Dish by Dish with Julia Child

The cover of Warming Up Julia Child depicts the chef preparing a dish as another chef looks on.

Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz ’63

Warming Up Julia Child: The Remarkable Figures Who
Shaped a Legend

Pegasus Books
279 pages; $27.95

Warming Up Julia Child: The Remarkable Figures Who Shaped a Legend takes a refreshing approach to the woman who, dish by dish, became one of the most esteemed and industry-shaping home cooks in the American culinary canon. Focusing on the collaborators in Julia Child’s life, Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz ’63 delivers a welcome expansion of the beloved cookbook author and television chef’s legacy.

Horowitz’s work is well timed. Thirteen years after Julie & Julia (written and directed by Nora Ephron ’62) brought a modern vision of Child to our screens, we find ourselves in the midst of another Child revival. HBO Max’s Julia portrays Child as she finds her footing with The French Chef on Boston’s WGBH in the 1960s, and the Food Network’s The Julia Child Challenge brings home cooks head-to-head over French omelets and coq au vin in a studio replica of Child’s famous blue-green kitchen. What Horowitz brings to this upswing is thorough research that portrays Child as more than a lone woman who simply fell into success—she was someone who was nurtured by a network of capable supporters, and she nurtured them right back.

Julia Child fans are likely already familiar with her husband, Paul Cushing Child. A diplomat, Paul brought her to Paris, where she fell in love with the food that formed the basis for her Mastering the Art of French Cooking; his essential role in Julia’s life is a through line of Horowitz’s work. That partnership wasn’t the only influential one in Child’s life, and Horowitz sets the scope on five others: Simone “Simca” Beck, who shared generations’ worth of knowledge of French cuisine and co-wrote Mastering with her; editor Avis DeVoto, who opened the door into publishing; William Koshland, who added her cookbook to the list at publisher Alfred A. Knopf; Judith Jones, who edited her work at Knopf; and public television producer Ruth Lockwood, who supported Child’s career at WGBH.

By parsing letters and appointment-book notes, Horowitz gives us a sense of not only how each person perceived and interacted with Child, but also who each person was, in their own words. “The Wifelet has been sparkling w/ pride all afternoon,” her husband wrote after Child earned a compliment from chef Claude Thillmont for the birthday cake she’d made for Paul. From Avis DeVoto’s early correspondence with her, we discover a quick-witted woman with stylish prose—an obvious fit for Child’s clever humor. Beyond each person’s contributions to her career, Horowitz portrays these friends as interesting and highly accomplished individuals in their own right, who found a good match in Julia Child.

As Child recirculates in both biographical and fictionalized depictions, it’s fair to ask—as cultural critics are doing more and more—whether her single story needs the spotlight yet again, especially if its prominence in media coincides with continued exclusion of other industry-shakers in American cuisine. Horowitz, for her part, makes a compelling case that Child’s story deserves retelling, if we cast our gaze farther afield. Her story was always also the story of the people who meticulously worked with her, Horowitz asserts, and together they forever changed how we cook, share, and enjoy food in the United States. The agency and contributions of those collaborators deserve the limelight, as well.

Makalintal is a New York City-based food and culture writer, currently on staff at Eater.

You Might Like
  • A bowl of fried rice
    I’ve always been the type of person who eats while thinking about my next meal. It’s an excitement about eating that could be called a preoccupation, but in these not-so-normal times, that mindset feels like a gift.More
  • Hands hold a bunch of fresh okra
    We all have foods—whether sweet or savory, spicy or mild—that are the culinary equivalent of a warm hug. The recipes here come from five alums who return to these foods over and over, at the request of family and friends, or just to please themselves.More
  • A headshot photo of Alice Sun '15
    Like many people, Alice Sun ’15 got on TikTok as a pandemic thing. After moving back into her parents’ home in March 2020, she found herself making meals for her family. “I’m cooking so much—I might as well share it,” Alice recalls thinking.More

Post a CommentView Full Policy

We ask that those who engage in Wellesley magazine's online community act with honesty, integrity, and respect. (Remember the honor code, alums?) We reserve the right to remove comments by impersonators or comments that are not civil and relevant to the subject at hand. By posting here, you are permitting Wellesley magazine to edit and republish your comment in all media. Please remember that all posts are public.

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether or not you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.