Product Details
Clementine in the Kitchen

Clementine in the Kitchen
By Samuel Chamberlain

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Product Description

The Chamberlain family spent a dozen blissful years in pre World War II France, with their beloved cook, Clementine, learning the gustatory pleasures of snail hunting in their backyard and bottling their own wine. When war rumblings sent them scurrying Stateside, Clementine refused to be left behind and made a new home for herself in Marblehead, Massachusetts, where she introduced the initially suspicious Yankees to the pleasures of la cuisine de bonne femme. First published in 1943, Clementine in the Kitchen is a charming portrait of a family of gastronomic adventurers, and a mouth-watering collection of more than 170 traditional French recipes. This Modern Library Food series edition includes a new Introduction by Jeffrey Steingarten, food critic for Vogue and author of The Man Who Ate Everything, winner of the Julia Child Book Award.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #398591 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-02-20
  • Released on: 2001-02-20
  • Original language: English
  • Dimensions: 7.40" h x 1.15" w x 4.90" l, 1.05 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Amazon.com
For more than a dozen years before World War II, the Chamberlain family lived and learned to eat in the tiny cathedral town of Senlis, France. Their Burgundian cook, Clémentine, presided over their kitchen in France, and later in Marblehead, Massachusetts. The alert, good-natured cuisinère is the heroine of Clémentine in the Kitchen, first published in 1943 and happily reissued in the Modern Library Food series. The book is a gem: part gastronomic diary and part cookbook (over 170 recipes are included), it also evokes, perhaps most interestingly, Clémentine's affect on a small town in pre-"gourmet" America, and its influence on her.

From the moment of Clémentine's Senlis arrival with her eloquent notebooks (containing lists of superb everyday dishes such as omelette aux fines herbs and blanquette de veau), to her preparation of extraordinary family meals, to her struggle and then triumph with American ingredients and kitchen ways, the book details the deeply shared gastronomic life led by the tiny, resourceful cook. It's a life defined by dishes, and the book includes recipes for many of Clémentine's best, including Coquilles St. Jacques au Gratin (gratinéed scallops), Escargots de Bourgogne (snails in garlic butter), Poisson à la Niçoise (fish baked with tomatoes and olive oil), and Crème Renversée (caramel custard). The recipes have been adapted for modern use by Narcisse Chamberlain, the author's daughter. Illustrated with dry points, etchings, and drawings, readers will delight in this wry yet charming tale and enjoy poring over the authentic mid-20th-century French recipes. --Arthur Boehm

From Library Journal
This is the first volume in the Modern Library's new "Food" series. More than simply cookbooks, the volumes offer some cultural information and illustrations along with the recipes. Other books in the line are Edouard de Pomaine's Cooking with Pomaine (ISBN 0-375-75713-9), Henri Charpentier's Life ? la Henri (ISBN 0-375-75692-2), and Laura Shapiro's Perfection Salad (ISBN 0-375-75665-5).
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Samuel Chamberlain's (Phineas Beck's pseudonym) Clementine in the Kitchen helped introduce Americans to the kitchen practices of their French cook in Massachusetts during the forties. The first famous French chef to ply his trade successfully in the U.S, Henri Charpentier, gave the world such renowned dishes as Crepes Suzettes. He recalls his upbringing and eventual culinary stardom in Life a la Henri . Mark Knoblauch
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