|
The French Chef With Julia Child 2 | 
enlarge | Actor: Julia Child Studio: Wgbh Boston Category: DVD
List Price: $39.95 Buy New: $20.22 You Save: $19.73 (49%)
New (22) Used (11) from $20.21
Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 13841
Format: Box Set, Closed-captioned, Color, Dvd-video, Ntsc Language: English (Original Language) Rating: NR (Not Rated) Region: 1 Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Number Of Discs: 3 Running Time: 30 Minutes Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 7.3 x 5.5 x 0.5
MPN: WG40519 ISBN: 1593755279 UPC: 783421405196 EAN: 9781593755270 ASIN: B000BKDO7A
Theatrical Release Date: 2005 Release Date: November 22, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
| |
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Prepare to enjoy eighteen of Julia Child s kitchen classics in a sumptuous second collection from her pioneering cooking show The French Chef.The French Chef was a cooking series unlike anything yet seen on TV. Warm and exuberant Julia was a natural television star whether scooping up a spilled potato pancake or coaxing a reluctant souffl Julia was not afraid of making mistakes. Soon a nation fed on Shake n Bake and Tang would be experimenting with quiche Lorraine and boeuf bourguignon and cooking would become a national pastime.This special collection presents 18 episodes from her groundbreaking series. In her signature style and with bloopers intact Julia demonstrates such classic recipes as cr pes suzette omelette gratin e p t de campagne b che de No l and many more.Bon appetit!Disc 1 Starters Sauces and Sides Cooking Vegetables Vegetable Adventures Elegance with Eggs More about Potatoes Terrines and Pat s The Hollandaise FamilyDisc 2 - Main Courses French Crepes I Cooking Your Goose Roast Suckling Pig Fish in Monk's Clothing Cheese Souffle Sole Bonne FemmeDisc 3 Breads and Desserts French Crepes II Buche De Noel Croissants Gateau in a Cage French Bread VIP Cake: Le PrantomeSystem Requirements:Running Time 30 Mins.Format: DVD MOVIE Genre: MISCELLANEOUS/SPECIAL INTEREST UPC: 783421405196 Manufacturer No: WG40519
Amazon.com A regular program on WGBH Boston from 1963 to 1972, The French Chef is perhaps best known for its down-to-earth hostess Julia Child with her dry wit and practical approach to "fancy" French cooking. Eighteen classic programs, in black and white and color, feature the ever-practical Julia Child educating viewers in everything from starters and side dishes like braised spinach, shirred eggs, and hollandaise sauce, to main courses like seafood crępes and braised goose, to breads and desserts like croissants and the exotic gâteau in a cage. Julia Child leads viewers step-by-step through each recipe, imploring budding chefs to use their fingers and hands, let go of their fear of failure, avoid a sense of panic and maintain a sense of humor so that neither the cook nor the soufflé collapses. Helpful tips include advice about preparing dishes ahead of time, how to save a recipe gone awry, and an ever-present sense of humor that includes a waving goose and more than a few chuckles from Julia Child at her own inevitable bloopers. While current recommendations about food safety may necessitate altering some suggestions like defrosting a goose in the sink for 4 hours and modern dietary guidelines might frown upon the use of pork back fat in a terrine or pâté, the majority of these recipes can easily be prepared without alteration today. If you love French food and want to learn how to prepare it yourself, join Julia Child for 18 lessons that are sure to have you cooking up exotic dishes in no time. --Tami Horiuchi
|
| Customer Reviews:
The French Chef 1 & 2 January 21, 2008 Mary B. Goouch (Toronto, Canada) 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I have been waiting for years for these DVDs to appear. Julia Child was an amazing woman who inspired me as a young bride to cook. She was, in addition to being a superb chef, a wonderful teacher. Her techniques and the recipes stand the test of time. My daughter, an excellent cook in her own right, has heard me talk about Julia Child and now she has her own copies of both DVDs. My daughter had watched Julia Child as a guest on television shows but now that she has actually seen the "Master Chef" in action she appreciates why I have been in love with Julia Child for so long. Julia Child goes back to the basics of cooking, showing the techniques that you have to master to become a really good cook.
Not Just Nostalgia -- Useful November 16, 2007 Robert Ruiz (California - USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is a culinary time capsule. I was one year old when The French Chef debuted on TV, and yet tonight I made the creamed spinach featured in the series, and not only was it simple, economical, and DELICIOUS (truly, like something I might have had in a restaurant), but it also used just a tiny bit of butter and a tiny amount of cream, and the rest was stuff you'd have on hand (plus the spinach). This is an EXCELLENT way to be cooking (perfectly Atkins even). I topped it off with two poached eggs, just as Julia suggested, and that was dinner. So many recipes today require lots of ingredients and you end up using only a portion of what you have to buy (usually only to find the recipe wasn't well written, could have been improved, and wasn't all that worthwhile). This is truly real-world and economical cooking, and even better than that, what you learn cooking one thing (in which you've learned a simple little technique and dish to add to your repertoire) transfers to cooking other things, and before you know it you're a good cook and INSPIRED cook, not having to stick slavishly to someone else's recipe, but just cooking based on experience. There's excellent kitchen wisdom in this series to go along with the nostalgia, and I'm looking forward to trying more -- tomorrow for lunch, in fact. It was also fun to hear Julia say things like that you could pick up a French omelette pan for $2.50 or so when the particular episode was made, and to correct herself to say "brown" a dish after saying "gratinee" and thinking (at the time) no Americans would know what she was talking about -- same thing with common cooking terms we know today like "bouquet garni" that Julia's audience was being introduced to for the first time but that today most any cook is going to know. Additionally, Julia makes suggested wine pairings that I'm certain still hold up today. This series was particularly good for the episodes on vegetables and eggs, as, again, you will have a small repertoire of things to try that are easy, excellent, and use ingredients you're likely to have on hand or can easily and economically pick up. Enjoy.
The Queen of cusine March 24, 2007 Sherry F. Hemphill (Broken Arrow, OK United States) Who wouldn't enjoy this down to earth, witty teacher of cooking! Awesome!
Another enjoyable visit with Julia! March 9, 2006 Cat Who Fan (Midwest) 10 out of 18 found this review helpful
Like the first, this too is yet another great opportunity to experience Julia at her best! Bombard WGBH and tell them to release #3, #4, #5, etc.!!! Also ask them to release episodes of the "Julia Child" of plants--Thalassa Cruso, star of "Making Things Grow" filmed on the same set as Julia!
Magnifique!!! December 28, 2005 Toni (Chicago, Illinois United States) 56 out of 58 found this review helpful
OK...........so my French vocabulary isn't that good, but this DVD sure is something to behold!! LOVE LOVE LOVE this visual Julia library! I dream of the title of "chef" and there is no greater role model than Ms. Child. She is THE hero upon which all other chefs have made their fame in culinary history. Her style, her incredible deadpan humor, and her encouragement to learn one of the greatest cuisines, make for a thoroughly enjoyable DVD. The series began in 1962 and initially the public did not know what to make of this rather tall and quirky woman who dared to teach us the culinary world of French cooking. To many, France was the only place that had the ability to cook as such. But Ms. Child removed the mysteries and overwhelming sense of details that one felt was needed to produce French masterpieces. You feel that you are in her kitchen and that she is speaking just to you. She has no airs about her, no pretensions, just a very earnest interest in showing you the incredibe world of flavor courtesy of our French neighbors. You also need to take into account that this was the first real TV cooking series and that it was the start of the 60's; so much history was just beginning during that decade. So what was she going to teach us in the midst of this turbulence? Well, an awful lot. There are 3 dics within this particular DVD. The first section is named "Starters and Side Dishes"; it covers: 1. Vegetable: The French Way 2. Vegetable Adventures 3. Elegance with Eggs 4. More About Potatoes 5. Terrines and Pates 6. The Hollandaise Family The second section is "Main Courses": 1. French Crepes I 2. Cooking Your Goose 3. Roast Suckling Pig 4. Fish in Monk's Clothing 5. Cheese Souffle 6. Sole Banana Femme The third section is "Baking, Desserts, and Other Classics": 1. French Crepes II 2. Buche de Noel 3. Croissants 4. Gateau in a Cage (WOW!!) 5. French Bread 6. VIP Cake Disc number 3 was the best, in my opinion. If you would like to impress friends with desserts, go with this one. The "Gateau in a Cage" looks so beautiful, that her fun and friendly teaching style makes you realize that it is not out of your reach to make this stunning dessert!! Another enjoyable aspect contained within this DVD is in part her self-effacing, deadpan humor. She doesn't worry about that she has spilled anything or that something is not releasing itself from the pan just right. Mistakes and problems happen and she lets you know that it happens to everyone, including herself. That's the beauty and comfort that is her secret. Just to give an example, who would think of using a sword to talk about cutting poultry? Why would ANYONE use a sword to talk about cutting poultry? Julia did. Also contained on the jacket are photos of how the show had to be taped in that people had to be positioned just so on the set so that they could help her with certain segments but remain out of sight of the cameras lens. I truly hope that they continue to make all the episodes from all her shows available as that would make quite a cherished DVD collection for anyone who loves to cook and/or bake. To borrow from my queen: "Bon appetit!".
|
|
| Copyright 2008 DVDonsale.com | |