Cooking Julia Child's Cassoulet should be an Olympic Sport

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  • Опубликовано: 9 янв 2025

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @Null_Experis
    @Null_Experis 2 года назад +9702

    The trick with these hodgepodge dishes is to identify each component, cook each one for dinner for each day of the week and save the leftovers to make your final dish at the end.
    You could have had:
    Pork and beans, Roast pork, Sausage cakes, and Braised lamb monday through thursday and turned all those leftovers into the cassoulet on friday.

    • @rachelsmachel6303
      @rachelsmachel6303 2 года назад +697

      This is an excellent idea.

    • @heatherjohnson1569
      @heatherjohnson1569 2 года назад +1671

      I bet that was probably how this dish came to be to start with. Someone making something new with all of the leftovers.

    • @brandykinnard2970
      @brandykinnard2970 2 года назад +421

      Exactly , i had the same thought it looked like a bunch of left overs along the way during the week.

    • @brandykinnard2970
      @brandykinnard2970 2 года назад +35

      @@heatherjohnson1569 I totally agree

    • @mysassybear
      @mysassybear 2 года назад +21

      That's what iwas thinking also

  • @kinesin8221
    @kinesin8221 2 года назад +5945

    As a French person, I have to admit that initially I was like "Oh, cassoulet is not that hard to make, surely this person is exaggerating." But then I heard "the recipe makes no attempt to cut corners," and I understood immediately how much of a nightmare this was going to be lol

    • @annabees
      @annabees 2 года назад +241

      same! Also, why are they hard cooking everything before putting it for just 20min in the oven? 😭

    • @CosmicComicChronicles
      @CosmicComicChronicles 2 года назад +98

      @@annabees Because it tastes better.

    • @annabees
      @annabees 2 года назад +148

      @@CosmicComicChronicles No, it doesn't. If you cook everything together it tastes a lot better. Try it 😅

    • @CosmicComicChronicles
      @CosmicComicChronicles 2 года назад +196

      @@annabees I have and I can say it truly doesn't.

    • @BronzedBeast
      @BronzedBeast 2 года назад +29

      Well we all have preferences haha

  • @arenkai
    @arenkai Год назад +4922

    As a french person who regularly cooks Cassoulet, I applaud your performance because there's no way in hell you'll get me to follow all those steps

    • @kc5997
      @kc5997 Год назад +125

      On est d'accord que c'est n'importe quoi ?

    • @THETowandAA
      @THETowandAA Год назад

      yep du vermouth dans le bordel .... et surtout faut bien enlever le gras en trop des machins mais verser de la graisse de canard par dessus pour compenser ..... ça a l'air tellement sec à la fin avec cette connerie de croute à baigner toutes les 5 min....

    • @stephaniepruitt3642
      @stephaniepruitt3642 Год назад +49

      Moi aussi!😂

    • @kitsunerose9545
      @kitsunerose9545 Год назад +47

      Ooh, who do you put it together is love to get the average consumer shortcut!

    • @skullykittie9889
      @skullykittie9889 Год назад +84

      How does a professional French person cook this dish? Anyone cooking this has to be a professional at something to afford the ingredients 😄

  • @LLC4269
    @LLC4269 Год назад +1608

    My brother is 17 years older than I am. Cooking food was our thing. We'd have whole theme days. I went down and we cooked French food for 2 days, including this Cassloute. We felt like we climbed Everest! I think we ate 100,000 calories that day. My brother passed away in December or cancer. This will be my favorite memory of him I will treasure thoroughly in my life. :)

    • @Udontsay948
      @Udontsay948 Год назад +10

    • @RLATC2001
      @RLATC2001 Год назад +7

      😊🫶

    • @sandierads4223
      @sandierads4223 Год назад +33

      Such a beautiful story, and I’m so sorry for the loss of your brother. I’m sure he’s watching over you now and saving you a place at his new dinner table.

    • @houseonthehill7625
      @houseonthehill7625 Год назад +12

      Holy Moly, this was supposed to be a peasant dish?? What a feat.

    • @katsybo
      @katsybo Год назад +2

      🥰🥰🥰

  • @TylerSmith
    @TylerSmith 2 года назад +5610

    This is the most realistic cooking video I’ve ever seen. Especially the confusion and emotional distress. I relate to this deeply.

    • @taylorfausett177
      @taylorfausett177 2 года назад +69

      Yes!!!! That's what I deeply love about his show! I love to cook and I'm decent at it now but I've had a very tumultuous relationship with cooking in my youth. I love how real he is for sure.

    • @user-sf9gs2pg1b
      @user-sf9gs2pg1b 2 года назад +50

      Yeah. I’ve always wanted realism from videos, makes me feel better. Like, for instance, instead of watching a RUclipsr pretending they have their life together, show me someone who is barely managing to accept their chaotic unpredictable life.

    • @rubyb7252
      @rubyb7252 2 года назад +30

      I feel like this must be how I appear to my husband whenever I'm making dinner🤣🤣🤣 I'm always doing multiple things at once and just buzzing around the kitchen. I identified very much throughout the video haha
      my husband on the other hand takes his time cooking, slowly chopping things up and very calm. While I'm dying watching him be so slow lol

    • @dontbeabeachmyrtle3871
      @dontbeabeachmyrtle3871 2 года назад +26

      Half his problem is, he doesn't read ahead ,nor does he read entirely. Just skims and then winders why things aren't what it's supposed to be

    • @jd6760
      @jd6760 2 года назад +3

      EXACTLY!!!

  • @spocot
    @spocot 2 года назад +8307

    julia single-handedly carrying the bay leaf industry

    • @MrTopcat3333
      @MrTopcat3333 2 года назад +386

      My husband bought me a bay tree 10 years ago. The gift that keeps on giving.

    • @noelseira6259
      @noelseira6259 2 года назад +202

      Onion industry is not doing bad either

    • @wereid1978
      @wereid1978 2 года назад +223

      when a cook discovers the difference between a casserole or soup w/w/o bay leaf they learn to never leave it out if they can help it. It never is the star but it always makes a dish taste better. Bay leaf is an integral ingredient.

    • @wereid1978
      @wereid1978 2 года назад +86

      @@noelseira6259 Funny thing if I have no plan as to my dinner meal first thing I do is sauté some onions and it just seems to come together from what I have. Sautéed onions are the start of so many good dishes it's hard not to start there.

    • @anathema2325
      @anathema2325 2 года назад +25

      @@wereid1978 I think I have with bayleaf what others have with coriander leaves. But instead of soapy it makes the dish taste like pennies. I can't stand the stuff and I pick it up no matter how little was used

  • @tildessmoo
    @tildessmoo 2 года назад +2676

    I think the hardest part of dealing with Julia's recipes is really absorbing the context. A lot of them are ridiculously difficult taken altogether, but they become much easier in the context of a French family kitchen, where a lot of the odd ingredients are already prepped. This cassoulet is a great example: it's a way to use leftover meat up and stretch it a bit at the same time. So, if you've already got some sausage, braised lamb, and roast pork lying around from previous meals, it suddenly becomes much easier, especially if you're a poor country cook who probably always has some beans soaking to use the next day. It's probably normal to leave the pork skin in, too, for some extra protein. (If you don't want to deal with removing it, cutting it smaller so you don't get the texture in the final dish is probably easier than cutting it bigger to remove it... Although, while it may have been obvious when the beans were done, you probably wouldn't notice it in the finished cassoulet.) That's also why there's so many bay leaves and bouquets garnis: you actually made three dishes just to prep for the final dish. And it's where the regional arguments about what goes into a "real" cassoulet come from: different regions have different leftovers to deal with.
    Of course, Julia is always a fan of saving duck fat for all your browning, so that turned out to be a lucky break.
    I know I'm making it sound simple, but I don't mean to demean the effort you put into doing this right. The first time I dove into Julia Child's book, I figured the veal liver looked like the easiest recipe in the book, and I ended up with a full sink and a barely-edible dinner after four hours of work, so the fact that you managed a decent cassoulet on the first attempt is honestly amazing.

    • @karencalloway9717
      @karencalloway9717 2 года назад +214

      That interpretation of the true origins of cassoulet makes a lot of sense. This dish looks really complicated and expensive for one country meal.

    • @rudibmd
      @rudibmd 2 года назад +42

      I’m new to the channel. Is there a reason Jaime doesn’t seem to prep anything prior to starting. As someone who also enjoys cooking it’s driving me CRAZY LOL

    • @tildessmoo
      @tildessmoo 2 года назад +168

      @@rudibmd As someone also new to the channel who's consumed the entire Jamie and Julia series in the past week, I think it's a combination of intentional comedic effect and dealing with oddities of Julia's writing, like the way she introduces things that ought to be prepared beforehand only at the point when it needs to be added to whatever has been prepared up to that point. Like, for a simple example, if you need to combine custard and whipped cream (as in crème anglaise), she describes how to make the custard, then says to fold in whipped cream, and that's where she includes a reference to see her whipped cream recipe. While a thorough reading might (and sometimes does) let Jamie know to prep some things before the point where Julia says to add it, the often long, many-step recipes make it hard to figure out all the places you need to do that (a problem I had the few times I tried out Julia's book), a problem exacerbated by Jaime needing to get through basically a recipe a week, in addition to the other things he cooks for the channel, which gives him time to read the recipe a couple of times in advance, but not to really study it. Worse, having so many sub-recipes scattered throughout the book breaks up the ingredient lists, which makes it hard to have everything on-hand; I'm honestly surprised the only times Jaime seems to screw up amounts is when he has too much of something and decides to go for broke (no such thing as too much cheese!); whether it's editing or actual planning, he never seems to actually run out of anything unless it gives him just barely enough for the recipe at hand.
      Also, while it's not something I've really experienced for myself, every RUclipsr/Twitch steamer/porn star I've ever heard talk about the job says that just introducing a camera makes even something you do casually all the time much harder, and trying to do the task while consciously performing for the audience introduces an aspect of multitasking that makes it harder still. And they all say that experience makes it easier, but never actually easy. This doubles as an explanation for why game streamers often appear to suck at video games, at least the ones who are good at streaming.

    • @kells4315
      @kells4315 2 года назад +51

      @@rudibmd I love that about it, I think it's more realistic to what a non-cook would do, which I think is the focus of this channel haha. It's like how I cook

    • @kristinheatherstarone6905
      @kristinheatherstarone6905 2 года назад +3

      I really want to make duck confit or even chicken

  • @joshuaphillips3491
    @joshuaphillips3491 Год назад +692

    Normally when I'm watching a cooking show, it's pre-planned and organized ahead of time. Instead, this is what it looks like when I cook. 10/10

    • @Kitty-we6il
      @Kitty-we6il Год назад +4

      im the same haha

    • @BBB-rd2qi
      @BBB-rd2qi Год назад +10

      I feel you! My children were always shocked when my cooking turned out so well. My now college aged children now brag to their friends about what a great chef I am. I still don’t prepare.
      Full circle baby!

    • @OHHHHUSBANT
      @OHHHHUSBANT 2 дня назад

      Misen en place is the reason why it was invented

  • @peggygraham6129
    @peggygraham6129 2 года назад +3761

    My French grandmother basically just cooked the meats veg and beans separately then threw them together into the oven. The bread crumb topping was only added at the end.She would be horrified to see how complicated Julia's recipe was.French peasants didn't have that much time!

    • @OpinionVille
      @OpinionVille Год назад +415

      As someone who makes this dish at least once a year I am flabbergasted at how complicated and involved this recipe is. I have always found Child's recipes to be that way. Too many steps and too many ingredients for what is traditionally a rustic dish.

    • @goeticfolklore
      @goeticfolklore Год назад +155

      @@OpinionVille Julia Child's potato and leak soup are one of the best though, her extra steps of emulsifying can be achieved with a blender. Some recipes really elevate a lot, Babish did a wonderful potato soup and leak recipe inspired by Julia and it is genuinely my go-to as someone whose favorite is soups lol

    • @syntheticsilkwood2206
      @syntheticsilkwood2206 Год назад +13

      @@OpinionVille i guess that was her charm? Hehe

    • @timothyblazer1749
      @timothyblazer1749 Год назад +22

      Try it once. Do it very carefully as a test. You'll see why it's involved when you taste it :-)

    • @philiphopbell8734
      @philiphopbell8734 Год назад +26

      Julia's recipe is not complicated. I made it over the weekend from her book. It's pretty close to my friend's who is from the French countryside.

  • @navypinkdesign
    @navypinkdesign 2 года назад +918

    "i feel that could use a little more butter" that's such a julia thing to say

  • @SaBoTeUr2001
    @SaBoTeUr2001 2 года назад +899

    I can't explain how a man cooking on the verge of a nervous meltdown is so hilarious to watch, but it is. Thank you, Jaime, for sacrificing your sanity to preserve ours.

    • @throughfaithhopelove
      @throughfaithhopelove 2 года назад +14

      The frequent looks of pain or anguish

    • @lizmalsam7528
      @lizmalsam7528 2 года назад

      Gotta give Jaimie props for perseverance! I would’ve tossed it all with the pig skin nipples! 😂😂😂

    • @MzClementine
      @MzClementine 2 года назад +8

      @SaBoTeUr2001 oh goodness me that's me for every new recipe. And I mean like super new. Where I'm either reading from notes or book. And God forbid if there's no visual. yep yep yep get lost in your own kitchen and lose your own tools. Because Insanity you do what with what? You put where with what? Why remove all the fat when we're putting more fat in? Why are we doing these processes when I can make it much easier? It seems that she wanted to use every single animal... 🤣 I would have been the same way. Even though I had read it a hundred times and thought okay I can do it.
      I was saying in the comments. My grandmother used to watch her. That woman would get so drunk. And one time she got into an argument I don't know if it was her husband or the person that shot the show. But she was really drunk. And they were still filming and she said some foul mouth words it was hilarious. But my grandma would not allow me to watch Scooby-Doo...
      She assumed because it was a cartoon about ghosts which it wasn't. She said it was satanic. Well after Julia child's flip out on national TV which you can't find anymore. I convinced my grandmother to take the time to actually watch scooby-doo, cuz if she was going to make me watch this mad woman. Then I should be able to watch scooby-doo. After she watched it she agreed I'm so sorry, you can watch it she said. I never had to watch that crazy woman again. Which I found myself watching. My God she would get so drunk, and mouth off to whoever was on set with her. Have to say she was as good as Scooby-Doo.. 😆

    • @King14278
      @King14278 2 года назад +3

      He reminds me of myself lol I’m the male version

    • @chunellemariavictoriaespan8752
      @chunellemariavictoriaespan8752 2 года назад +2

      "Sacrifice your sanity" 😂😂😂

  • @IO-zz2xy
    @IO-zz2xy Год назад +440

    Julia had a very wicked sense of humour. A lot of people told me that she purposely overcomplicated her recipes to make them appear more difficult and "special than they should be. A French friend of mine said it was an affectation to make cassoulet a marathon overcomplicated meal so that your guests made the appropriate oohs and aaahs.
    Hilarious

    • @mauricekirksey1973
      @mauricekirksey1973 Год назад +8

      Really? lol I just remember how good this tasted when I was a kid. The first time I looked at the recipe, I was like, "uhh.. mais non...." LOL

    • @JASinIL2006
      @JASinIL2006 2 месяца назад +4

      I think it was more her co-authors who were responsible for that than Julia. Julia wanted to make this stuff accessible to the American cook.

  • @courtneydurham8429
    @courtneydurham8429 2 года назад +2730

    What I love about Jamie is that he spills stuff, dirties up way more pots and pans than necessary, cuts himself, burns himself, buys the wrong ingredients, and is basically all of us staring at Julia's cookbook like a clueless deer in the woods. And at the end, his kitchen is a hot mess unlike what we see on tv cooking shows. Like, yeah, that recipe is dope but you're going to pay, not just in groceries.

    • @mocowan6642
      @mocowan6642 2 года назад +53

      Yes! This is how most of us cook!

    • @elizabethwalter5744
      @elizabethwalter5744 2 года назад +49

      Sometimes I just watch for the fun of seeing the bowls fall from the ceiling. And the malice of inanimate objects, like the electric mixer, the too-small whisk.

    • @donfay111
      @donfay111 2 года назад +35

      I agree. I love the errors. It makes me feel like, if he can do it, so can I.

    • @suemikeemery
      @suemikeemery 2 года назад +21

      I think he’s going a little heavy on the “I’m so cute and quirky” act.

    • @KyokujiFGC
      @KyokujiFGC 2 года назад +39

      @@yeshummingbird It's definitely one of the things that makes it stand out. It's not a tutorial or a guide. It's just one man's slightly unhinged cooking journey.

  • @Fidi987
    @Fidi987 2 года назад +2532

    Imagine serving that to your family after you were in the kitchen for 10 hours and your kids and spouse would just go "meh"! 😂

    • @khaelamensha3624
      @khaelamensha3624 2 года назад +227

      Easy they are the meat for the next meal 🤣

    • @xxromanovaxx6682
      @xxromanovaxx6682 2 года назад +27

      Lucky I just have to cook for myself

    • @Mars-ii6ki
      @Mars-ii6ki 2 года назад +11

      @@khaelamensha3624 LMAOOO

    • @trinkab
      @trinkab 2 года назад +50

      The book said it wasn't ambrosia, just nutritious country fare. I am not sure what he's expecting...

    • @khaelamensha3624
      @khaelamensha3624 2 года назад +2

      @@trinkab Nutriius a cassoulet, well if you eat more two pounds per person yes some may say so 😂

  • @emmalee3691
    @emmalee3691 2 года назад +753

    Many years ago, my husband decided to make me a chocolate cake for my birthday using a Julia Child recipe. It turned out beautifully… after 9 hours of the most meticulous directions ever. He was exhausted. Needless to say, he never attempted another Julia Child cake recipe. 😆

    • @RLucas3000
      @RLucas3000 2 года назад +56

      Each recipe in her book should have a difficulty 1-10. Maybe it does, but if not, what a good idea that would have been

    • @michealpersicko9531
      @michealpersicko9531 2 года назад +14

      OK but this is meant for the average home chef to do so i think this book contains the dumbed down versions of these recipes.

    • @LuliLulu
      @LuliLulu 2 года назад +2

      What a order full story 😂

  • @01Mary02
    @01Mary02 Год назад +719

    Julia's recipes are needlessly and ridiculously complicated. The first dish of hers I ever made was the Boeuf Bourguignon. Took me 4 hours to do when following her steps. I learned my lesson, eliminated half the steps and now the prep work can be done in 30 minutes. And it tastes just as good as hers.

    • @colleenroberts8202
      @colleenroberts8202 Год назад +39

      Agree! Might be more "traditional" but not necessarily better

    • @donkylefernandez4680
      @donkylefernandez4680 Год назад +9

      Well that's your problem you started with one of the hardest recipes and somehow came around to improving it

    • @SeanHendy
      @SeanHendy Год назад +11

      I think if you're fairly experienced and read ahead, you'd be able to find some shortcuts and speed things up. Good skills though to take on any of Childs' recipes.

    • @Ignore14
      @Ignore14 Год назад +16

      I highly doubt that it tastes just as good.

    • @BBB-rd2qi
      @BBB-rd2qi Год назад +8

      @@Ignore14- I’m with you.

  • @mauriciobelmar4530
    @mauriciobelmar4530 2 года назад +2360

    I usually reduce the anxiety level by drinking a glass or two of wine while cooking.... Honestly with a recipe like this I would've been drunk by the end of it.

    • @navnher1135
      @navnher1135 2 года назад +25

      So would i, i say that as a person who never* drinks and mostly takes cooking in stride
      *basically never, not against it, I just usually dont feel like it

    • @IrishAnnie
      @IrishAnnie 2 года назад +12

      Your my kind of cook!!!

    • @thomascollette6322
      @thomascollette6322 2 года назад +52

      If I remember Julia Child correctly, she'd have probably killed a bottle or two over the course of this beast of a recipe.

    • @BitmapFrogs
      @BitmapFrogs 2 года назад +2

      my man

    • @Rhanyra
      @Rhanyra 2 года назад +1

      So was Ms. Child's lol

  • @justwantapeacefullife1863
    @justwantapeacefullife1863 2 года назад +950

    Completely lost it at "very alarmed at the pig nipples." I love your show so much.

    • @sublimetulips6771
      @sublimetulips6771 Год назад

      That did it for me too😂. “These “pig nipples” are intense as hell” ☠️

    • @quickchris10
      @quickchris10 Год назад +8

      He said, ``that's intense.'' LOL, he said what I was thinking.

    • @BM_100
      @BM_100 4 месяца назад

      Some "rustic" recipes in other countries call for cow's tongue or goat head, lol

    • @Cobalt360Degrees
      @Cobalt360Degrees 4 месяца назад

      @@BM_100 _To be fair,_ I have had beef tongue tacos and they were *astoundingly delicious* so don't knock it till ya try it (I cannot speak to the goat head, though).

  • @SianLondon
    @SianLondon 2 года назад +1052

    "Cut off the pig nipples" is not a phrase I ever thought I'd hear, EVER and it's got me cracking up. This is my first vid from this creator so I don't know if Jamie is always this funny. Good job!

    • @majbrat
      @majbrat 2 года назад +18

      Me too - I laughed loudly

    • @Mandassina
      @Mandassina 2 года назад +13

      It was the funniest thing I've seen in days.

    • @user-sf9gs2pg1b
      @user-sf9gs2pg1b 2 года назад +15

      Tbh that just terrifies me 😮

    • @sarahsaurus9317
      @sarahsaurus9317 2 года назад +20

      It was hilarious. I’ve bought rind on bacon and had to cut the odd nipple off, but a whole row of them was next level lol

    • @amandagareis7876
      @amandagareis7876 2 года назад +6

      I also legit hooted

  • @ksierra4444
    @ksierra4444 Год назад +52

    My husband got me the set of her two cookbooks 2 years ago. I have not used them. I have 4 kids 7 and under and he wants to know why I haven't made any dishes. My brain almost explodes when I look through the books and see the instructions. Thanks for this video! I'm very impressed.

    • @livingdeadgirl8074
      @livingdeadgirl8074 11 месяцев назад +13

      Too funny. A gift would have been him using the book while you mommy all the kids.

    • @ksierra4444
      @ksierra4444 10 месяцев назад

      @@livingdeadgirl8074 he definitely cooks dinner a lot

    • @maddieb.4282
      @maddieb.4282 13 дней назад +1

      Ew so your husband bought you a challenging cookbook for a holiday (something you weren’t particularly interested in) only with the expectation that you would cook for him using it? Kinda garbage move tbh…

    • @maddieb.4282
      @maddieb.4282 13 дней назад

      @@livingdeadgirl8074 right?? Why doesn’t he cook something for her instead of being demanding?

    • @cmaden78
      @cmaden78 13 дней назад

      Lol

  • @fgjah
    @fgjah 2 года назад +910

    I actually started laughing when this poor lad began separating the pork skins from the beans. Usually you keep them as long strips if they're not going into the final dish so Julia's recipe most likely had pork skins in her Cassoulet. So the fact that she cut them small on purpose is her indirectly telling you "yea dump this in too".

    • @Tvianne
      @Tvianne 2 года назад +84

      I'd grind them, 'cause I don't like the texture much, but the taste is good and they add "glue" to the dish (they are absolutely delicious crispy fried).

    • @engc4953
      @engc4953 2 года назад +19

      I think it was supposed to be pork belly, with the skin optional.

    • @francescorighini9303
      @francescorighini9303 2 года назад +54

      Yeah, beans and pork skins is a typical winter dish here in northern Italy too.

    • @Tvianne
      @Tvianne 2 года назад +3

      @@francescorighini9303 lo so bene! Ciao vicino!

    • @Tvianne
      @Tvianne 2 года назад +31

      @@engc4953 nope, pork skin is used for cooking here in Europe.

  • @robinoconnor553
    @robinoconnor553 2 года назад +259

    I remember growing up and watching Julia Child's cooking show on PBS with my mom. Occasionally, I would ask if we could make something she had shown and my mother would laugh and laugh. When I got older, I understood what was so funny.

    • @jankasza5538
      @jankasza5538 2 года назад +19

      Robin, your comment really made me laugh!🤣

    • @cmaden78
      @cmaden78 13 дней назад

      I used to watch her, great chefs, and the galloping gourmet 😂❤

  • @nbknopp
    @nbknopp 2 года назад +502

    This seems like one of those "end of the week" dinners where you've made each of these individual things throughout the week and just assembled the leftovers on Sunday because you don't want to waste anything. Making all of this for one meal that's supposed to be a simple country dish seems impractical. Looked delicious none the less. Great job and admirable fortitude for sticking that one out!

    • @nancy9478
      @nancy9478 2 года назад +8

      Agreed, and it would likely taste so much better.

    • @Imaginexall
      @Imaginexall 2 года назад +43

      Half of the famous french dishes are this long and complicated to make, because they are indeed made of leftovers.
      Funny how french cooking seems all fancy, but it's just sharing plates made by mostly poor people who didn't want to waste anything :')

  • @Juicypaint
    @Juicypaint 2 месяца назад +6

    Just a reminder, Jamie-- we don't just watch your newest videos. We go back over the years. I've learned so much from you teaching yourself how to cook. Thank you for sharing your adventures.

  • @kovokkovariki
    @kovokkovariki Год назад +2261

    A thing I love (probably because it's a bit creepy) is how Julia is this supernatural presence in your videos. You talk about her as if she was there, she gives you orders, you comply reluctantly...
    ... Pans and bowls materialize out of thin air...
    There's a bit of unintentional creepiness along with some sound gastronomic culture here, and I 'm up form that.

    • @oliverhopkins8074
      @oliverhopkins8074 Год назад +151

      Julia is his dom, and he is her sub.

    • @TheRealSplexy
      @TheRealSplexy Год назад +114

      ​@@oliverhopkins8074 why did you have to say this.

    • @oliverhopkins8074
      @oliverhopkins8074 Год назад +105

      @@TheRealSplexy Julia made me 😞 against my will 😞😓

    • @emilyg2451
      @emilyg2451 Год назад +71

      I also love that so often he does it grudgingly, like he's thinking "goddammit Julia... fine. FINE! I'm doing it! Are you happy?!?!"

    • @whuuuut2035
      @whuuuut2035 Год назад +45

      @@emilyg2451 then acts like every line cook ever has when the chef is out of the room: "Whatever Julia wants, she gets, I guess..."

  • @camillesadventures
    @camillesadventures 2 года назад +469

    As a French, you did a great job! Now I understand why no one does it and we all buy it from the grocery store

    • @MediterraneancookingChefStefan
      @MediterraneancookingChefStefan 2 года назад +14

      CAMMILE TU HABITES OU LOL PAR CE QUE CHEZ MOI A TOULOUSE CETTE RECETTE SERA A LA POUBELLE

    • @jbcaycay8035
      @jbcaycay8035 2 года назад +12

      @@MediterraneancookingChefStefan moi je suis perpignanais et je te confirme que ca a l’air bien dégueulasse cette recette... de l’agneau plus les 8 tonnes de chapelure... non merci 😂

    • @CosmicComicChronicles
      @CosmicComicChronicles 2 года назад

      @@jbcaycay8035 Yet Julia was trained professionally in your country ;)

    • @CosmicComicChronicles
      @CosmicComicChronicles 2 года назад +1

      @@MediterraneancookingChefStefan This recipe is from your own country;)

    • @jbcaycay8035
      @jbcaycay8035 2 года назад +2

      @@CosmicComicChronicles then we've failed her

  • @laethy8393
    @laethy8393 2 года назад +491

    I'm from the south of French and my family has been making cassoulet with duck and pork for a while. We use Coco beans and the whole pork skin rolled up (didn't realized how weird it was before today) and we cook it on a fire outside for 4 hours. It's certainly a big activity but it's one of my favorite dishes. I'm always super happy to see people experience more rustic french cuisine that's not as popular as the classic gastronomic one.

    • @minttjulep
      @minttjulep 2 года назад

      do you eat the skin or no?

    • @minttjulep
      @minttjulep 2 года назад +1

      my comments keep getting deleted wtf

    • @annabees
      @annabees 2 года назад

      @@minttjulep skin is mostly for the bouillon taste. I don't eat it personnaly because there's already so much meat inside haha

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 2 года назад

      @@minttjulep
      Welcome to YT lol. Censorship has been a huge problem here since the beginning of 2017.

    • @Maria-mx1lj
      @Maria-mx1lj 2 года назад +16

      it’s absolutely not weird to eat pork skin don’t worry. he’s just being weird about it fsr

  • @annettehammersmith1152
    @annettehammersmith1152 Год назад +74

    OMG sooo very funny. I made this recently and nearly cried the whole way through. Asked my husband what he thought of it and he looked at me and said ‘think you can do better’. He nearly died that night. Never making it again.

  • @allgreatfictions
    @allgreatfictions Год назад +781

    I've never seen someone whose energy in the kitchen is so relatable, so infectious, and so hard to watch haha.

    • @oliverhopkins8074
      @oliverhopkins8074 Год назад +33

      With energy prices so high you really gotta cook with your own enthusiasm

    • @icklethepickle
      @icklethepickle Год назад +3

      It's great, isn't it?

    • @BlueZirnitra
      @BlueZirnitra Год назад +30

      I hate it. He's needlessly agitated before he even starts to cook. I'm stressed just listening to him make such a big deal out of everything.

    • @nickbarlow4270
      @nickbarlow4270 Год назад +7

      @@MrAlissahk97 Took me 30 seconds to stop watching. Very, very annoying energy. I don't know how so many people can watch this.

    • @nickbarlow4270
      @nickbarlow4270 Год назад +1

      @@icklethepickle No.

  • @cindyhammond5573
    @cindyhammond5573 2 года назад +919

    Honestly I think this was the first “let’s make something delicious from left overs” dish. Oh look some pork roast from yesterday, sausages from Tuesday, lamb from the day before- not enough of each on their own to feed the hungry hordes but cook up a mess of beans, add the other meats, bake them together, and voila ! A hearty dish, enough for all!

    • @markbraunstein58
      @markbraunstein58 2 года назад +51

      I was thinking the same thing. All this time I've been making cassoulet!

    • @Wabajck
      @Wabajck 2 года назад +74

      At multiple stages I kept thinking "oh that's a dish on its own"

    • @1ACL
      @1ACL 2 года назад +2

      Yep

    • @patrickgoss4221
      @patrickgoss4221 2 года назад +45

      EXACTLY. There's a reason you don't see this offered on a lot of restaurant menus except as a special. But when it's good, OH MAN! I will say that it freezes very well and I tend to divide it up into thirds when I do it. Then you have three full meals that just need to be defrosted and baked on cold winter nights.

    • @GrammarSplaining
      @GrammarSplaining 2 года назад +57

      That's what I was thinking, farmhouse frugality, because there's no way anyone ever sat down and deliberately invented this dish.

  • @madcampos
    @madcampos 2 года назад +696

    I'm Brazilian and there is a traditional recipe just like that, the thing is we usually don't cook this all by ourselves, it is supposed to be a feast for a family and requires a whole family to cook together too

    • @Biancafrasson
      @Biancafrasson Год назад +33

      Tb olhei e falei: uai uma feijoada

    • @gyroscoper
      @gyroscoper Год назад +15

      chamar Cassoulet de Feijoada é um pecado
      amo culinária brasileira mas não há comparação

    • @keslyajennifer
      @keslyajennifer Год назад +3

      Mano, cê tem que ser exilado.

    • @RyvreRandom
      @RyvreRandom Год назад +7

      That's how it should be done!

    • @Nat.ali.a
      @Nat.ali.a Год назад +9

      @@gyroscoper pecado? Feijoada é derivada desse prato. Na verdade derivada da versão Portuguesa do Cassoulet.

  • @CookingWithNellie
    @CookingWithNellie Год назад +107

    First off, you might want to try making Pork Cracklings, or Pork skinned Braciole. Also, the Pork skins do absolutely belong in the dish. They will shrink in size when cooked (which is what she meant when she said that they'll disappear) and finally, it's not too late to add more stock or water to the consistency that pleases you.

    • @NickeyVamp
      @NickeyVamp Год назад +1

      Great advice I was wondering about that.

    • @nicknamenao7905
      @nicknamenao7905 Год назад +1

      Fried pork skin is great to finish the leftover skin

    • @104thironmike4
      @104thironmike4 8 месяцев назад

      Taking out the pork skin, was me screaming moment. Not because of the waste (and it is a waste to take it out), but because he has such a way to make things so needlessly difficult on himself. Good lord, boy, just... stawp! 😀

  • @neiltheblaze
    @neiltheblaze 2 года назад +524

    Next time, make meals out of the component parts and save some of it - the sausage patties one night, the lamb another, etc. - and then at the end of the week, throw it all together in with the beans and create it component by component over several days. Like a lot of peasant style farm-dishes, this looks like it was created as a useful way to use leftovers rather than something you take all day to make in one go - because on any actual working farm NOBODY has ten hours a day to make dinner!

    • @KeithOlson
      @KeithOlson 2 года назад +17

      THIS!!!

    • @verteup
      @verteup 2 года назад +7

      You do not make a cassoulet every day. It's a special dinner for an occasion.

    • @seasons0123
      @seasons0123 2 года назад +3

      @@verteup Do you know how it came about? Or just a recipe handed down from generation to generation?

    • @sallycapotosto6927
      @sallycapotosto6927 2 года назад +31

      @@seasons0123 Not only was this a recipe for using "left-overs" but was a peasant recipe to use what was available. While I admire his dedication, he made everything so much harder than it needed to be! Still - it was fun to watch!

    • @k.v.7681
      @k.v.7681 2 года назад +23

      Even outside the scope of a farm, and even when experienced and familiar with the dish in France, we tend to take two days to make them when they're this massive. We don't use leftovers anymore when we invite people, and start from scratch, but the entire prep is done the day before. The day of we tend to just throw it all together or let it go for a last simmer before serving. I'm also quite impressed with how he worked around lacking some ingredients we tend to just order from the butcher ready to use (like saucisse de Toulouse, even availlable from the shelf in supermarkets) or bouquet garni (herbs tied together)

  • @gddrew
    @gddrew 2 года назад +277

    I admire your fortitude in sticking with the madness that is Julia Child’s French Cooking. I myself would not even attempt it, so kudos, my friend.

    • @THEGREGDREW
      @THEGREGDREW 2 года назад +5

      Hello same name person!

  • @roxou493
    @roxou493 2 года назад +74

    As a french personne, that is the most complicated cassoulet recipe I've ever seen, I've felt your pain ;_;
    kudos to you, you really gave it your all!

  • @jasonwojnicz
    @jasonwojnicz Год назад +28

    Me and my husband made this for our anniversary this year. Took us 14 hours. Highly recommend making over a couple of days. No harm in letting your meat rest in the fridge. Save all cooking liquids in all steps, you will need them to keep it most for the end. Literally the most delicious thing you will ever eat. Remember that this was originally a "what to do with leftovers" dish for medieval French peasants. Whatever the nobility didn't eat at their formal meal was combined into a dish to feed the household staff and then the poor.

  • @ennn4158
    @ennn4158 Год назад +416

    Once my sister made Julia’s recepie. - and told us in the dinner’s table - I have never been this much proud of myself- and I will never do this again. - now I understand 😅

  • @rhapsodybohemiangirl
    @rhapsodybohemiangirl 2 года назад +854

    pork skin with beans is actually super good! in mexico we have this dish called frijoles charros, which is a bean soup with sausage and chorizo, that includes "cueritos" (pickled pork skin)
    it's not for everyone i must admit but they add a nice extra texture to the dish

    • @bobcook2366
      @bobcook2366 2 года назад +68

      Came here for this comment. Totally agree, I enjoy the texture and thinks it adds to the dish. Unfortunately it was just too “weird” for him

    • @kungfumattquantumofconsuck6601
      @kungfumattquantumofconsuck6601 2 года назад +10

      "in mexico we have this dish called frijoles charros, which is a bean soup with sausage and chorizo, that includes "cueritos" (pickled pork skin) "
      Oh that sounds so good!
      I love Mexican food and Mexican ladies. hehe

    • @AlbertMoff
      @AlbertMoff 2 года назад +8

      The first thing I think soo it's French frijoles charros niiice!!! But it needs some Pico de Gallo and some tortillas.

    • @skatergeek19811
      @skatergeek19811 2 года назад +2

      It's for me! Good lord, I already want to eat the words :)

    • @KenS1267
      @KenS1267 2 года назад +50

      I've worked in a French bistro where cassoulet was on the menu pretty frequently. The pork rind is pretty tender after the second cook. Obviously it still has some chew but he gave up on the recipe without trusting that Julia actually had faithfully wrote down all the steps.

  • @darciofharmonyhomesteadfar5974
    @darciofharmonyhomesteadfar5974 Год назад +147

    I have to admit, that half way through this video, I forgot what dish you making. So many steps! Your perseverance is admirable. Well done!

  • @femaleprosthetic
    @femaleprosthetic Год назад +433

    As a culinary instructor, this is the most infuriating video I've ever seen. I seriously applaud your effort and I think you did a fantastic job. Julia is the GOAT for a reason.

    • @Puddycat00
      @Puddycat00 Год назад

      No she’s not . Her cook books are terrible. Recipes are nasty. I’m Romanian and know great amazing food and no French food is good

    • @Draxxdemsklounst
      @Draxxdemsklounst Год назад +9

      Why infuriating?

    • @frankmartinez6027
      @frankmartinez6027 Год назад

      😂

    • @ReinaDido
      @ReinaDido 11 месяцев назад +5

      @@Draxxdemsklounst I suppose he gets angry in solidarity with Anti-Chef's suffering with those instructions that I don't know whether to call Proustian or Kafkian.

    • @lucindamahaffey4556
      @lucindamahaffey4556 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@ReinaDido she is sympathizing, I agree. I was watching thinking, ‘ well, not on my bucket list’- and I love to cook! I’d love to get that culinary instructor to tell us how to simplify this a little bit. I bet she’d have some ideas!

  • @battletestedbeauty3758
    @battletestedbeauty3758 2 года назад +523

    Only JC can turn essentially leftovers stew into an endurance sport 😅

    • @nosender2399
      @nosender2399 2 года назад +38

      I thought the same thing. He essentially had to make from scratch, the leftover ingredients that are typically used. Poor guy 😫🤣

    • @CatsPajamas23
      @CatsPajamas23 2 года назад +2

      Seriously. (I know a few "country cooks"(or suburbanites...or city chefs) who do that.😉.🤫)

  • @HumanimalChannel
    @HumanimalChannel 2 года назад +199

    There is your hint:
    "..but two or three days of leisurely cooking is much easier".
    Leftovers, with beans!
    Oh Julia you Joker!!
    You did a fantabulous job!

  • @alanolejniczak4389
    @alanolejniczak4389 2 года назад +595

    So I made this last night because my husband picked it out of the cookbook - long story. I generally don't follow recipes to the letter but I was determined to create it as Julia intended. It took two days and took way too much head space. It was delicious and nourishing, but I nearly cried given the effort. It was fine. Just okay. So much mess. So much fuss. I was indignant. I felt punked. I could have made this with dish half the time and effort. Now I have leftovers for days. Thanks for making this video because it helped me to visualize this complicated recipe for what is meant to be a simple dish.

    • @kc5997
      @kc5997 Год назад +30

      The actual most common cassoulet is way easier to make. And it's mostly duck.
      This was painful to watch.

    • @surtu9221
      @surtu9221 Год назад +59

      Julia was definitely not creating an entry-level or practical everyday working mom cookbook, she was trying to crack the secrets of French chefs for "professional domestic housewives" who wanted to step up their game, cream the competition in the next neighborhood bake sale, or astonish their husband's business contacts at a home dinner with European cuisine that felt straight out of a five star restaurant. As such, there is definitely a specific target audience for her books that almost doesn't even exist anymore (classic 50s housewife), and people outside of that target audience are going to struggle to milk all the quality out of every detail of her recipe the way she originally intended. Most people would be much better off with a simplified recipe that focuses on amplifying the big important parts of the recipe, not getting lost in 200 details.

    • @Gee-xb7rt
      @Gee-xb7rt Год назад +6

      @@kc5997 Indeed, cassoulet is beans with leftover scraps, not 3 days worth of preparing meat to end up in a bean pot.

    • @Gee-xb7rt
      @Gee-xb7rt Год назад +4

      ​@@surtu9221 Cassoulet is a home cooked dish, the French have a name for this -- cuisine grand-mère, grandma's cooking. For some reason Anglos have to fuss with things.

  • @annoyance4135
    @annoyance4135 Год назад +40

    this video got recommended to me when i was havin a rough week and then i spent the following week watching all of jamie and julia. these videos are a delight and i'm glad i subscribed. it's nice to see a cooking channel where they aren't an expert but have the enthusiasm of one.

    • @wryderz
      @wryderz Год назад +1

      me too!!

    • @markpukey8
      @markpukey8 6 дней назад

      BINGO! I found that watching Jamie enjoy his finished products has motivated me to try some of these insane recipe's!
      I made Julia's Beef Bourginioun (SP?) after watching Jaime do it and it was FANTASTIC. But I'll never make it again. What I will do is saute mushrooms Julia's way for the rest of my life. Picking up tricks like that that I will reuse makes it worth the effort to do these things one time.
      But I think I've learned "don't cook the pig nipples" already. I don't need to do that one, ever.

  • @TheLikenessOfNormal
    @TheLikenessOfNormal 2 года назад +535

    The greatest part of this is you fishing out the pork skins without realizing that the collagen breaks down and works as a thickener XD

    • @Dajaphil
      @Dajaphil Год назад +106

      rI was laughing my ass off at that too. Knowing why your ingredients are being used (as well as being familiar with the recipe ahead of time) makes all the difference.

    • @Klm49
      @Klm49 Год назад +75

      Ok, that's what I thought too!! As a child of Southern, Caribbean, and American cooking, I don't recall my grandmother ever removing the pork skin from dishes, but I also don't recall ever eating a piece in her food. It dissolves!!

    • @jacobhoward9305
      @jacobhoward9305 Год назад +33

      Was looking for this comment I was like NOOOOO leave it

    • @Jedi71
      @Jedi71 Год назад +21

      I know! Why does he think he can change Julia's recipe!

    • @degueloface
      @degueloface Год назад +30

      Removing the pork skin make me almost click off the video

  • @Malcriada115
    @Malcriada115 2 года назад +140

    This is hilarious. Loved the pork skin Cinderella moment. Thank you for making me realize I never want to cook this thing as long as I live.

  • @strongfp
    @strongfp 2 года назад +203

    In classic southern French cooking the pork skin is a complimenting ingredient that is used in a lot of soups and stews, or used as a thickening agent with its gelatin content. There's something called 'Lyon bowties' where strips of pork skin are boiled down, then folded over and then tied with string to make a bowtie of sorts, then boiled or simmered down in soups or stews and served as a side dish.
    I'm thinking julia meant for you to keep the pork skin in there. It's a wierd texture at first, but you grow to like it.
    Happy cooking!

    • @Es-Flowers
      @Es-Flowers 2 года назад +1

      A bit old of a comment, but what about in Northern France, or other parts of France, if you know?

    • @strongfp
      @strongfp 2 года назад +4

      @@Es-Flowers they're known for being a southern thing because in the northern parts it was a much more urban living style, where living off the land wasn't as common. They're also called Lyon bowties because of the city Lyon which is the culinary capital of Europe, or at least France. But, I'm sure in the north they utilized the pork skin just as much tho!

  • @dontlistentoanythingisay
    @dontlistentoanythingisay Год назад +53

    In south Louisiana where most dishes are heavily French influenced, everything takes forever to cook. Most staples are at least a 2-3 hour process. If you make roux from scratch for some of the dishes, you can add an additional hour

    • @kille-4B
      @kille-4B Год назад +7

      Roux: lightly browned flour mixed with butter or margerine. 1 hour? I don’t think so!

    • @dontlistentoanythingisay
      @dontlistentoanythingisay Год назад +19

      @@kille-4B to make a proper roux, yes. Technically it will take longer than that to have it come out the dark chocolate looking color. Google how to make a Cajun roux and read for yourself goofball

    • @cc_snipergirl
      @cc_snipergirl Год назад +3

      ​@@dontlistentoanythingisayI've heard of roux before, but have never seen one like that before now. Holy cow, that must be hard to make without burning and ruining it.

    • @dontlistentoanythingisay
      @dontlistentoanythingisay Год назад +4

      @@cc_snipergirl It is, you cant leave it for the whole couple hours or so you make it. I've watched family members do it, but I personally haven't made one from scratch. I buy them premade and it works really well. I use Kary's original roux for when I want to make stuff like gumbo or meatball fricassee

    • @NickeyVamp
      @NickeyVamp Год назад +1

      True you have to stand over the roux and stir so it doesn’t burn.. took 45 min one time.. some can take well over an hour.

  • @nhennessy6434
    @nhennessy6434 2 года назад +201

    I make a very abbeviated version of this where I add together two cans of great northern beans, I can of tomatoes, 14 oz of sausage (usually kielbassa), six bacon slices, a couple of boneless, skinless chicken thighs some thyme, paprika, herb de provence, and a couple tbsp of tomato paste with a crumpled up corn muffins with some chicken broth. It takes about an hour to cook and it's delicious.
    Ultimately, this is peasant food, and whatever you have: pork, beef, chicken, duck, etc can go into that pot. With some herbs, bacon, white beans, tomato, bread crumbs, it will be cassoulet, and will be perfectly delicious. And it doesn't have to take all day.

    • @paint4pain
      @paint4pain 2 года назад +11

      As you say, Cassoulet and Bouillabaisse, are the fridge emptiers of france. The family's recipie has no tomatoes or paprika but saussage, salt pork/bacon and duck confit along with a few different herbs and beans and some vegies (onion, carrot, celery). Bonus is that the fat from the duck confit forms a solid layer that seals up the top and protects it.

    • @theengagedfew
      @theengagedfew 2 года назад +4

      I didn't have the heart to tell him that it doesn't have to take this long. He seems like a real sweetheart, but I've worked for chefs who would smother him with a bagful of grimy kitchen towels for using pork loin in a braised dish, or wasting valuable pre-service prep time picking out bits of pork rind.

    • @meethepie
      @meethepie 2 года назад +11

      The one thing western cooking is good at is taking peasant food and making it some extremely expensive, overly complicated, mystical dish that is too intimidating for the average cook

    • @suwooshi
      @suwooshi 2 года назад +3

      @@theengagedfew the pork loin really didn’t make any sense lol

    • @peachmelba1000
      @peachmelba1000 2 года назад +3

      Agreed. I make mine once per month, and it always has something different in it. This video got frustrating to watch because he followed Julia's sort of pedantic recipe (love her, but yeah)
      This is real stick to your ribs stuff, and it is supposed to be easy to make.

  • @emilyjackson1457
    @emilyjackson1457 2 года назад +443

    I celebrated my 75th birthday by retiring from cooking. Watching you cook is the most pleasurable thing I now do in the kitchen. Am I correct in assuming that the breadcrumbs were homemade? Your videos are addictive. Thank you!

    • @Nico-xf2rb
      @Nico-xf2rb 2 года назад +18

      Please write down your recipes, we loose so much food knowledge.

    • @ememman1460
      @ememman1460 2 года назад +4

      @@Nico-xf2rb Exactly. Please do.

    • @TheMFYeti
      @TheMFYeti 2 года назад +5

      Nah, you can see him pouring the crumbs out of the can/tin at like 26:44

    • @Jmonta
      @Jmonta 2 года назад

      Look like the 12 hours shifts with no breaks are over. Happy cooking and watching cooking videos at home.

  • @lilykep
    @lilykep 2 года назад +131

    You can definitely see cassoulet's origins as an end of the week dish to use up the rest of the leftovers.

    • @Classwarvet
      @Classwarvet 2 года назад +14

      Yeah this is a dish akin to shepherds pie. I see why julia said it would be easier to make this stuff over the course of 3 days.

    • @fionadefranco1276
      @fionadefranco1276 2 года назад +3

      Sorry, nice idea, but you have to make Cassoulet from scratch using raw meats. It wouldn't work with cooked leftovers. That said, I've always thought the recipe was way over complicated for what it is.

    • @lilykep
      @lilykep 2 года назад +24

      @@fionadefranco1276 He literally cooked every single meat before he put it into the main dish

    • @Classwarvet
      @Classwarvet 2 года назад +16

      @@fionadefranco1276 if you look at the assembly, everything was cooked already before even popping it in the oven. The way he prepped those meats would've been dishes on there own. All you'd have to do is reserve some for the cassoulet and by the time you have everything, all you really need to do is cook the beans and prep the breadcrumbs.

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 2 года назад +4

      @@Vel_D Yup, he "cooked for a week" and then assembled the "one dish"! LOL ;D

  • @sionan7937
    @sionan7937 Год назад +42

    Instant sub after seeing this video. Your overall sense of anxiety and exhaustion while cooking is a total mood and perfectly encapsulates what I'm like in the kitchen 😅

  • @Sarina_Dear
    @Sarina_Dear 2 года назад +79

    My family makes cassoulet for birthdays! It’s delicious, feeds a crowd, and always feels like love on a plate

    • @antichef
      @antichef  2 года назад +13

      ❤️

    • @ninianstorm6494
      @ninianstorm6494 2 года назад

      @@antichef need to force city officials to lower inflation/living cost for all those making below 150k per year to prove daca worth it since for ages DC never lower living cost only print dollars to do more refugee crisis
      1. Ukrainian Officials Tried To SABOTAGE Trump 2016
      ruclips.net/video/BGGxl6hD5yc/видео.html
      2.george bush 14y ago said add ukraine to nato foreshadow nuland f eu coup 2014 support =
      ruclips.net/video/nTQ3D1a-j20/видео.html
      2001 pentagon memo kill occupy libya to syria
      ruclips.net/video/_mrJRHwbVG8/видео.html
      current ukraine gov is proxy since obama drew red line just like did in syria earlier arming rebels telling russia not to interfere while zelensky ethnic cleanse donbass region 7y=
      a. ruclips.net/video/ta9dWRcDUPA3/видео.html.

      b. ruclips.net/video/IBeRB7rWk_8/видео.html
      dnc smear looking into treat covid symptoms/travel bans but permit parades/riots, recall snitches get rewards?
      ruclips.net/video/06Fyg4maLWg/видео.html
      ray epps-fake sole survivor from ritten house case 2.0/podesta 2.0 when you look at left wing msm collaborate
      ruclips.net/video/OnVHhn-vgUw/видео.html
      dnc establishment kill 50 in vegas/portland, thugs attack with stand down cops san jose/charlotte, burn loot several months, sabotage afgan withdraw using russia bounty smear to give taliban equip, crash car in to wisconsin parade thanks to nbc follow jury bus smearing ritten house too
      ruclips.net/video/UxoL8tHSa7g/видео.html
      left wing media give protest t-shirts to san quan mayor for lying about never receive maria supplies
      ruclips.net/video/qYmCtYLE9k0/видео.html

    • @Sarina_Dear
      @Sarina_Dear 2 года назад +15

      @_____ when we have the pork skin my aunt uses the fresh skin, and by the time the beans are done they are pretty much dissolved into the dish. I prefer to use the salted version and make them crispy and mix them with the breadcrumbs as part of the topping- they are kinda like salty meaty panko

  • @janiceervin428
    @janiceervin428 2 года назад +292

    😂😂😂
    I can’t…. I was already chuckling at the “having pig skin in the house is …an experience” so when it came to the “pig nipples” I lost it completely.😂😂so much so, that I couldn’t follow along and just had to rewind. Omgosh. I’m dying. Love this channel!

    • @sublimetulips6771
      @sublimetulips6771 Год назад +9

      I did the same thing.😂 REWIND!

    • @MrsGump
      @MrsGump Год назад +4

      Yup pig nipples got me too, woke my hubs up I was pissing myself so loudly 😂

    • @arthas640
      @arthas640 Год назад

      this is why you need a kitchen dog. they'll take care of any unwanted bits like pork nipples for you. just drop it on the floor and forget it ever existed.

  • @Augustus_Imperator
    @Augustus_Imperator 2 года назад +78

    I cooked this two times in my life and once I ate it in southern France in the medieval town of Carcassonne, it goes without saying that all three times were absolutely memorable

    • @ronschlorff7089
      @ronschlorff7089 2 года назад +9

      Yes, some iconic dishes are best eaten in iconic places. Like the 1000-year-old recipe of a beer that I once had in a 1000-year-old abbey in Germany for example! ;D

    • @HaloArtisan
      @HaloArtisan 2 года назад

      Yooo I had my first and only cassoulet there too. Still remember how delicious it was.

    • @diray3474
      @diray3474 2 года назад

      Now I wish I had known of that dish when I was in Carcassonne... All I took home with me was a T-shirt.
      Well, if I ever visit again I'll know what to look for!

  • @ChocoBabiChan
    @ChocoBabiChan Год назад +27

    I grew up watching Julia Child as a kid in the 80s. In high-school I made this, and you're right, it was helluva task. Took me 16 hours. I ended cooking it overnight, my mom woke up the next morning and took over the basting so I could sleep. It was good, but definitely not worth 16 hours of work.

    • @himesilva
      @himesilva Год назад +3

      You have a nice mom! My mom would've just flipped out at me for creating a mess and making her kitchen unusable for an entire day lol

  • @ericmiller6828
    @ericmiller6828 Год назад +171

    Love it! “I’ve been on my feet the entire day… there was no breaks.” That was the most chef statement you’ve said yet - welcome to the life brother.

    • @EughhBrothereughh
      @EughhBrothereughh Год назад +6

      Or every married woman with kids. Yall didn't invent bicycle 🤡

    • @jishani1
      @jishani1 Год назад +6

      @@EughhBrothereughh pft. acting like any woman with kids does more than hand them a tablet and ignore them 80% of the time anymore

    • @jmc8076
      @jmc8076 Год назад +3

      @@jishani1
      There’s ALOT of mothers in the world. Impressive you know how they all live...or why.

    • @himesilva
      @himesilva Год назад +2

      @@jishani1 I have never seen someone who so obviously has never had kids... yikes

  • @IrishAnnie
    @IrishAnnie 2 года назад +162

    I made Julia’s beef Bourgogne and it took me a whole afternoon. My husband said it was the best thing I have ever made…

    • @CalderaXII
      @CalderaXII Год назад +8

      Great feeling, isn't it? 😊 Having your hard work appreciated

    • @johnbaker6125
      @johnbaker6125 Год назад +3

      There are lots of blogs out there comparing her recipe to other acclaimed chefs and almost everyone says hers is so much better. I think it's an idea she talked about in her cookbook, cooking everything separately and bringing them together only long enough for the flavors to meld together.
      I know I cook mushrooms the same way she did, and they are definitely better. I had to laugh to myself when I noted that the French way to cook fresh green beans is the way I have done it for years without anyone telling me to do it.

  • @rockstar-made
    @rockstar-made Год назад +121

    this is both the most chaotic but also the most engaging cooking video i've ever watched, new sub

  • @drcatastrophicus
    @drcatastrophicus Год назад +22

    This is the most relatable cooking show I've ever seen. This is exactly how I feel when cooking much simpler dishes 😂

  • @The_Bear_with_Flair
    @The_Bear_with_Flair 2 года назад +31

    This is Mrs. Alaimo here. I actually found this channel accidentally, and am I glad I did 😊. I love it! I loved that he ate the finished product, I know what he was thinking…he was thinking “Yes indeed this is great, but I do not want a plate of what I’ve been taste testing for the last 10 hours.” I can see it in his face. Love this guy! He has a true heart of a great cook. Your new fan, Pamela

  • @nariyat
    @nariyat 2 года назад +65

    I love watching your cooking style, being polished and skilled, yet just as scattered and confused as my everyday cooking. It makes me feel a little better, even though my recipes are a tiny fraction of this level of difficulty.

  • @befuddled2010
    @befuddled2010 2 года назад +90

    I'm new here so I don't know if you already covered this, but if you find cassoulet intense, try Julia's bouillabaisse. The process is laborious but the end result will melt you in your boots. This was really authentic and very enjoyable. Thank you for this and I am now a subscriber!

    • @Serimewmow
      @Serimewmow 2 года назад +7

      bouillabaisse was one of the first ones he did! you should go back and check it out in the playlist if you havn't already!

  • @zerokiryuu3387
    @zerokiryuu3387 Год назад +9

    My family is Dominican and Venezuelan and so we are used to cooking with Canned and Dry Beans (Pinzo/Kidney/Pigeon/Habichuelas/Guandules).
    Something I learned from my mom is that when you use dry beans that they take more time to soften. The stove and heat will kill you if you try to get them soft in one day. So she'll soften them overnight with water and let them simmer throughout the day.
    Sometimes two night's is needed because the quality of the beans always are different per bag. And when she's going to use them for another day, she leaves the softened beans in a container to freeze in the freezer. You can reuse them again later!

  • @xgrumx
    @xgrumx 2 года назад +162

    I never ever do a Julia Child recipe if I’m not in the mood to ingredient shop for 1-2 weeks and then cook for a full day (which is honestly like twice a year). This was way too chaotic.

    • @Dont145
      @Dont145 2 года назад

      Does that worth tho?

    • @elizabethclaiborne6461
      @elizabethclaiborne6461 2 года назад +4

      I learned to cook from JC. Most of the recipes are not this involved, this be one is a week of leftovers you cook all at once.
      I suspect the pig skin could be left out.

    • @anti-ethniccleansing465
      @anti-ethniccleansing465 2 года назад

      @@elizabethclaiborne6461
      What I want to know is how she live to the age of 91 with this kind of crap she ate.

    • @kerrizor
      @kerrizor 2 года назад

      Not helped by this cook's approach at all

  • @SilvaDreams
    @SilvaDreams 2 года назад +63

    As a side note when using the thermometer you want to stop at about 5 degrees before the finale temp you want. It'll continue to keep going up over 15 minutes or so on the counter if you put some tin foil over it.

  • @fabrisseterbrugghe8567
    @fabrisseterbrugghe8567 2 года назад +118

    I make cassoulet on New Year's Eve starting at 7:00 a.m. and finishing in time for a midnight party. I had a friend request it for his 60th birthday which is the only time I made it twice in one year. I use lamb, duck, and duck sausages for my friends who don't eat pork, but I have made it with pork, duck, lamb, and a mix of lamb and pork sausages.
    When making the duck version, I use a combo of duck fat and olive oil to replace the pork fat in the easier version.

    • @funkyfiss
      @funkyfiss 2 года назад +1

      Sounds delicious!!

    • @theatrecreep
      @theatrecreep 2 года назад

      im so glad to see a version of this with no pork!

    • @myrrhfishify7743
      @myrrhfishify7743 2 года назад

      I cannot do chicharonnes (fried pork skins). The texture, OMG hate it. Thank you for providing an alternative. The duck sounds rich.

    • @oldasyouromens
      @oldasyouromens 2 года назад

      The duck version is by far my favorite - but we use bacon instead of lamb. Will have to try it. Like commenters have said, it's one of those things where you could eat one dish for dinner every night and then make cassoulet.

    • @jeanvignes
      @jeanvignes 2 года назад +3

      This is truly a rough country dish. Left-over meat baked with some beans and what not. One could use chicken, turkey, beef, pork, pretty much anything. The white beans & sauce will pull it together.

  • @kristenrose257
    @kristenrose257 Год назад +8

    My dog tapped the screen of my tablet with his paw while I was watching Tasting History and this video came up. I did go back and finish watching the other one first but then I came back to this and I really enjoyed it. So relatable! I feel as anxious and chaotic whenever I attempt a new recipe. I end up saying, "Was that right? I hope that was right." a lot too. And realizing you shouldn't have chopped the pig skin and now you have to pick it all out was just the kind of blunder I could see myself doing as well. This was a great video and got a subscribe from me. Now I'm going to check out that duck video.

  • @dashcarter1101
    @dashcarter1101 2 года назад +118

    I laughed the entire time you were separating the beans from the pork skin. 🤣

  • @tatianamelendez490
    @tatianamelendez490 2 года назад +115

    This is a good recipe to do with a group, like a cooking dinner party where everyone has something to do before putting it all together.

    • @Amy-pv7ke
      @Amy-pv7ke 2 года назад +8

      When your friends ask what they can bring "pork skin...." :D

    • @lucyk.5163
      @lucyk.5163 2 года назад +3

      Yeah no. I really hate having too many people around when I'm doing stuff and that includes cooking. One person to help around, fine. More than the 2 of us, never. I'd rather do everything on my own. Not that I would do this recipe for any reason whatsoever.

    • @tatianamelendez490
      @tatianamelendez490 2 года назад +6

      @@lucyk.5163 That's cool, I get like that sometimes. However, I was raised with cooking parties happening at home every once in a while where everyone pitches in, and it's heartwarming for me to be surrounded by loved ones that help. But I totally get needing your space while cooking, I get a bit perfectionist in the kitchen and don't trust people to do it right sometimes.

  • @CalindaSharisse
    @CalindaSharisse 2 года назад +87

    For the leftover pork rind, you can make chicharrón de puerco (also known as pork crackling). I've never made it but it's sold in stores here in Texas. It's a common snack.

  • @MarthaMax
    @MarthaMax Год назад +10

    As a brazilian who eats beans every single day, it is just beautiful to see an american cook beans instead of opening a can, Julia Child is such a hero!

  • @savannahrodriguez8537
    @savannahrodriguez8537 Год назад +377

    I finally found a cooking channel that’s not intimidating cause I can relate to the pain and suffering the chef is experiencing 😂
    Throwing the carrots and one going AWOL hit me harder than I’d like to admit. I’ve lost many veggies that way…

  • @bryanpritchett
    @bryanpritchett 2 года назад +85

    My all-time favorite dish. Growing up, whenever my mom would ask me what I wanted for my birthday dinner, Cassoulet was always the answer. Her family recipe was considerably simpler than this one, but just as delicious.

    • @drunkenfarmerjohn42
      @drunkenfarmerjohn42 2 года назад +13

      Yeah, the JC recipe is super duper complicated. Most are just variations of the trinity, beans, stock, duck confit, and sausage. Bacon, if you're nasty. When I make it, it comes out to ~ 2.5 hours time total, since I'm lazy and buy premade confit. If I can't get that, I roast up same dark chicken quarters the night before in boatloads of fat over low temp, effectively doing a confit sans the three days of allium marinade. I also, typically, spice towards the cajun family and use andouille. Because filthy colonial.

    • @rosesweetcharlotte
      @rosesweetcharlotte 2 года назад +2

      Can you give us her recipe?

  • @arianabrand1153
    @arianabrand1153 2 года назад +122

    Julia: “cut out the fat!”
    Jaime: *visibly losing his mind*

  • @afeathereddinosaur
    @afeathereddinosaur Год назад +8

    This video is exactly how I felt baking a cake from zero for the first time.
    If only I knew that was just a taste of what was to come in my culinary journey

  • @ohdear5890
    @ohdear5890 2 года назад +41

    This is what I like to call lumberjack meals. Any meal that makes me feel like I just spent 12 hours chopping down trees and I came home to my beautiful spouse holding a huge cast iron dish of straight up protein gets that name 😂

    • @sarahgooey
      @sarahgooey Год назад

      thats such an amazing and funny way of seeing it. im def gonna use that now

  • @rosies_crafty_cohorts6454
    @rosies_crafty_cohorts6454 2 года назад +88

    You’re adorable to watch! I went through a year in 2017 of being obsessed with cooking these recipes! After 20+yrs of talking about it with my high school French teacher, we are FINALLY GOING TO FRANCE TOGETHER NEXT JUNE!! My teacher turned into a lifelong mentor and friend. I told her about your channel my friend, she’s impressed with your spunk as well!! -Rose

    • @jarodh-m6099
      @jarodh-m6099 2 года назад +4

      C'est fantastique.

    • @accidentalpatient4152
      @accidentalpatient4152 2 года назад

      Spunk means ejaculation in quite a few places

    • @dixietenbroeck8717
      @dixietenbroeck8717 2 года назад +3

      *_Bon voyage!_*
      Have a WONDERFUL trip with your Teacher-Friend (& Mentor) - I envy you your stamina, tbh!

  • @elizabethwalter5744
    @elizabethwalter5744 2 года назад +9

    An ancient process that once served to make bad meat as palatable as possible and to make the pot go as far as possible with large families. You are the real treasure here. Love this crazy channel to bits.

  • @magentapierrot8409
    @magentapierrot8409 Год назад +6

    “Things are happening. You can’t see it but things are happening.” Great video! Thank you. I would not even attempt this recipe. I just love watching you & Julia cook this ridiculously difficult recipe. ☺️

  • @johnwest4492
    @johnwest4492 Год назад +125

    I've worked with an old chef who said that the Cassoulet was their final for Culinary school . It's a tough one, much respect lmao 🤣 😂

  • @daisysmum7336
    @daisysmum7336 2 года назад +91

    This was so much fun watching you do this 😂. I was trained in French cookery 43 years ago and I didn’t work in a restaurant all that much; however, I never lost those valuable skills. I would not even attempt this recipe because it’s just too much work. Good for you for giving it a go.

  • @robbiebarroll5102
    @robbiebarroll5102 Год назад +37

    I would never in a million years make this dish but you are the funniest cook I have ever watched. Thank you for being real!

    • @jmc8076
      @jmc8076 Год назад

      For baking try Dylan Hollis.

  • @Nosceteipsum166
    @Nosceteipsum166 Год назад +13

    If I'm not mistaken, this is where the Brazilian feijoada comes from. It has African/French influence. It's basically a bean "soup" full of meats. We also top it with breadcrumbs (farofa) and white rice as a side. It's fantastic.

  • @AVintageLibrarian
    @AVintageLibrarian 2 года назад +49

    I’ve never been so invested in someone making something in a video this long in my entire life…but I am here for it 😂❤

  • @JG-wg2iv
    @JG-wg2iv 2 года назад +182

    You can turn the rest of the pork rind into crackling! Those are so good depending on how you fry them your milage may vary

    • @refitdan
      @refitdan 2 года назад +15

      Crackling or scratchings was my first thought, for the excess.

    • @elizabethwalter5744
      @elizabethwalter5744 2 года назад

      Crackling is evil enough health wise, but crackling with nipples would take them to a whole new level of gastro-gross 😁

    • @PumpkinPails
      @PumpkinPails 2 года назад +8

      With some hot sauce and paired with a cold beer. 👌

    • @dugswank
      @dugswank 2 года назад

      Even the nipples?

    • @k.v.7681
      @k.v.7681 2 года назад +4

      My family recipe for this dish, we put the skin at the bottom of the pot before the last cooking, when everything is together, and a layer of beans. It draws the fat out as it cooks, leaving something akin to a crispy skin at the end, since it takes the brunt of the heat.

  • @happycamper4thewin
    @happycamper4thewin 2 года назад +9

    Thank you for the amazing videos!

  • @nataliesiagkris-seymour6924
    @nataliesiagkris-seymour6924 Год назад +4

    Pulling all the pork rinds out of those beans is the sort of thing my first Chef would have made me do back when I was 15. You're certainly earning your stripes with these techniques and videos, if in some ways hazing yourself. Hilarious video, and well done.

  • @demonalivefornow9680
    @demonalivefornow9680 2 года назад +54

    I passed on this video a few times, always intrigued but never clicked on. Now for the last few days all I'll been doing is binge watching your channel. These recipes make me want to eat better and I want to get the cookbook for myself. You deserve many more subscribers!

    • @HumanimalChannel
      @HumanimalChannel 2 года назад

      Have you cooked anything yet?
      Maybe save your leftovers from during the week and make a version of this Casoulet. I think each person's Casoulet would be such an interesting tour of life and culture.

  • @rspranchinmontana
    @rspranchinmontana 2 года назад +37

    YOU are a very brave cook to dive right into this recipe, deal with pig skin and nipples and all the special requirements this recipe brings to the table. I have so appreciated your diligence and humor. Just a great video friend, truly!

    • @lolilollolilol7773
      @lolilollolilol7773 2 года назад +1

      The only problem is, he doesn't understand what he's doing.

  • @virnataijeronyager7741
    @virnataijeronyager7741 2 года назад +61

    Even though these videos have comical moments, I have to say the nipple part had me LMAO. whilst this looked delicious, I’m absolutely not ever making this. Far FAR too much effort and time consuming for me. Thank you for taking one for the team! Cudos to you for all your effort. It looked delicious. 😊 Love your vlogs!

    • @antichef
      @antichef  2 года назад +3

      Thank U, Virna! 🙌🏼🙌🏼

  • @bigglesharrumpher4139
    @bigglesharrumpher4139 Год назад +8

    Not many people understand that the recipe should call for the use of Tarbais broad beans which are only grown in those cassoulet regions. It has the extra property of absorbing large amounts of liquid without disintegrating - so you can reduce, reduce, absorb, absorb like a risotto - but with beans. To this end, they also recommend breaking the crust multiple times during cooking and adding more stock each time. THAT my friend, is the real secret.

  • @nmal8702
    @nmal8702 2 года назад +19

    This randomly popped in my recommendations and I probably never laughed so much from watching a cooking video! The pig skin part had me in stitches 😂

  • @PullingRugs
    @PullingRugs Год назад +48

    You're slowly selling me on a cookbook that I will likely never use LMAO. I love this series

  • @nemwa
    @nemwa 2 года назад +69

    The boil and rinse in cold, then boil again is to do with if you are using salt pork rind like she said is an option at the start. You need to do that twice to remove excess salt other wise its too salty for the dish. It also helps with getting rid of potential hairs missed in the butchering process, although you're pretty unlikely to notice that in the final dish. The cold water rinses are to stop it from still cooking after you've taken it out. If you're using fresh rind that hasn't been salted or preserved you don't really need to do the second boil

    • @astaiannymph
      @astaiannymph Год назад +8

      This whole video has so many things like that: when you know your way around the kitchen, this all becomes so much simpler, even if you don't know all the ingredients and techniques specifically.

    • @quickchris10
      @quickchris10 Год назад +2

      Yeah, she rinsed all the vinegar off her sauerkraut, too. I've done her braised sauerkraut ever since, but now tend to be less vigilant about timing triple rinsing to get all the sour off the sauerkraut. But it is really good after braising; very herby, savory. After you rinse it, you simmer it with herbs in chicken stock.

  • @janetp5956
    @janetp5956 11 месяцев назад

    Absolutely hysterical to watch you attempt this insane recipe. You deserve an A+++. Thanks for taking one for the team as I will surely never make this!!!

  • @sebastianguerra6358
    @sebastianguerra6358 2 года назад +175

    You separating the pork skin cracked me up. In my country we add pork skin in little cubes to our menestra (bean stew) and they are really great.

    • @alejandrodeschamps131
      @alejandrodeschamps131 Год назад +19

      Same and the fact that he removed the porc fat from the meat and then bought porc fat to use in the pan got me LOL

    • @Klm49
      @Klm49 Год назад +10

      Exactly! The pork skin dissolves when cooked leaving only delicious flavor!!

  • @rank1839
    @rank1839 2 года назад +23

    Man, you have my respect. Mastering the Art of French Cooking is complicated, even for experienced cooks. What I like most about your videos, other than they’re entertaining, is it show me where Julia’s recipes can be confusing and go off the rails. It’s like your giving us a trial run without attempting them for ourselves. Thanks and I wish you well.

  • @wiggy5492
    @wiggy5492 2 года назад +21

    You really did a great job with this. I also like the "humanity" you put into this type of cooking. This is very entertaining and relatable.

  • @d0dgecity
    @d0dgecity Год назад +2

    I've never watched any cooking anything on RUclips but this is a really good show, man. I really enjoyed this. I don't cook and don't really care about food that much and still had a great time watching. Only halfway through but wanted to leave this comment. Can't wait to see it at the end!