the GIs, and they didn't object,
luckily. And we started in at 7:00 in the morning and finished at around
11:00, and then I would rush home and prepare a fancy lunch for my
husband, Paul. In those days too the American embassy followed two-hour
lunch, French lunch hour, so we always came for lunch.
But in those days too, middle-class women were not going into cooking,
either the French or the Americans. And the French, of course, all had
maids. It was the way we had lived before the war, in the USA.
GROSS: When you co-wrote "Mastering the Art of French Cooking," did you
see it as a way to introduce Americans to French cuisine?
Ms. CHILD: Yes. I was tremendously interested in French cuisine because
it was, it's the only cuisine that has the real rules on how to cook.
And I wanted, because I had started in quite late. I was about in my
early 30s when I started cooking and I found that the recipes in most,
in all the books I had were really not adequate, they didn't tell you
enough. And I'm for, well, I won't do anything unless I'm told why I'm
doing it.
GROSS: Mm-hmm.
Ms. CHILD: So I felt that we needed fuller explanations so that if you
follow â if you followed one of those recipes, it should turn out
exactly right. And that's why the recipes were very long, but they have
full detail. My feeling is that once you know everything and have
digested it, then it becomes part of you.
GROSS: When you moved back to the States and you wanted to continue
French cooking, were there ingredients that you couldn't find in the
States?
Ms. CHILD: No. Well, there were some differences. I think the cream was
not as thick, but that was easy enough to make your own what they called
creme fraiche by adding a little buttermilk or yogurt to heavy cream and
making it thick. In those days, cream was very chic. Nowadays, people
are afraid of it. But the flour is different, but you could - because
the French, general French flour is softer and more made for pastries.
And you can perfectly well duplicate that by using part unbleached, all-
purpose flour with a little bit of plain, bleached cake flour added to
it, which softens the gluten content.
GROSS: You became nationally famous in the United States for your
cooking show. Were you early shows live?
Ms. CHILD: No, nothing was live. But the early shows, because we were
very, very - on a strict budget. It was really live on tape.
GROSS: Mm-hmm.
Ms. CHILD: And so once we started in, we didn't stop at all unless there
was a terrible disaster, and we only had about two or three, I think.
GROSS: Tell me one of the terrible disasters.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Ms. CHILD: Well, one time, I was taking, I was cooking - blanching some
broccoli, and it was in a salad basket, which was lowered into a big
kettle. And when I picked it up, my fork slipped, and it all fell on the
floor. I didn't pick it up and use it, so we did...
(Soundbite of laughter)
Ms. CHILD: We did stop because it was a real mess. But every time we
stopped, it would cost - I mean several hundred dollars, because it
always took half an hour to get back again, and you would have to pay
overtime.
And another time, there was a short circuit on my microphone, and every
time I touched the stove, the microphone would go...
(Soundbite of crackling sound)
(Soundbite of laughter)
Ms. CHILD: And I'd clutch my breast.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Ms. CHILD: So we had to stop for that. But otherwise, we just didn't
stop at all. Then people - it's funny. People would say, well, I saw you
drop that chicken on the floor - which, of course, I never did. All I
did was flip a potato pancake into the stove, then I put it back into
the pan, and I said well, if you're all alone in the kitchen, nobody
will know.
GROSS: So were there often mistakes in the actual show that you would
recover from, thinking that, well, this kind of thing happens all the
time...
Ms. CHILD: Yes. Well, and I think some people would accuse me of doing
things purposely. But anyone who's been in the kitchen knows that awful
things happen all the time, and you just - if you're a cook, you have to
make do with whatever happens. I mean, I was just cooking as one
normally would at home, which I think people rather enjoyed because it
was informal, and the way most people cook at home, anyway.
Ms. CHILD: I'm sure you must have seen the Dan Aykroyd "Saturday Night
Live"...
Ms. CHILD: Oh, yes. We have a tape of that.
GROSS: Do you?
Ms. CHILD: That's great fun.
GROSS: What he'd always do is when he was doing you, is take little nips
of wine...
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: ...until he got really giddy while he was cooking.
Ms. CHILD: No, I people accuse me of that, too. No, I would never. I
mean, that's a - would be a very gauche thing to do in public, wouldn't
it?
GROSS: I want to ask you what you think of nouvelle cuisine.
Ms. CHILD: Well, nouvelle cuisine is through, I think. But I think it
has been very useful in that it released people from a straitjacket,
then we've gone into silly seasons and so forth. But one thing that was
very useful was of paying attention to how the food looks on the plate,
to make it really attractive. Then I think that gets exaggerated, so
something looks like Japanese flower garden and the food looks fingered,
which is not attractive. I think food should look like food, but it
should be very appetizingly arranged.
GROSS: When you say food looks fingered, what do you mean?
Ms. CHILD: That means you're taken your thumb and sort of wet your thumb
and put these little things all around the plate in the shape of pedals
and so forth.
(Soundbite of laughter)
Ms. CHILD: And it's - I don't find that attractive, because you know
that they have been probably licking their fingers and putting it on the
plate.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: Thank you so much for talking with us.
Ms. CHILD: Well, good to talk with you. Bye.
GROSS: Julia Child, recorded in 1989.
Coming up, our all you can eat series concludes with Mark Bittman's
unconventional method of preparing steak.
This is FRESH AIR.
..COST:
$00.00
..INDX:
139793130
*** TRANSCRIPTION COMPANY BOUNDARY ***
..DATE:
20110901
..PGRM:
Fresh Air
..TIME:
12:00-13:00 PM
..NIEL:
N/A
..NTWK:
NPR
..SGMT:
Mark Bittman Explains 'How To Cook Everything'
TERRY GROSS, host:
Our TV critic David Bianculli has had many food adventures, tasting
strange and exotic - some might say scary - meats. He's grilled
kangaroo, alligator - he says it tastes like chicken - and crocodile,
which doesn't. He told us yak is delicious, but that bear was too
disgusting even for him, which is saying a lot. So we thought it would
be fun for David to interview Mark Bittman. He wrote The New York Times
column "The Minimalist" for 13 years. Now a Bittman writes an opinion
column on food-related matters and is a food columnist for The Times'
Sunday Magazine.
David interviewed Bittman in 2008 after the publication of his book "How
to Cook Everything Vegetarian."
DAVID BIANCULLI, host:
Mark Bittman, welcome to FRESH AIR.
Mr. MARK BITTMAN (Food Columnist, The New York Times): Well, it's great
to be here, Dave.
BIANCULLI: Your new book, "How to Cook Everything Vegetarian," has an
obvious limitation: no meat. But was that restriction freeing, as well?
Mr. BITTMAN: Interesting question, because when you started asking it, I
thought immediately of this Japanese woman I met a couple of years ago
who was a brilliant chef who only did super-vegan, you know, really,
really limited stuff. And I asked her why, because she ate meat and she
obviously enjoyed it, but she only cooked very, very limited. And she
said, it's like pen and ink. And I said, what do you mean? She said
well, you know, you limit things so that you can explore the universe of
them more thoroughly, which seemed like a very Japanese thing to say.
BIANCULLI: Mm-hmm. Sounds great, though.
Mr. BITTMAN: But I - you know what? I think that I'm not interested in
proselytizing for people to be vegetarians, but I am interested in
proselytizing for people to eat fewer animal products. We raise animals
now in what can only be called an industrial fashion. And I think the
more people know about that, the more turned off they're going to be by
that.
BIANCULLI: All right, here's my big question, in theory. What I wanted
to do for the interview was pick out a recipe of yours that I was very
skeptical about in advance. That...
Mr. BITTMAN: I am already amazed that you found you could be skeptical
about. But go ahead.
BIANCULLI: Yeah. No, I did.
(Soundbite of laughter)
BIANCULLI: And I couldn't find it in the vegetarian cookbook. I had to
go on "The Minimalist" and go back. And it was - we're in firm agreement
as meat eaters that - you know, we're talking about rib eyes is the best
part of the stake and...
Mr. BITTMAN: No question.
BIANCULLI: ...and that, you know, simplicity is wonderful here. And you
have a recipe which says instead of just doing it the normal way, just
put it uncovered, you know, over a little wire thing in the refrigerator
for like two or three or four days and flip it once a day and don't
cover it. And then this gives it this crust that you can then cook with.
Mr. BITTMAN: So it dries it out a little bit.
BIANCULLI: A little bit. Well, let me tell you, I did an A/B test. I got
two rib eyes. I have a real good butcher...
Mr. BITTMAN: You know, I'm very glad you did this. I can't wait to hear
what you say.
BIANCULLI: Yeah. So what happened was - so I kept one wrapped up and did
it the way I normally would do. I did the other one. I did a rub on the
equal, rub on both. But the one that was dried in the refrigerator,
after a couple of days, it started looking like rib eye jerky.
(Soundbite of laughter)
BIANCULLI: You know, and the last time meat looked like that in my
refrigerator, honestly, I threw away. But I thought...
Mr. BITTMAN: Right.
BIANCULLI: Okay, I can sue you if it doesn't work. I could talk to you
about this or get some sort of...
Mr. BITTMAN: You didn't throw it out, though. You cooked it.
BIANCULLI: I did not throw it out. I cooked it. And eating them side-by-
side, it was remarkably better.
Mr. BITTMAN: Well, how is this a scary question?
BIANCULLI: Well, yeah. Well, yeah.
Mr. BITTMAN: You got me all nervous. But now you're telling me that...
(Soundbite of laughter)
BIANCULLI: Because it looked horrible. It looks horrible.
Mr. BITTMAN: Yeah. Yeah, it does dry out.
BIANCULLI: And you didn't warn me in the recipe that it was going to
look, you know, inedible before you cooked it. But it was so much
crustier and crispier and better. So how did you figure that out?
Mr. BITTMAN: You know, refrigerators are a pretty drying environment.
And that's why people hang meat in cool places, because you want to - if
you think about all the different meat preparations, the traditional
ones of aging and drying meat, they're things that people love. And a
prosciutto, which is essentially a dried ham, it's hung for 18 months,
and almost all the moisture is leaving that. And if you think of dry,
aged beef, that's exactly what it is: dry, aged beef. But my thinking in
the refrigerator thing was not really to age the meat, although that's
something I want to try to play with at some point, or I've been
threatening to play with at some point.
My thinking was really when you are trying to brown a stake, especially
in a home environment where you often don't have the kind of high heat
they have been restaurants, your biggest enemy is moisture. And if you
put a piece of meat on a rack in a refrigerator, I figured it would dry
out. And the whole thing's not going to dry out. What's going to dry out
is the outside.
BIANCULLI: Mm-hmm.
Mr. BITTMAN: And then it's going to take a crust really, really well. So
it wasn't that hard to think about this. It wasn't that hard to figure
it out, and I was pretty sure I was right, which is why I was actually
was getting nervous when you were - with your big build up, making me
feel like you were going to tell me I was wrong.
(Soundbite of laughter)
GROSS: FRESH AIR contributor David Bianculli spoke with Mark Bittman in
2008 after the publication of his book "How to Cook Everything
Vegetarian."
And so we conclude our all you can eat series with another recipe that I
will never, ever try - never.
Here's Dave Frishberg.
(Soundbite of song, "Let's Eat Home")
Mr. DAVID FRISHBERG (Musician): (Singing) I like to stroll on the Costa
Dell Soul at sunrise. And to me, Waikiki is the place to be speaking
fun-wise. I like to dine in the Florentine palazzo. You can laugh and
call me fatso. That's okay by me.
I like to stick with the first-class ticket buyers, setting trends with
my trend-setting friends, the frequent fliers. I like to shop on the
Champs Elysees, eat curry in old Bombay and spend New Years Eve in
either Tel Aviv or Rome.
But if it's all the same to you, let's eat home.
GROSS: You can download podcasts of our show on our website,
freshair.npr.org.
..COST:
$00.00
..INDX:
139846788
Transcripts are created on a rush deadline, and accuracy and availability may vary. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Please be aware that the authoritative record of Fresh Air interviews and reviews are the audio recordings of each segment.