“Fingers are not part of this lasagne recipe”!! LOVE this woman :-)
@MsAmique9 ай бұрын
Lol 😂 💜
@chrissyknowsitall51709 ай бұрын
I just caught her saying that!! 🤣🤣🤣 I love this lady❤️❤️🥰🥰
@angelaberni88738 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for spelling LASAGNE correctly. It drives me insane when most foreigners spell it ending with an A. Another mistake frequently made is calling the famous Italian marble CARRERA IT NOT. IT CARRARA and it comes from Carrara in Italy.
@ianradford5026 ай бұрын
Dan Akaroyd SNL😂
@mahmamia51004 ай бұрын
@@angelaberni8873 Literally half of Italy calls it "lasagna" (the singular form anyway) instead of "lasagne" (the plural form), so maybe chill your tits a bit.
@deenak7910 ай бұрын
It’s also fair to note that, even as Julia Child’s cookbooks contain precise renderings of time-honored dishes, her TV show revealed a confident, casual cook who might forget the garlic or add too much cottage cheese, but who soldiered on without apologizing. Now that’s a model worth following.
@evanstar8410 ай бұрын
This was copied and pasted from a 2019 article about the episode by Kelsey Dimberg.
@kimcelowy642810 ай бұрын
Julia said never apologize. Just put it out there. Most people will not know the difference.
@bethotoole656910 ай бұрын
She was right!!
@JerseyCityGirl910 ай бұрын
I don't agree with the oil in the water.
@bethotoole656910 ай бұрын
@@JerseyCityGirl9 I don't either however it was common practice back then. That's how I was taught to do it... Things change.
@Donna-ct2gn10 ай бұрын
Who doesn't love Julia Child? A national and natural treasure.
@MsAmique9 ай бұрын
Most indeed. She’s always fun to watch and listen to. Despite her tall stature, she’s unexpectedly delicate and very dainty. A true gem.
@wynnelewis56988 ай бұрын
Me
@BlueJazzBoyNZ7 ай бұрын
Treasured by the World...
@888money942 ай бұрын
Whenever I hear lasagna I think of piwdipie no matter what
@bgggg4168Ай бұрын
@@888money94brain rot
@KidChaos2219 ай бұрын
I always pictured Julia Child living around the corner from Mr. Rogers.
@Detroitmamma8 ай бұрын
😂
@lauraamundson7698 ай бұрын
She put olive oil in the water! No!!!
@NOMCCBAMA7 ай бұрын
@@lauraamundson769 depends what your doing lassange noodles i would concurre.
@lisalove9917 ай бұрын
And Bob Ross lived down the street 😂❤
@AntiHolyChrist7 ай бұрын
to eat the children watching?
@topaz34682 ай бұрын
My Swedish grandmother from Nebraska, watched Julia on PBS religiously! She must have learned a lot, because she was a great cook (1916-2016). She lived to be 100 years old.
@theresarts4822 ай бұрын
I love that a Swedish woman from Nebraska watched a French Chef teach American women french cooking on TV. The different cultures coming together is delightful. I never understood people who weren’t curious about other cultures.
@mariehelena236424 күн бұрын
I like to think - and have good reason to believe - the longevity of both Julia + your grandmother was directly related to the quality of the food they made ❤❤
@jovetj18 күн бұрын
We have some great cooking here in Nebraska! And many Swedish (and Danish) descendants!
@cynaraslover8 ай бұрын
Julia was my client for 30 years and I absolutely adored her. Except nobody called her Julia; unless you are an intimate she was Mrs Child, . She was enormously charming, somewhat quirky, and until Paul became very ill in old age, you could see that they were an adoring couple. I still miss her after all these years.
@bethotoole65698 ай бұрын
How lucky you were to have known her!! I envy you...
@cynaraslover8 ай бұрын
@@bethotoole6569 she was just a real charmer, and what a sense of humor! It was heartbreaking when Paul developed brain damage as a result of his brain being starved of oxygen during heart surgery. People have said that Paul child had Alzheimer's disease but that was not actually the case. It was very touching to see a couple as much in love as they were after so many years.
@daynashallenberger62568 ай бұрын
thank you for sharing that 🫠
@BlueJazzBoyNZ7 ай бұрын
Thank you for that personal glimpse of Mrs Child
@janeydoe14037 ай бұрын
@Nikodymus5 ай бұрын
She’s just REAL. And that’s why she’s a natural treasure. She is relatable, and she makes you feel more confident in your own kitchen. Rachel Ray, Paula Deen, Emeril Lagasse, even Gordon Ramsay, NONE of them instill the same feelings as Julia Child did!
@ozrob765 ай бұрын
Everything about how was UNreal. From her cosplaying as a woman (if you can't see that's a man, then I can't help you) to her careeer as a spy for intelligence agencies. The only REAL thing about "her" was her cooking, I suppose....
@user-mb4ig1bq5p5 ай бұрын
Martha Stewart is another good, homey chef!
@mahmamia51004 ай бұрын
@@ozrob76 Honey, nobody wants your help. You need to GET help.
@drewschumann118 күн бұрын
@@ozrob76 Yeah, you need some mental help
@nativevirginian834410 ай бұрын
Nothing more entertaining than a wined-up Julia! 😄
@getgaymin10 ай бұрын
My bf actually met Julia later in life several times as a college student in Santa Barbara, and when somebody asked her how she made it to her '80's, she said: "Red meat and vodka."
@KrisPaape9 ай бұрын
@@getgaymin I saw a show of her once with Jacques Pepin and when they were just about to sit down to eat together, Jacques starts pouring the wine, and she gets up, goes to the frig, takes out a beer, cracks it open, and says "Well, I prefer beer!" I laughed so hard!!
@NOMCCBAMA8 ай бұрын
I remember seeing Robin Williams doing a wined up impersonation of her somewhere. hilarious.
@redrooster19088 ай бұрын
Danny Aykroyd.... Save the liver!!! 😂😂😂
@marymagdalene30047 ай бұрын
That's why she love living in France so much! Nobody noticed how many "samples" you imbibed.
@roberkremer8 ай бұрын
"Very often I don't do anyhting they say on the box" hahahaha I loved this part.
@mjrussell4146 ай бұрын
Me neither Julia!
@cannedmusic3 ай бұрын
You want it to taste more homemade rather than something constructed by Duncan Hines?
@bazcar225 ай бұрын
I'm an Australian, grew up in the 60 sand 70s. Was not aware of this divine creature until I saw the movie just recently. Now I watch her on KZbin. She's utterly insane, I love her.
@LepinayAlix5 ай бұрын
Take a look at the TV Series also :)
@dickcummings77722 ай бұрын
Absolutely non Italian. What a horrible mess. And to call it peasant food. Julie...stay in your own country.....PLEASE!!! .
@RLucas30002 ай бұрын
@@bazcar22 have you seen Dan Ackroyd’s parody of her on SNL (Saturday Night Live) from the 1970s? It’s on KZbin and it’s a gem! Julia loved it.
@alexwallace9832Ай бұрын
Same. Same, I have commented similarly on other episodes on KZbin. Cheers from Australia 🇦🇺
@sallymoen7932Ай бұрын
Her style of talking is as distinctive as Kathryn Hepburn.
@lechatbotte.9 ай бұрын
Julia was real. No fake for the camera nonsense. She was just herself, honest not a snob. It’s interesting she’s using an electric stove at a time when many chefs used gas.
@sarahferrell54588 ай бұрын
Well. This is a tv set-I imagine running a gas line might have presented logistical challenges-or legal ones. I can’t imagine anything else in a studio that would run on gas…
@lechatbotte.8 ай бұрын
@@sarahferrell5458 good point but they could’ve used propane or butane without using a permanent line. Fewer worries about the Co2 issues but that makes sense
@sarahferrell54588 ай бұрын
@@lechatbotte. I not fed you be of the episodes I watched was sponsored by General Electric-sponsorships like that used to be very common.
@halynamyers86648 ай бұрын
I have a friend who even today has a very similar cook top, brown, with the settings part of the overhead fan. An obliging service man keeps it going. Love it.
@voraciousreader33417 ай бұрын
People really need to forget today’s KZbin videos and propel their minds backwards to the time when the television programs were aired. The available cameras and other technology dictated much, as well as the studio setup, because they were often shared spaces. Putting in gas and having to have a tank around would have been dangerous and truly unnecessary, and most Americans thought gas stoves were too dirty and “low tech;” they wanted up-to-date, clean electric _everything_ when this was filmed. Anyway, Child was such an excellent chef she could work with any situation, so a portable electric cooktop obviously didn’t bother her at all….she may have used an electric stove at home because they were so ubiquitous!
@JonSnowIII4 ай бұрын
Dude, Julia Child is such a charming character of a human.
@s.tiffanysmith99777 ай бұрын
Her show, unlike her books, was delightfully chaotic.
@Justcanadianjanjan2 ай бұрын
The best part of Julia on KZbin is we can stop and rewind and pause where as our mothers had to quickly find a pad and pen to copy her recipes… and when the show was over it was over for them..I’m thankful and I Mean so thankful My mother was such a beautiful cook and mostly baker and when she passed away I was Fortunate to inherit her Recipe box. I hope Today’s generation start recipe boxes ..sadly prob not because everything is online.
@SJisReadingАй бұрын
I've got a recipe box! It's where I keep recipes I got online, from other people, or came up with myself
@Bee-ih5uy7 ай бұрын
I want to go back in time. She was my comfort tv watching in the '70's and '80's when I was a kid.
@janeydoe14037 ай бұрын
I agree.
@PatrickDKing3 ай бұрын
Only if we could have on demand back then. I hated missing an episode of something and never knowing when it would be on again. Often you had to wait a very long time, even decades for some things that are readily available now whenever you want it.
@christinasepulveda165510 ай бұрын
3 tbsp of salt looks like 3 handfuls, lol. I love it.
@stevemassarone147010 ай бұрын
A little more is better than a little less... words to live by ala Julia Child
@trinleywangmo10 ай бұрын
Never have a guest leave hungry!
@KRITIN10C8 ай бұрын
When cooking shows were a true spectacle ❤❤❤
@aliyamoon808 ай бұрын
I loved her so much! She had such a marvelous sense of humor, and she was not fussy at all.
@martha-anastasia9 ай бұрын
This looks absolutely delicious.... It's an original creation. She is teaching folks to be creative and do their own thing. Go Julia!
@rosannemassman456010 ай бұрын
I about died laughing when she re-assembled the finished lasagna (replaced the slice). BRILLIANT! 😂
@EnterShikari019 ай бұрын
Lasagne.
@jabbaa65009 ай бұрын
SMH. The comments are just too much. This is not an exact science, its food. As many grandparents and parents said use what you have on hand. Salute Julia as the real first American cook to educate people on cooking outside the box. Today's "celebrity" chefs (if you dare to call them that) make food a project and use ingredients not many have. Julia any day over any TV cooks today.
@Nunofurdambiznez5 ай бұрын
Which comments might those be, exactly? Seems to me, the ones I've read were quite complimentary of her.
@drewschumann118 күн бұрын
@@Nunofurdambiznez There are many of them. Mostly accusing her of making dumb cooking decisions and making food that wasnt delicious
@nysavvy924110 ай бұрын
You gotta love Julia, she was a hoot!
@m.theresa138528 күн бұрын
I love that there’s always a skill to be gained. Likewise when watching Jacques Pépin cook. There’s always a lesson in there .
@chadkosakowski33273 ай бұрын
I loved watching Julia, as a child on PBS. She kept my attention and made me laugh!
@veedejames72110 ай бұрын
I can't explain how watching Julia makes me happy. Puts a smile on my face and joy in my heart.💗.no matter what she is cooking, I just love watching her. I have a lot of love and Respect for her. Yes I wished I could of met her, sat down shared a meal and perhaps a glass of wine.😊 I'm still learning from Julia. Her Legacy lives on. Love, respect and positivity always. Vee.✌️🕯️💕🙏🦋🌻🌠🌹🤗🥰😊🙂👋👣.
@hunkhk10 ай бұрын
I 100% agree no airs or graces, just charming, witty down to earth and a delight to watch. Always brightens my day
@MsAmique9 ай бұрын
She’s comforting. ☺️
@lancelotdufrane9 ай бұрын
Lasagna is the LAST thing I would consider for last moment guests! She’s so amazing. Takes me two days to make a lasagna. Steps. Certainly, most of us have a pasta sauce waiting to be made in our fridge. Spaghetti is the must have for me.. and of course good parm. She’s so much fun. Watching Julia is pure pleasure.
@nonstopmom81854 ай бұрын
LOL You are so right! I make this all the time and takes a "minute" to do. Of course, I never have all those leftovers she has. I have to cook all of the ingredients day of.
@schifahrer1233 ай бұрын
I totally agree. My lasagna recipe takes 5 hours to make. I'm sure there are quicker ways to do it, but it would be hard to believe they are quite as delicious as doing everything from scratch. But even looking at the way Julia Child does it here, with everything prepped ahead of time for television, there is no way this would be quick and easy. Would take at LEAST 2-3 hours, probably closer to 3, or more.
@nonstopmom81853 ай бұрын
@@schifahrer123 Oh but just do it. I put the recipe in smaller pans and freeze it before cooking for the 2 of us. It is delish!
@pudnbug10 ай бұрын
I love the way she makes this without fussing about ingredients - like ladling cottage cheese on it.
@nathanjustus665910 ай бұрын
Cottage cheese has a slightly different flavor from ricotta cheese but it’s not that far different. It’s like sesame tahini doesn’t have that much different of a flavor than peanut butter.
@bethotoole656910 ай бұрын
Many people would not have had access to ricotta. But everyone had cottage cheese...
@nathanjustus665910 ай бұрын
@@bethotoole6569 Exactly.
@giuliettamassina778710 ай бұрын
I grew up watching her back then. She was great. We always had mozzarella and ricotta in the NYC area.
@jovetj18 күн бұрын
I grew up on lasagna (in the Italian way, I expect) made with cottage cheese. My mother didn't want to pay for ricotta, cottage cheese was cheaper and it worked. I've definitely never seen or done a lasagna like this, before, though!
@sincerelyme-7778 ай бұрын
I’m a chef who remains inspired by all of her tricked out and amped up flavor combinations. Can’t you just taste and smell everything she describes? Her guests were definitely not disappointed with her unique spin on lasagna! Always an adventure!
@andreszimmermann569610 ай бұрын
Hahahaha, fingers are not part. Just love her.
@redlady2227 ай бұрын
I love how she calls out the things she would change next time. She was so amazing, but so relatable. Amazing woman and chef.
@Lettuce-and-Tomatoes10 ай бұрын
Please start posting the original air date in the description. PBS undoubtedly has this information on the original master tapes. It’s interesting to know the time frame for these amazing classic videos.
@chrisben310 ай бұрын
Season 7 Episode 8 - First aired November 25, 1970
@Lettuce-and-Tomatoes10 ай бұрын
@@chrisben3 Thank you! That was the day before Thanksgiving in 1970. By the time this came on television, people were off work, or very close too it, and looking forward to a long holiday weekend. Julia probably recorded the show in September though.
@bethotoole656910 ай бұрын
@@Lettuce-and-Tomatoes Probably not. She filmed in Boston at the PBS station.. I can't remember it. It's not like today where they film a bunch of them at once. She did most of them weekly.. I had a friend who interned there for a bit.
@pauladams8969 ай бұрын
@@bethotoole6569it was taped at WGBH.
@jenniferadam80527 ай бұрын
@@Lettuce-and-Tomatoes Ah, so about 2 months after I was born. I got to meet Julia in about 1995 at Dayton's in Minneapolis. I told her she always remind me of my grandmother. She just looked at me and signed my cookbook.
@genevieveparismusic10 ай бұрын
She’s fantastic. I love Julia Childs
@EricCarver-ud8wz9 ай бұрын
Child no S.
@genevieveparismusic9 ай бұрын
@@EricCarver-ud8wz oops thanks !
@hamett3569 ай бұрын
Just by the way she handle the knives you know she is a real cook.
@Mayssoun31218 ай бұрын
She also doesn't know what a lasagna is
@jennifer605158 ай бұрын
@@Mayssoun3121She’s dead, she doesn’t care. Neither should you. Good lord.
@karinagomescruz19 күн бұрын
Why did my eyes start watering when she started chopping the onions? 😆
@michaelparkin697410 ай бұрын
As an Englishman , i love the way she pronounces tomato !
@cyrilmauras42478 ай бұрын
Julia was born and raised in Southern California, traveled extensively with her husband Paul during WWII including France, then set up domestic life with him in Cambridge Massachusetts.
@daisyflower41058 ай бұрын
As an Australian, I agree,
@MyrickMcdougald10 күн бұрын
Me too lol
@debralynnpaxton52388 ай бұрын
Sad that Anyone would have been offended rather than attentive, entertained, and thankful for a new recipe idea ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@luticia10 ай бұрын
She has an entertaining way of talking and showing.
@lauraclark15209 ай бұрын
What a wonderful woman. ❤❤❤ I definitely want to try this recipe.
@StarwaterCWS9 ай бұрын
No specifics. Stunning.
@along59259 ай бұрын
I love her to pieces and always will! Dearest friend and mentor of my youth.
@mcswabin2079 ай бұрын
She is so authentic in a good way. Paved the way for food streamers of today. She used cottage cheese rather than that Italian cheese, ricotta, that she couldn't remember what the name of it was.
@ericholck39142 ай бұрын
I'm not much of a cook, but I find her almost mesmerizing to watch.
@nevermind95484 ай бұрын
Oh my....this was great ... everyone cooks different...like that she is normal, practical and seasoned in what she puts together. We sometimes have to incorporate what we have in stock (she uses leftovers, yay). Homecooking! Cooking is fun...some of us want fancy, some like simple! Try everything...why not? Plus, FOOD IS GETTING EXPENSIVE! Goodness!
@paddybm32459 ай бұрын
It’s more like a one pot leftovers dish than lasagna but I’ll definitely give it a try. Her nonchalance might help me to rediscover the fun in cooking.
@videox222ify10 ай бұрын
I learned how to cook watching Julia Child and from her first cookbook which I still use. She is the greatest.
@WickedLady639 ай бұрын
I loved watching Julia Child growing up
@horos58709 ай бұрын
The spaghetti laundry 😂😂😂
@AntiHolyChrist7 ай бұрын
im concerned
@silverd52637 ай бұрын
Julia was a great chef and very entertaining here in NZ during the late 70's and early 80's. Loved her accent and her rustic way of pulling a chicken apart. Bravo
@josephcollins603310 ай бұрын
THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!!! The best cooking show ever!!!!!
@terebrown28929 ай бұрын
I've never seen a lasagne heaped up.... I'm soo inspired.
@houseofvanity819 күн бұрын
She just so honest! Instead of glamorous housewives with perfect hairstyles and manicure she get down and dirty and show you how to work a kitchen She’s an icon!
@thetroytroycan10 ай бұрын
Nobody EVER has unexpected guests that will have even one course. But I love anything she says no matter what. She's the voice of courage to cook of my childhood!
@roadwayrona9 ай бұрын
At the time, I think this did happen most certainly in Europe as not that many people had phones at home yet.
@juliovicsilvaaray7 ай бұрын
This was and, in some old fashioned environments, still is something that happens. It is pretty usual for older maids and grannies to have some concoction ready to feed unprevented guests.
@michaelzimmer377 ай бұрын
Yes ,unexpected guest do happen. I had three hour warning time and I like Julia made lasagna. Not her lasagna but a more Italian lasagna.
@jacqueline410712 күн бұрын
Perhaps company traveling long distances found a pay phone to alert you they were soon to arrive. Perhaps they didn't find a pay phone. Or husband visited with an old or new friend or client. Invitations were extended as it's considered rude to make them eat alone and spend hard earned money at - gasp- a restaurant. NOT hospitable or nice. That's the way it was in those days. And men didn't cook.
@alexwallace9832Ай бұрын
Let us not forget that Julia said, "we have unexpected company today" then proceeded to use whatever was at hand to cook a meal. The audience when this was first aired is vastly different than today. Too all the negative commenters, don't nock it until you have tried it. Cheers from Australia 🇦🇺
@MaryHemmings9 ай бұрын
Love the way she de-seeds tohmahto
@lynettewashington64439 ай бұрын
Delicious and creative. She’s doing her own version of lasagna and stated that it wasn’t Italian and that the French take recipes from different cultures and make it their own.
@pauljordan44525 ай бұрын
Indeed they do.
@jimbo4779 ай бұрын
People don't realize that the fruits and vegetables that we eat today are quite different from older days. Yesterday's tomatoes had seeds that were bitter with tough skins. Carrot skins were bitter and needed to be removed. Today's fruits and vegetables have been modified to eliminate bitterness and toughness. And BTW, that doesn't make them GMO!
@davidhudson35349 ай бұрын
Even modern tomato skins will make your tomato sauce very bitter when they cook down. That’s why recipes usually call for canned tomatoes to skip the blanching process.
@patcola733526 күн бұрын
Yeah now they call what's natural and grown in the earth "organic" and charge you much more,
@louloufildezinc90412 ай бұрын
Julia is naturally adorable and makes me laugh as much as I find her generous, enthusiastic and full of humor. I discovered her recently in the film Julia & Julie with Meryl Streep. Beautiful person, Julia... I am French and she reminds me of 2 French women cooks. Maïté (cook with a show: La cuisine des Mousquetaires) with great moments of laughter, among which, when she does not manage to kill a live eel or when she adds a "small" dose of Calvados (she empties almost half the bottle...). And to La Mère Léa (mother Léa), a great cook renowned among Les Mères Lyonnaises (mothers of Lyon in France) who did her own shopping. There are one or two videos of her, including one where she meets her friend Paul Bocuse, young but already renowned chef. That is the cuisine of the Mothers, and Julia pays tribute to them with the same spirit! It should be noted that Paul Bocuse learned his excellence in cooking from famous Mères Lyonnaises, such as La Mère Eugénie Brazier (the restaurant still exists in Lyon, in the 1st arrondissement, in the Rhône department, like Paul Bocuse's restaurant in Collonge-au-mont-d'Or very close to Lyon, 7 km from the center of Lyon). The same is true for Georges Blanc who learned his excellence from Mères Elisa and Paulette Blanc, respectively his paternal grandmother and his mother. The restaurant still exists in Vonnas in the Ain department, near Bourg-en-Bresse and less than 70 km from Lyon. Bon appétit ! 😀😋
@jamesbooth33602 ай бұрын
As a kid back, then you could tell whose Mom had watched this show because that was what she made the next day. What great moms and neighborhoods we had back then! I loved them all, and they all loved us kids.
@lesamisdelacuisineprovenca953410 ай бұрын
Je l'adore !! Elle est géniale !
@MIKECNW10 ай бұрын
Amazing to see the TV cameras on screen in these episodes. Good thing she doesn't bump into them.
@EnterShikari019 ай бұрын
Where????
@MIKECNW9 ай бұрын
@@EnterShikari01 Sorry I'd have to look through the episode again. I think it's somewhere in the middle of the show if not towards the end.
@ywidelectronicsАй бұрын
I love watching Julia she's one of my favorite chefs ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤.
@JackieAndrews-c7x10 ай бұрын
Enjoyed Julia learned so much from her
@davidhickenbottom657410 ай бұрын
I love making lasagna. Thanks Julia.
@lisalove9917 ай бұрын
Something I loved hearing about this show is that when she had food scraps she would scrape it onto the floor, and then later on they would clean it up after the show because there are no breaks in the show they just kept filming, idk how true that is but it sounds about right.
@Robin-ng4lh5 ай бұрын
Every episode is a joy. My sis made lasagne yesterday with all sorts of weird shit in it. It didn’t retain its layers but who cares. It was good.
@terlinguabay18 күн бұрын
Always a pleasure to watch her work. Surely she knew her comedy.
@terlinguabay18 күн бұрын
So fuckin' funny.
@rufusred4410 ай бұрын
I just made a tomato sauce for a chicken pizzaiolo. I used a 28 ounce can of peeled plum. I didn't puree them but instead, and admittedly, more effort, I used shears to snip up the tomatoes, making a very textured sauce. A food mill is something that I may incorporate one day.
@antohong10 ай бұрын
And what is peeled plum😢
@rufusred4410 ай бұрын
@@antohong Peeled plum tomatoes. 🍅
@berniewalasavageАй бұрын
I love the "chaos is just around the corner" vibe
@aragregorian603910 ай бұрын
I miss you Julia, like I miss mama...
@MrSprings7510 ай бұрын
So enjoyable. I wish there was someplace to find Dinner at Julia's. I really liked that show.
@candidasmith962310 ай бұрын
Contact PBS. They may have trove of JC reruns for sale. Also JC may have a website.
@jujub45538 ай бұрын
Julia is tripping if she thinks I’m just gonna whip up a whole lasagna for unexpected company 😂
@RocPinАй бұрын
😂
@shannonlee70148 ай бұрын
I feel like my cooking standards are like Mrs Childs, it's not perfect in the process but my kids and hubby love my cooking, it's not a top star chefs way but it gets done and makes my family happy. I had family members who watch me chop onions and tell me, you are doing it wrong. Like who cares, my family are being fed tonight and they dont care
@mariaelizabethsotomella55433 ай бұрын
Muy graciosa....cocina humoristica....😮😅...sin temor al ridiculo....gran sentido de la autocritica....totalmente autentica....me encanta !!!!!!!!!!!!!
@michaelcornett44410 ай бұрын
Julia got LOTS of hate mail over this, believe it or not. It turns out many were disgusted by her handling of lasagna as a vehicle for leftovers, or were just offended at a French chef doing lasagna at all. They kept a form letter on file to send back, with a statement that this was not intended to be traditional authentic Italian lasagna, that cooking is about trying new ideas and combinations, and including the recipe. They never got a reply to that!
@nathanjustus665910 ай бұрын
What is interesting is that, as I understand it from speaking to a coworker who is of Italian heritage and lived in Italy for a number of years, there are many variations of lasagna served throughout Italy. In southern Italy, the lasagna is more like Americans think of lasagna. In northern Italy, white sauce and other ingredients are in it. Kind of like how chili is cooked differently in the United States in different parts of the country.
@jpp778310 ай бұрын
Watching it, I felt the same way. She just slopped everything she could get her hands on (cottage cheese? Ugh). There was no delicacy, no finesse, and yet it was still grossly over complicated (that dance with combined canned and fresh tomatoes was a lot of work and yet a complete waste of energy).
@jpp778310 ай бұрын
@@nathanjustus6659but never pasta with chicken. (In fact, chicken is rarely cooked in Italy; Italians like eggs too much to kill the egg factory. Meals like chicken parmigiana are American, not Italian.)
@modestacattaruzza740010 ай бұрын
@@jpp7783you have the slightest idea what Italian cousine is about. Chicken is eating vin mane different recipes,so is beef,pork, lam , turkey, fish, wild game ,fruits , vegetable, risotto, legumes, and much more that's meets the eye . It's called La Buona cucina gastronomica Italiana regionale.
@marynapoleone474810 ай бұрын
Wow, the Italian food police have been around that long.
@MyrickMcdougald10 күн бұрын
She is my favorite all time chefs
@sebastiankinnunen554910 ай бұрын
❤Lovely❤Iconic❤love from Finland❤❤❤❤
@jademcqueen54744 ай бұрын
And people say adhd didnt exist before 😂 i LOVE JULIA adhd sister😂 she was just brilliantly classy and fabulous
@lily30547 ай бұрын
Shes cool, doesn't be anyone but herself. Love it ❤
@martinzenor744910 ай бұрын
I would never think of lasagna as an impromptu meal when guests show up unannounced.
@nathanjustus665910 ай бұрын
Well she did say she had several hours warning.
@hunkhk10 ай бұрын
Pre mobile phones and email how wonderful that must have been 😊
@kirstenosthus618110 ай бұрын
I live in an Italian neighborhood in Brooklyn. Very few places make Lasagna every day
@princesabonita7910 ай бұрын
best i could do is order pizza in a situation like that lol
@califdad410 ай бұрын
Today with spaghetti sauce bottled noodles that cook at the same time it's baking, it can be done rather quickly, , but I didn't know really what lasagna was until the later 70s
@alanabroad34718 ай бұрын
She does an amazing impression of Meryl Streep.
@mov1ngforward8 ай бұрын
only better 😉
@judysteadman7999 ай бұрын
Authentic Wonderful Chef, loved her so much. Now 2024 I'll be trying this
@mizfrenchtwist8 ай бұрын
hello , julia was such a treasure💯💯💯💯.........i watched her ever since , i was a young teen . RIP , she is much missed❤❤❤❤❤. great share thank you , for sharing🥰🥰🥰🥰🥰.............
@D.E.P.-J.7 ай бұрын
I'm always amazed how she could do a half-hour show in one take. (Some shows had a two minute separate take at the end in the dining room.)
@drgeorgeian188810 ай бұрын
Love You Julia ! ! !
@JanPatt3273 ай бұрын
Oh great...now I want her "lasagne salad" recipe too!😊 I love that gal. ❤❤
@nonstopmom81854 ай бұрын
I honestly do this recipe several times a year. Just Hubby and me so I make several smaller and freeze. I really like this one because there is not as much red sauce as the Italian version. Also, so versatile since you can use left over things, leave out the chicken if you want and use whatever cheeses you want, etc. I make the red sauce all the time for other recipes. The recipe is written in one of her books which I have.
@debralynnpaxton52388 ай бұрын
Lol ! Love the "...spaghetti laundry..." ❤❤❤❤❤❤
@FarewellAphrodite4 ай бұрын
My grandma Loretta made traditional mozzarella ricotta cheese 🧀 lasagna with me in her kitchen during the late 80’s in her home 🏡 on two acres in Riverside, CA…I love you Grandma Loretta 💕👵🏼 💋♥️👱🏼♀️💕 R.I.P. April 2021
@flavianofloris44595 ай бұрын
Ahahahah I just discovered madame Julia! And I love her. I'm going to search more stuff 👍 thank you for the video
@loupeelou90210 ай бұрын
Magical ❤ absolutely love this! 😂
@T_M___10 ай бұрын
Heavens! I've got so much to do today! 🥰
@Detroitmamma8 ай бұрын
Wow all that energy😊love it I adored her as a kid growing up in Detroit
@Ruth69510 ай бұрын
Love how she just throws all the unwanted bits into the floor 😂
@Isabella-nd3rq10 ай бұрын
No she didn’t! There was clearly a garbage can there.
@511pearl10 ай бұрын
That's her crew down there with a trash can.
@EnterShikari019 ай бұрын
@@Isabella-nd3rqit’s called a bin, far easier to say. Why would you call it anything else ? Weird
@EnterShikari019 ай бұрын
@@511pearlit’s called a bin mate
@The_Real_HeatherMarie8 ай бұрын
@@EnterShikari01We call it a trash can in the U.S.
@timmyteaching8 ай бұрын
She is the best. A force of nature.
@suzannevega228910 ай бұрын
I remember watching Julia Child’s show from the beginning😏I also have a signed cookbook from her, She is truly a treasure. I don't remember how many times I've seen this lasagna episode but each time is hilarious.
@lauracontino2697 ай бұрын
Ive actually never watched Mrs Child before but I knew of her, of course. Im glad I stopped and watched this video. I did watch the movie Julie Julia and I think Meryl Streep did a wonderful job portraying her, tell me if Im wrong! I love Mrs Childs quirkiness ❤
@sharonjonsy94128 ай бұрын
I'm exhausted just watching the master Julia. She was a hoot.
@christianluff10 ай бұрын
‘This is a peasant dish’ - the ultimate get out of jail for sloppy slicing! 😜
@aprilcraddock16910 ай бұрын
She's scary handling knives. 😨🤡
@baritonebynight10 ай бұрын
@@aprilcraddock169 I guess you are not used to seeing skilled cooks with good knife skills.
@ExcitedRainforest-ix9vu8 ай бұрын
Julia was " first in her class in onion chopping skills."
@ExcitedRainforest-ix9vu8 ай бұрын
As seen in the movie, Julie and Julia.
@sallymoen7932Ай бұрын
I really love her knife skills. She's very talented at not cutting her fingers too