The Soup Show | The French Chef Season 2 | Julia Child

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  • Опубликовано: 1 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 67

  • @geneyoon6128
    @geneyoon6128 Год назад +20

    “If you poured your hot soup right on to the egg yolks, they would SCREAM in anguish and curdle.” The mental image of eggs screaming in anguish is never something I would have ever conjured on my own, and it delights me. Julia delights me.

  • @AngelicDirt
    @AngelicDirt Год назад +9

    She is either the most wholesome or the most stealth-clever person you ever met. Omg, the knife... XD

    • @ahlivetuhsidamaro150
      @ahlivetuhsidamaro150 3 месяца назад

      She was a spy during world war 2. She’d know how to fillet anybody

  • @Westernwilson
    @Westernwilson Год назад +6

    Ok so I decided to cook along with Julia on this one and even ordered up a food mill for the purpose. Finding watercress was not easy, but tracked it down at a local luxury produce market. I admit I was a bit hesitant on the whole "enrichment" part at the end so divided the soup into two pots and added the cream/egg/butter enrichment to one and had the family do taste testing. Wowza. The enrichment makes an incredible and incredibly delicious difference! It elevated the soup from tasty to transcendent! And the eggs yolks add a great shot of protein as well : )

  • @gregory90211
    @gregory90211 2 года назад +17

    My gawd. We wouldn’t be cooking the same if Julia hadn’t graced our lives!

  • @meredithlambert5594
    @meredithlambert5594 Год назад +4

    Just made Julia's Watercress soup, it was wonderful, her recipes are absolutely the best.

  • @annking8633
    @annking8633 2 года назад +12

    Love how she hurried up the bell. A treasure.

  • @kellyjohnson3617
    @kellyjohnson3617 Год назад +7

    Made the watercress soup today. Amazing

  • @biancalawrence3178
    @biancalawrence3178 Год назад +7

    "it has a beautiful perfume like an onion or like ... itself" that's delightful.

  • @lynnettespolitics9656
    @lynnettespolitics9656 Год назад +15

    My mom exploded a pressure cooker decades ago, I think that's why I've never wanted to use one!

    • @mikezylstra7514
      @mikezylstra7514 4 месяца назад

      I heard all the horror stories (back in the 50's). I think that was simply "geloso." Pressure cookers saved time - lots of time. My aunt could go to the racetrack come home at 4 o'clock, and still cook a dinner like my mom tended for 3 or 4 hours. And mom never hesitated to tell the pressure cooker stories (the lid flying off, the whole nine yards). LOL

  • @regplate2923
    @regplate2923 2 года назад +11

    I love her. I learn to cook and have a good laugh to-boot.

    • @mikezylstra7514
      @mikezylstra7514 4 месяца назад

      Learned a lot of cooking techniques from her show. 55 years ago, afraid of girls and afraid of divorce courts, I had to learn to cook my own meals. Julia was a big help.

  • @kd1s
    @kd1s Год назад +5

    I've made mushroom soup it's brown mushrooms, leeks and so delicious someone went for a second serving.

  • @WatchitforDays
    @WatchitforDays Год назад +4

    I need to get one of those harakiri knives for the kitchen.

  • @DavidHall-ge6nn
    @DavidHall-ge6nn 2 года назад +12

    This one is new to me. I have never gone shopping for watercress in my life. Now I'm like Rapunzel obsessing over rampion. I do believe Julia could sell anything!

    • @rah62
      @rah62 2 года назад +5

      Well, since watercress is native to Europe and Asia, it's not a terribly American thing. Julia probably first encountered it in France. Brits tend to put it on their tea sandwiches; I remember an episode of Two Fat Ladies where Clarissa made a tea sandwich of sliced tongue, cress, and mustard butter. (There is a variant called just "cress" or "garden cress" to distinguish it from the version which grows in streams and creeks) Of course, since I live in the desert, there isn't watercress - or water, for that matter - for miles and miles!!!

  • @adrjaco
    @adrjaco 2 года назад +83

    "This is a Japanese knife my sister-in-law gave me, and it's used for harakiri... and vegetables, depending on what your mood is"

    • @DaveMK.
      @DaveMK. 2 года назад +12

      Thank you for your comment Adrian! I looked up what Harakiri actually meant and I just gasped when I found out XD! That line in the video would've just went over my head as another "chef" term I'm unaware of but your comment made me look it up and appreciate the dark comedy behind it!

    • @calmingme01
      @calmingme01 2 года назад +4

      @@DaveMK. what does it means

    • @DaveMK.
      @DaveMK. 2 года назад

      @@calmingme01 Well ages ago in Japan, Harakiri knives were used in ritual suicide where one would slit their abdomen with the knife. Thus when Julia said that the knife could be used for Harakiri or vegetables depending on your mood, she was comedically referencing the medieval purpose of the knife (which was to disembowel yourself during suicide) or use it to cut vegetables depending on how you feel that day i.e. to kill yourself or to cut vegetables. Hahaha

    • @arra5316
      @arra5316 2 года назад +9

      For Harakiri or to cut vegetables whichever mood you have ….Thats really hilarious…i dont know if shes joking or what 🤣🤣🤣

    • @sandywaddell4303
      @sandywaddell4303 2 года назад +13

      @@calmingme01 “Hara-kiri” is a somewhat blunt way of referring to Japanese ritual suicide, more formally known as “seppuku.” The name for the Japanese vegetable knife Ms. Child is using here, as it happens, is “nakiri.”

  • @pwp8737
    @pwp8737 2 года назад +11

    Julia called the nakiri knife harakiri

  • @fathermetalASMR
    @fathermetalASMR Год назад +9

    3:52: "Now this is an AK-47 that my sister in law gave me. It's for stealing cars in Liberty City...or it can be used for vegetables, depending on what your mood is."

  • @cultureshock5000
    @cultureshock5000 10 месяцев назад +1

    funny that im eating the leek an tater soup i made on christmas, i put some chicken in it used bone broth sweated the leeks and garlic used little red potatoes and mashed them up a little with the skin still on it, lots of the green of the leek.... carrots ...celery shallots it is excellent i didnt puree it or add cream just whole milk and some butter when i reheated it... its excellent

  • @jjmboston5832
    @jjmboston5832 Год назад +1

    i've never had a pressure cooker. I just use the old pot on the stove or a crock pot. And the watercress cost me $2.00 a bunch at the farmer's market. Probably even more at the supermarket. Times change.

  • @josephcollins6033
    @josephcollins6033 18 дней назад

    THE QUEEN!!!!!!!!

  • @kell_checks_in
    @kell_checks_in 11 месяцев назад

    Every month I pick one of my cookbooks and use it to source three or four recipes for the month. (The rest of the time I cook The Usuals.) I was wondering what to do for December and then saw this. Mastering..., Volume I is my book for December 2023. I was going to choose "Julia's Kitchen Wisdom," a great little book that has Julia's "greatest hits" recipes, including this soup. (It's cheaper and less scary than Mastering... and makes a great gift for cooking newbies BTW.) Instead, I decided to get out the Mama rather than the Baby version. If you've not had potato-leek soup, it's yummy.

  • @artistlovepeace
    @artistlovepeace Год назад +2

    This is all true.

  • @Sugarmountaincondo
    @Sugarmountaincondo Год назад +2

    @ 27:34, This is a No-Cal Soup, Ha ha It had butter, cream & potato's
    in it

    • @mikezylstra7514
      @mikezylstra7514 4 месяца назад

      Potatoes never made me fat. Pizza pasta, and bread, on the other hand...

  • @rah62
    @rah62 2 года назад +15

    I went through a pressure cooker (Instant Pot) phase. It's not worth the hassle and the special appliance. Factoring in the time you spend waiting for it to come to and come down from pressure, you might as well just cook things the normal way as it doesn't save much time at all.

    • @richardengelhardt582
      @richardengelhardt582 2 года назад +4

      Agree!

    • @RCook-iy4xk
      @RCook-iy4xk Год назад +2

      You must not have watched the video! You speed cool the cooker with cold water just like seen in the video.

    • @rah62
      @rah62 Год назад +3

      @@RCook-iy4xk Of course I watched the video, silly. "Speed cooling" is not often recommended because pressure cooking recipes usually factor in the time coming down from pressure in the cooking time. Often, if you "speed cool", you're undercutting the recipe time. So there.

    • @RCook-iy4xk
      @RCook-iy4xk Год назад +2

      @@rah62 Didn't you see her cooling with running water or was she doing it wrong? I suppose you know better. You are flat wrong . So There.

    • @mikezylstra7514
      @mikezylstra7514 4 месяца назад

      Depends on the brand and learning how to use it. The beef they sell today is like goat meat. meh I give a ribeye 35 minutes at 14 lbs pressure just make it edible.

  • @kd1s
    @kd1s Год назад

    And regards knives I've got a Mercer chefs knife that I keep nice and sharp

  • @arra5316
    @arra5316 2 года назад +9

    Must be a really sharp knife if it can be used for harakiri…😂

  • @garyclark9807
    @garyclark9807 Год назад +1

    Cant find watercress in our area. Leeks either.

    • @MuddyPigg
      @MuddyPigg Год назад +1

      It's easy to grow, you might be able to find some seeds and grow it on a windowsill.

    • @nathanjustus6659
      @nathanjustus6659 Год назад +2

      I find leeks in my local Walmart grocery and I live in a food desert. You have my sympathy

    • @mikezylstra7514
      @mikezylstra7514 4 месяца назад

      Bought a leek once. It was bitter. Ugh! I just buy the smallest onions I can find, sometimes available, sometimes not; you just have to look. Scallions work but way too expensive.

  • @francesfarmer736
    @francesfarmer736 Год назад +1

    Food Mill before Food processors

  •  2 года назад +1

    Julia bir işaret gibi 3 gündür heryerden geliyor, 1. Gün Netflix, 2. Gün dsmart biography, ve bugün 3. RUclips 😅 juliayı ve azmini sevdim şuan tek düşündüğüm güneş burcu veya yükselen burcu yengeç mi?

  • @Donaldopato
    @Donaldopato Год назад +2

    Pressure cookers are useless. Let it cook naturally and slow.

    • @mikezylstra7514
      @mikezylstra7514 4 месяца назад

      really? That goat meat they sell for beef and pork?

  • @GohAhweh
    @GohAhweh Год назад

    3:53 😳 a bit of leftover bitterness from WWII Julia??