MS. EPHRONâS RECIPE
JOHN HORN AND NEW YORK â âI donât understand this,â Nora Ephron said, shaking her head. âWhy isnât it done yet?â
The writer-director of the foodie movie âJulie & Julia,â opening Aug. 7, is as comfortable wielding a paring knife as she is aiming a movie camera; Ephron has self-published for herself and friends a spiral-bound booklet of scores of favorite recipes. On this day, though, she canât figure out why her apple tart wonât cook.
The dessert has been in the oven of her Upper Eastside apartment for more than an hour, twice the time recommended in Julia Childâs âMastering the Art of French Cooking: Volume One,â from which the recipe (and a good chunk of Ephronâs new movie) comes. She isnât panicking, even though a recent shared afternoon of cooking a Child recipe with the filmmaker started problematically, as she nearly set fire to a store-bought cabbage strudel warming in her toaster oven.
Cooking, like filmmaking, canât always be governed by inflexible rules and timing; there has to be some serendipity too. âJulie & Juliaâ is a movie about two chefs, but their parallel stories are intended to dramatize a bigger idea -- that determination, creativity and passion can change a life. Those same attributes can produce memorable dishes in the kitchen too, as the apple tart may prove -- if it ever finishes baking.
Considering that some of Childâs recipes are as intricate as a Tolstoy novel, the pioneering chef/authorâs instructions for Tarte aux Pommes are remarkably simple. The apples -- about four pounds peeled, cored and sliced âcrisp cooking or eating applesâ -- are tossed with a teaspoon of lemon juice and two tablespoons of sugar before they top the tart. But Child calls for a homemade pastry shell, made-from-scratch applesauce and an apricot glaze that must be heated exactly between 225 and 228 degrees to achieve the right consistency. This much is clear: If we donât take some shortcuts, the apple tart wonât go in the oven until very late in the evening.
Julie Powellâs 2005 book âJulie & Julia: My Year of Cooking Dangerouslyâ and Childâs 2006 autobiography âMy Life in Franceâ have at their centers the kind of unusual romances that the 68-year-old Ephron has been drawn to throughout her film career, a slate that includes writing credits on âHeartburnâ and âWhen Harry Met Sally. . .â and directing and writing credits on âSleepless in Seattle,â âYouâve Got Mailâ and âMichael.â
Powell, a failed actress and discontented Manhattan secretary, felt unaccomplished and unfulfilled. As a personal challenge as she neared 30, she decided to cook all 524 of Childâs âMastering the Art of French Cookingâ recipes in a year, constantly blogging to a growing fan base about the experience.
While her expedition presented perilous challenges -- setting aspics, euthanizing lobsters, boning a duck -- her culinary circumnavigation also brought new focus and satisfaction to her personal life: She not only became an author but also rediscovered friendship and love. Powell condensed some of her hundreds of blog posts and added biographical material for the book version of her online diary (but was not directly involved in making the movie).
Childâs autobiography traced a similar narrative of discovery and transformation. A child of privilege who didnât aspire to become a stay-at-home society wife, the Pasadena native experienced an epiphany when in 1948 she visited France with her diplomat husband -- and bit into an incomparably delicious sole meuniere.
A stranger to both the country (she didnât speak French) and cooking (she didnât know what a shallot was), Child was transformed by that piece of fish and committed herself to learn how to cook and, subsequently, craft her own cookbook. It wasnât easy. Parisâ Le Cordon Bleu cooking school didnât welcome the enthusiastic American with open arms, and it took years of recipe research and publisher rejections before Child and coauthors Louisette Bertholle and Simone Beck completed their cookbook.
Published in 1961, âMastering the Art of French Cookingâ helped set off a revolution in American kitchens. Where women had hustled out tuna noodle casseroles, they began slaving over blanquette de veau a lâancienne.
Yet what really drew Ephron to a story that cuts between the womenâs lives were their surprisingly different yet believable marriages. Ephronâs best-received movies -- âSleepless in Seattle,â âWhen Harry Met Sally. . .â -- have relatable love stories at their core. When Ephron struggles (âBewitched,â âMixed Nutsâ) the romance seems saccharine, uninvolving: too-sweet desserts that are harder to digest.
Julia (Meryl Streep) and Paul Childâs (Stanley Tucci) postwar romance was a red-hot affair filled with afternoon delights, whereas Julie (Amy Adams) and Eric Powellâs (Chris Messina) modern relationship was more focused on careers than copulating. âI may NEVER want to have sex AGAIN,â a frustrated Powell writes in her book.
âYoung people today really have no idea that people ever had sex before they were born except once or twice in order to have kids,â the wiry Ephron said as she cut apples into incredibly even slices. âThese two people,â she said of Julia and Paul Child, âand you would never have guessed to look at them, had had this wild, fantastic sexual connection. And then there was the story of this married couple living in New York right now who absolutely never got laid -- ever.â
Rather than cite significant books or movies about food as her âJulie & Juliaâ references, Ephron instead pointed to films about marriage: âThe Thin Man,â âThe War of the Roses,â âThe Palm Beach Story.â But considering her adoring close-ups of fish, duck and even an Everest of chopped onions, Ephron isnât afraid to elevate food to the same plane as romance.
âThe truth is that most marriages have food as a major player in them, and certainly mine does,â said Ephron, who is married to author and screenwriter Nick Pileggi (âGoodfellas,â âCasinoâ) and wrote about her earlier marriage to journalist Carl Bernstein in the caustic roman a clef âHeartburn,â a novel that included recipes. Ephronâs best-selling 2006 memoir, âI Feel Bad About My Neck: And Other Thoughts on Being a Woman,ââHeartburn,â shares an almost equal fascination with gastronomy.
Yet even the most experienced cook can turn out a strawberry souffle resembling a red Frisbee. On her groundbreaking, low-tech public television show âThe French Chef,â Child occasionally launched food onto the floor, and Powellâs debacles included greasy mayonnaise, carbonized boeuf bourguignon and inedible poulet en gelee a lâEstragon. Given the risks, would the apple tart turn out as memorably as âSleepless in Seattle?â Or would it unfold more like Ephronâs last film, 2005âs âBewitched,â a TV show adaptation many critics found about as agreeable as cold leftovers?
Child discourages store-bought ingredients; her cassoulet recipe calls for homemade sausage cakes. Powell, who found some of these recipes either inexact or overly complicated, sometimes departed from and criticized Childâs thoroughly tested recipes. That irritated Child, who dismissed Powellâs blog as not worth her attention.
Ephron had no qualms about not following the tart recipe to the letter. She proposed using Pillsbury refrigerated pie crust, but a reporter insisted on making the pastry dough from scratch -- but not using Childâs recipe, and substituting a food processor for fingertips to mix it. Because Child crafted her book before the advent of molecular gastronomy, she couldnât have known that blending vodka and water for the crust yields a moister, more manageable dough. Ephron was skeptical and wondered how she had become a sous chef to her visitor. âI think itâs fascinating that we have to cook something from Julia Child, but you are now completely improvising,â she said. âSo if it doesnât work out, you canât blame me or Julia.â
Ephron grew up in Beverly Hills with plentiful good food around -- her screenwriter parents had live-in cooks -- and graduated from Wesleyan just as the first volume of âMastering the Art of French Cookingâ was published. Like many women her age, Ephronâs eyes -- and taste buds -- were opened by the cookbook, along with âMichael Fieldâs Cooking Schoolâ and Craig Claiborneâs âThe New York Times Cookbook.â
âEverybody in America was waking up from a long slumber with Campbellâs cream of mushroom soup,â Ephron said in her slightly narrow but well-equipped galley kitchen, which includes a Viking range but also an eclectic assortment of cookbooks -- âGreat Dinners From Lifeâ and âThe Silver Palate Cookbookâ among them.
Like Childâs typewritten recipes (marked âtop secretâ) that are reprinted in âMy Life in France,â Ephronâs cookbooks are stained with bits of food and sauce -- they are there for cooking, not decoration. âI still cook all the time,â she said, adding that her version of Chasenâs chili is among her favorite dishes.
âEvery woman I knew was doing this insane amount of cooking,â Ephron said of her postgraduate food fixation. âIt was obsessive. It was competitive. It was pathological.â
Sony studio chief Amy Pascal pitched Ephron on âJulie & Juliaâ while the director was filming âBewitchedâ; producer Amy Robinson thought of combining the books into one movie.
âI felt my entire life had prepared me to write this screenplay -- my obsession with food,â Ephron said.
Outside of having just one week to shoot in Paris, Ephron said that one of her hardest challenges was creating tension within Powellâs narrative; she eventually added a scene where, over a lunch with girlfriends, the bloggerâs occupational shortcomings are more palpable.
She cast Streep after a chance encounter -- in which the actress effortlessly slipped into Childâs distinctive patois -- and then devised all sorts of schemes to make the 5-foot-6 actress look like she was Childâs ceiling-scraping 6-2 self. Ephronâs costume department built lift shoes, her carpentry staff built sets with two levels and her casting director hired short extras to fill the background. âWe did every trick in the book,â Ephron said, âbut we never used special effects. It was as if we did it 20 years ago.â
Childâs apple tart recipe says the pastry shell should be âpartially cookedâ before it is topped with applesauce, apple slices and strained apricot preserves, but gives no time. âWhat does that mean -- âpartially cookedâ?â Ephron said. âHow long is that?â About 15 minutes, it turned out. Ephron then spread about two cups of artisanal applesauce (from neighborhood gourmet market Eli Zabar) and then began arranging her apple slices.
âHow gorgeous or un-gorgeous should we make it?â she asked. Told pretty is always best, Ephron then struggled with the irregular geometry of the hand-formed pastry. âNow which direction do they go?â she asked, examining the apple slices. âThis is a nightmare, a total nightmare.â It wasnât, really: The tart looked lovely, especially with the strained (but not heated to 227 degrees) apricot glaze drizzled on top. Because her massive Viking range heats the already hot kitchen, Ephron put the tart into her built-in Thermador, preheated to 375 degrees. Then the âWaiting for Godotâ vigil began, as we waited to see when (if ever) the tart would be done. âIs it your oven?â her visitor asked after more than an hour with no visible browning. âIs it my oven?â Ephron said, indignant. âNo. It is not my oven.â
As much as âJulie & Juliaâ celebrates food, as much as cookbooks stuff wings of bookstores, as much as food shows pack the airwaves, as much as almost every home remodel features a new kitchen, Ephron isnât sure the culinary craze adds up to anything more than a passing hobby. Like SUV owners whose mammoth vehicles never leave the pavement, the cooking craze seems to be more about hardware than food. âNo one seems to cook anymore,â she said.
But for those who wait -- or cut a few corners -- the results can be sublime. After nearly 90 minutes in the oven (which was finally turned up to 425), the tart finally came out.
âThatâs really pretty, donât you think?â Ephron said. Biting into a nearly molten slice, she smiled. âI think,â she said, âthat this is delicious.â
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