
Clementine in the Kitchen
David R. Godine Publisher Inc
Will be published approx. on 13. March 2014
Book
Paperback/Softback
256 pages
978-1-56792-646-0 (ISBN)
Description
"French cooking for Americans was never the same after Clementine came into our kitchens . . . This tale of a cook taught us that we, too, could turn out a splendid home-style French meal in our very own American kitchens."-Julia Child
When Clementine in the Kitchen first appeared in 1943, it immediately captivated American readers, and a new edition, revised by Narcisse Chamberlain, taught a generation of cooks that French family cooking could easily flourish in their own kitchens. Written by the artist Samuel Chamberlain under the pen name Phineas Beck, it recounts the gastronomic adventures of the Beck/Chamberlain family during the decade that their beguiling Burgundian cook Clementine produced wonderful French meals for them, both in France and in their New England home in Marblehead.
This edition includes a delicious collection of more than 170 traditional recipes-classic dishes, regional specialties, and much that is useful for special occasions: filets de sole au vin blanc, boeuf a la mode, endives braisees. But the most compelling are plain and old-fashioned. These are the dishes that identify the Clementine family style, a style so French, so civilized, so knowing in its use of ingredients that it cannot become impractical or ever go out of date.
When Clementine in the Kitchen first appeared in 1943, it immediately captivated American readers, and a new edition, revised by Narcisse Chamberlain, taught a generation of cooks that French family cooking could easily flourish in their own kitchens. Written by the artist Samuel Chamberlain under the pen name Phineas Beck, it recounts the gastronomic adventures of the Beck/Chamberlain family during the decade that their beguiling Burgundian cook Clementine produced wonderful French meals for them, both in France and in their New England home in Marblehead.
This edition includes a delicious collection of more than 170 traditional recipes-classic dishes, regional specialties, and much that is useful for special occasions: filets de sole au vin blanc, boeuf a la mode, endives braisees. But the most compelling are plain and old-fashioned. These are the dishes that identify the Clementine family style, a style so French, so civilized, so knowing in its use of ingredients that it cannot become impractical or ever go out of date.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Lincoln
United States
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Illustrations
Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 233 mm
Width: 164 mm
Thickness: 25 mm
Weight
506 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-56792-646-0 (9781567926460)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Samuel Chamberlain was an impressively prolific writer and graphic artist, with some dozens of titles to his name. At Gourmet magazine, he wrote the Clementine column under the name Phineas Beck, a nom de plume he based on a French term for a gourmand, bec fin. Chamberlain attended the School of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and lived for many years in Marblehead, Massachusetts, where he did indeed introduce Clementine of the famous column to the not-so-glorious challenges of American canned goods and supermarket produce.
Narcisse Chamberlain was a highly respected cookbook editor and writer-including co-authoring books with her father, Samuel Chamberlain.
Narcisse Chamberlain was a highly respected cookbook editor and writer-including co-authoring books with her father, Samuel Chamberlain.