Essential Techniques and Recipes From a Lifetime of Cooking
Mem. Ed. $7.99
Pub. Ed. $26.95
You pay $0.20
From the chapter Soups and Two Mother Sauces
"Once you have mastered a technique, you hardly need look at a recipe again."
Homemade soups fill the kitchen with a welcome air, and can be so full and natural and fresh that they solve that always nagging question of "what to serve as a first course."
***
CHOWDERS
Traditional chowders all start off with a hearty soup base of onions and potatoes, and that makes a good soup just by itself. To this fragrant base you then add chunks of fish, or clams, or corn, or whatever else seems appropriate. (Note: You may leave out the pork and substitute another tablespoon of butter for sautéing the onions.)
The Chowder Soup Base
For about 2 quarts, to make a 2½-quart chowder serving 6 to 8
4 ounces (2/3 cup) diced blanched salt pork or bacon (see box, page 60)
1 Tbs butter
3 cups (1 pound) sliced onions
1 imported bay leaf
¾ cup crumbled "common" or pilot crackers, or 1 pressed-down cup fresh white bread crumbs (see box, page 46)
6 cups liquid (milk, chicken stock [page 4], fish stock [page 5], clam juices, or
a combination)
3½ cups (1 pound) peeled and sliced or diced boiling potatoes
Salt and freshly ground white pepper
Sauté the pork or bacon bits slowly with the butter in a large saucepan for 5 minutes, or until pieces begin to brown. Stir in the onions and bay leaf; cover, and cook slowly 8 to 10 minutes, until the onions are tender. Drain off fat and blend crackers or bread crumbs into onions. Pour in the liquid; add the potatoes and simmer, loosely covered, for 20 minutes or so, until the potatoes are tender. Season to taste with salt and white pepper, and the soup base is ready.
chowder suggestions
new england clam chowder.--For about 2½ quarts, serving 6 to 8. Scrub and soak 24 medium-size hard-shell clams (see box). Steam them for 3 to 4 minutes in a large tightly covered saucepan with 1 cup water, until most have opened. Remove the opened clams; cover, and steam the rest another minute or so. Discard any unopened clams. Pluck meat from the shells, then decant steaming-liquid very carefully, so all sand remains in the saucepan; include the clam-steaming liquid as part of the chowder base. Meanwhile, mince the clam meats in a food processor or chop by hand. Fold them into the finished chowder base. Just before serving, heat to below the simmer--so the clams won't overcook and toughen. Fold in a little heavy cream or sour cream if you wish; thin with milk if necessary, correct seasoning, and serve.
Excerpted from Julia's Kitchen Wisdom by Julia Child Copyright © 2000 by Julia Child. Excerpted by permission of Knopf, a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Can’t you just hear Julia Child’s inimitable voice describing Julia’s Kitchen Wisdom as a “mini aide-memoire for general home cookery.” In her no-nonsense way, she reduces 40 years of cooking experience into a concise, user-friendly problem solver that will save many a meal or utensil from disaster. Did Julia use canned broth…oh, yes she did! Did she know how to clean a burn-blackened pan? Sans doute! Julia always said, “once you have mastered a technique, you hardly need to look at a recipe again,” but just in case, here are her recipes from a lifetime of learning and cooking, updated from the earlier volumes to take advantage of time-saving equipment and more readily available products. Sepia photos.
Hardcover : 144 pages
Publisher: Random House Inc. ( January 01, 2000 )
Item #: 13-182457
ISBN: 9780375411519
Product Dimensions: 6.875 x 8.375 inches
Product Weight: 14.0 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

I am a seasoned cook (pun intended) and I found this little nugget to be a helpful quick reference book. Sometimes one dosen't want to slog through a large cookbook for a quick sauce or side. This book condenses nicely those regularly used recipes that you just need a quick reminder of temp., quantities, etc. I would reccomend this to everyone.
Reviewer: Todd S
Very disappointed; I have almost all of her books so this was a come-down. This would be a good book for someone who hasn't been cooking with her for years.
Reviewer: Joyce J
really; that wouldn't be any fun though! But when I went for the weekend to the cookbook empty house of my mother in law to help while she was recuperating from surgery, this was the book I took. The roast turned out great and I knew I could prepare something with whatever ingredients she had on hand using the formulas included covering every course of a meal you could possibly want. All in a thin 135 page volume! Really, there is everything you need if you don't know how to cook, and all you'd want if you do. Great little book.
Reviewer: Judy G
Reviewer: Judy G
The card security code is an added safeguard for your credit/debit card purchases. Depending on the type of card you use, it is either a three- or four-digit number printed on the back or front of your credit/debit card, separate from your credit/debit card number. To make shopping at Doubleday Book Club® even more secure, we require that you enter this number each time you make a credit/debit card purchase. Please note that your security code will not be stored with us even if you have saved your credit/debit card information.