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usonian

(13,836 posts)
Mon Sep 16, 2024, 07:31 PM Sep 16

Julia Child's Kitchens

The French Chef’s focus on function over style in the kitchen boosted the accessibility movement that became known as Universal Design.

https://placesjournal.org/article/julia-childs-kitchens

THE FRENCH SAMURAI CHEF



A pretty amazing article about her, husband Paul, and kitchens --- with photos and drawings.

While I love this stuff (Mom, the Italian Chef, taught me to cook ) I am in the "cook for one" situation that Koz posted about.
https://democraticunderground.com/1157143499
and the nice gear is overkill. But sometimes, a nice Staub pan brightens up the daily fare.

The publicity photo of Julia Child making Poulet Sauté Marengo captures everything that made her a runaway star. She seems at once powerful and naughty, a woman who always shares in the joke. She wields the sword and holds the chicken firmly, with strong arms and a conspiratorial smile.

Child’s presence is so dominant, it is hard to look beyond her. But once we do, details of the set come into focus. At the counter, an array of ingredients and saucepans stand at the ready. On a tiled back wall, we see two waist-high ovens and some of her famed batterie de cuisine. A painting by her husband, Paul, hangs above a vase of flowers.

The kitchen was Julia Child’s workplace. It was also a stage, where her show, The French Chef, was recorded. A weekly half-hour program, piloted in 1962 on Boston’s WGBH-TV and then eagerly picked up by an expanding pool of affiliates, the show was the first bona fide hit for the nascent National Education Television network. By 1966, it was being broadcast in 106 cities across the United States. Its star, unknown at the start of the decade, appeared on the cover of Time and received an Emmy. In 1973, The French Chef ended with over 200 programs under its apron.

...

Yet there is another story to tell about Child’s influence on design, one less about the products she made desirable and more about how her ethos shaped the environments in which she worked. Her kitchens were distinctive but not glamorous or miraculous. Reflecting principles and skills Julia and Paul Child had developed in earlier careers, these were highly rational spaces, rigorously designed by the couple to support the varied activities and lives that played out there. Style was subservient to flexible functionality. It was this quality that would be picked up, starting in the late 1970s, by a group of designers who put forward a design philosophy emphasising user-centeredness and accessibility.


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elleng

(136,071 posts)
2. Thanks, love seeing her (in any circumstance.)
Mon Sep 16, 2024, 08:07 PM
Sep 16

My kitchen's OLD, but likely not situated well enough for me to do anything useful with it; neither am I!!! SO, I'll just read (and dream.)

slightlv

(4,332 posts)
3. Egads, user-centeredness and accessibility!
Mon Sep 16, 2024, 09:06 PM
Sep 16

The VERY two things my kitchen doesn't lend itself to providing. (sigh)... I have a small rollaround island to do most of food preparation. And spices on racks and on the side of my frig. If ever I would be rich enough to design a house, the kitchen, the bathroom, and my bedroom would be the most important rooms to design!

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