Simone "Simca" Beck is known to millions of Americans as Julia Child's French partner in the creation of the two classic volumes of Mastering the Art of French Cooking. Simca's Cuisine offers up her own delectable recipes - the ones she most treasured form a lifetime of cooking creativity that made her one of the great cuisinières of her day. Here are recipes that were inspired by old French family specialties found in her mother's and grandmother's well-thumbed notebooks; recipes that grew out of Simca's life in the provinces (particularly Normandy, Alsace, and Provence), where she gardened, cooked, dined out, and entertained - simple delights and fabulous concoctions all set down with a beautiful clarity. Skillfully adapting French ways to American needs, Simca's Cuisine presents over one hundred recipes in thirty-one alluring menus designed for every sort of occasion, from the informal "earthy dinner for high-spirited friends" - centered around a cassoulet with duck and hot sausages - to the ornate "spectacular dinner with champagne" that begins with salmon or striped bass in brioche. (6 X 9, 368 pages, illustrations)
Simone "Simca" Beck was a French cookbook author and cooking teacher who, along with colleagues Julia Child and Louisette Bertholle, played a significant role in the introduction of French cooking technique and recipes into American kitchens.
This is one of those delightful hardcover cookbooks you'd find in a used book shop; yellowed pages, thick and rough to the touch, the hardcover wallpapered with a simple red and black flower print, a substantial weight to the text. What caught my attention was the acknowledgements, noting Julia Child's partnership with the author for 23 years. Simca (a nickname for Simone Beck) co-wrote the two masterful texts of French cooking (Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Volumes I & II) with Julia Child, who is enjoying a resurgence in popularity thanks to Julie and Julia.
This cookbook was a delightful diversion - I love reading old cookbooks (on a full stomach, as a rule), and Simca's Cuisine is full of the kinds of recipes that you just don't encounter anymore: organized within menus for multiple course meals, labeled by their French titles (un menu de panache au champagne - a spectacular dinner with champagne; un menu somptueux pour recevoir Mr. Knopf - a dinner grand and sumptuous), always including a cheese course and massive dessert, portions enough to feed a dinner party, without serving sizes or calorie and fat breakdowns. Includes charming illustrations throughout, as well as sections that tell you how to cook basics (how to boil eggs, make croutons) in a completely non-basic way (yes, there is more than a page devoted to how to perfectly boil an egg).
I love visiting the past, as preserved in cookbooks. There's something so immediate about the distilled "slice of life" that you get from a cookbook that is watered down in novels set in the same time and place. Beck has charming descriptions that accompany her menus, where she talks about scallops having a "distinctive lusty taste of the sea" or reminds the American reader/cook that the differences in fats between American and French ducks are tremendous. This was a charming and, yes, tasty read... next time you're in a used book shop, check out the cooking section - I think you will find something like this to tickle your fancy.