I think Julia wrote the recipe expecting her audience to just have leftover cooked lamb, leftover brown sauce, and leftover tomato sauce. So, yeah, if all you have to go buy is eggplant, it’s a simple-ish recipe. But totally not simple if you have to make the sauces, too!
and that still is simplicity only if you made all those things over the week and had any leftovers to speak of (certainly not at my house, leftovers are breakfast the next day)
I just watched his first aspic video, where he licked raw chicken liver juice off the plastic and burned himself twice on boiling water. He's come such a long way.
Yesterday, I met a lady who told me she has hundreds of cook books and loves to cook. Trying to make conversation, I suggested cooking videos on TH-cam. I said "I have been watching this guy cook Julia Child's recipes" and the lady, to my astonishment, said she had all of Julia Child's cookbooks and cooked them all the time. I am sending your channel to this lady.
When I saw "Julia Child's worst recipe" I immediately assumed this would be about the aspic. Since I can't imagine that ever being redeemed (the mistake is the recipe, not the chef!) I'm quite glad it was the moussaka instead!
That aspic is gastric nightmare fuel. I simply fail to understand every aspect of that recipe, including what could possibly possess someone to shove it into their gob. Not a chance!!
Julia Child's old school recipes are a glimpse into to another time. What recipes as hers fail to mention is one key ingredient: A full time middle class housewife raised with the expectation that she is supposed to make fancy food happen.
The other missing key ingredient is a culture with aspirational attitudes. In that worldview there are upper class pursuits that have high value (like classical music, french haute cuisine, proper manners) and all people should try to know them to elevate themselves. Our culture is more nihilistic believing things like there is no hierarchy between music genres or food traditions, do what you want etc.
Actually, Julia came from a very wealthy family and her parents were mystified and horrified that she was learning how to cook. Her father was so upset that his daughter was forced to be in the kitchen that he sent her extra money to hire herself a cook. Julia was never expected to make fancy food happen -- she was supposed to have staff to do that. The fact that Julia threw herself into learning how to cook shows her immense curiosity and intellectualism, her desire to learn and achieve, and an enthusiastic willingness to roll up her sleeves and get stuck in.
This comment. I’ve worked full time my entire adult life and love to throw down a fantastic meal for my family. Cooking is therapeutic and a joy for most cooks. If you see it as work then I guess you’d feel this way. Idk. 🤦🏻♀️
I've eaten really good Moussakas, for example in Greece and it's supposed to be a homey, simple dish. I respect Julia, but I think she overcomlicated this one a bit.
no I make Moussaka and it is HARD WORK !!! It takes forever to make and I feel like I need to lie down for 2 days after I make it. I think it is a dish leftover from the days when it was normal to have 4-5 women living in the house and they all spent all day in the kitchen cooking. Moussaka is fabulously delicious though.
Yes, it is a lot of work. Delicious but a lot of work. As questioned in the video, is it worth the effort? Once you realize that Moussaka is a fancy Shepherd's/Cottage Pie or Tourte Au Chou then you either divert or press on to honor Grecian gastronomy for whatever personal motives.
@@kirbyculp3449 moussaka is WAAAAY better than Shepherd's/Cottage Pie. it is not the same category at all. Shepherd's/Cottage Pie is ok. Moussaka is delicious.
I love the old moussaka video so much because when I was 11, my mom had just had my little sister and I volunteered to cook dinner for everyone, her choice. She picked moussaka, and I made the whole thing from scratch (not a Julia Child recipe, but similar). We sat down to a very late dinner, and my mom's first comment was "I never expected a packet mix to taste so good." I did not know we had a packet mix (it's probably why mum suggested it, to be fair to her), and had I used one it wouldn't have taken me two hours to clean up after myself. Like you, Jamie, I got way better at cooking after that and have been known to enjoy making moussaka, but for me it took decades!
she made it so complicated for absolutely no reason... I think it takes me like 1 hour prep time, depending on how quick I move and then cook time is also an hour-ish. But you did amazing trying to do exactly what it says and you've improved so so much!
most of julia's recipes are complicated for no reason because she's taking old recipes and trying to bring them to her audience. Recipes and cooking used to be VERY different than they are today. There's a lot of "old wisdom" that doesn't make much sense in her recipes.
I think a lot of her recipes are for dinner parties. Back in the 50s and 60s adults did do adult only things. My relatives did fabulous Mad Men style dinner parties, where there was not a crumb cruncher to see seen. My mom baby sat the kids. Her moussaka looks delicate and easy to eat. My relatives hated sliced potatoes in casseroles, so this would be up their alley. They said potatoes were cheap filler. God love French Canadians lol. If you watch her early shows, the tables are set for dining, and I assume adults only dining. She’s not whipping most of her recipes together for a family of 5.
considering she describes the cooked lamb as leftovers, I'm guessing she's intending you to make this when you happen to already have most of this leftover, perhaps at the end of several days of entertaining multiple guests. Different era
Bob Ross once said talent is pursued interest. Its so interesting seeing you improve your skills, practicing techniques, Seeing you cook with confidence is so satisfying. Real talent. Ive been a subscriber for a couple months, but I kinda binged your episodes 😂 and it's getting better and better and better. Thanks Jamie!
I'd love to know: 1) total elasped cooking time 2) total number of cooking vessels used 3) total cleaning time and I know this probably isn't possible, 4) energy usage. Julia's recipes are intense.
I've made moussaka a few times. I don't know what Julia Child was trying to accomplish with that, but I've never made or had moussaka that was anything like that. Looks fantastic this time, but the normal version is much easier and probably tastier.
I think a lot of big french chefs dont appreciate the delicacy of the taste of fresh ingredients sometimes. Only in french cuisine do i keep seeing recipes that just keep adding and adding and adding........
This might seem a little dramatic but as a person who grew up around chefs in a family of food lovers, I think it's an absolute privilege to witness your food journey! It's so fun to see you go from following recipes to an absolute T to going with your gut - even if it fails sometimes. An Anti-chef day is always a good day! :)
I LOVE this idea of revisiting your old fails! You've grown so much as a chef! 👏👏 We have some eggplant allergies in the fam so I'll probably never try it, but it reminds me of a big stuffed pepper.
Having had moussaka a few times from Greek restaurants (which was very tasty) Julia’s recipe seems so overly complicated with results not worth the effort! I am a huge fan of Julia’s, but not that recipe. But you mastered it! ✅
Awesome to see your improvement over the years. Also the eggplant skins in the Charlotte mold reminds me of the facehugger eggs from "Aliens" and I can't unsee it.
My nana taught me that with cooking/baking back in the day, you were expected to read the whole book front to back and then begin with the first recipe. The books she was referring to also taught things like proper measuring techniques, terminology, different tools in the kitchen, safety, and so forth. I wonder if Julia's book was also made like this, or if it was expected that the reader already knew the basics.
This is one of those recipes that makes the kitchen look like a war zone. It looks very impressive when you put it in front of your guests. Definitely a redemption arc for this one. Thanks.
It's so amazing to see people redo older things and just be able to visualize how far you've come. As an artist, I appreciate this sort of thing greatly! I've been with you a while, and you've been amazing!
Really good job! For the record, I agree that this recipe is much more trouble than it needs to be. I once made Bobby Flay's chocolate cake with the goats milk, etc. and it took me ALL day. It was really good - it was chocolate cake after all - but it weighed about 15 lbs, cost a ton and I decided that if I ever did it again it would be done over two days! Live and learn.
The moussaka I know has bechamel sauce and potatoes, but it looks like solid comfort food, which always seems to involve a lot of work. I love eggplant, but I'm allergic to it, so I often substitute zucchini or yellow squash. It doesn't taste as good, but the texture is similar. Just cut the cooking time in half.
Jamie's style of editing is so organic, where funny creators use funny noises, visuals, or editing highjinks to enhance their humor, with Jamie it just feels like you're sitting at your friends kitchen counter occasionally setting timers and taste testing while he does his own silly thing
So proud of you, Jamie! It looks great, and you did an awesome job interpreting Julia's recipe instructions. You've come so far in your cooking skills. Bravo!
So I did see the original video back in the day and was excited to see him retry this. As he was making it, when he added the eggs, I thought to myself “he’s making an eggplant and lamb meatloaf basically, cool”. I felt vindicated when he made the same comparison at the end 😂
I appreciate Julia's exacting methods, her testing recipes time again, her whole presence in commanding a batterie de cuisine and the ingredients to pull together visions like this -even if personally, I find it not that appetizing looking by today's standards. I also appreciate how far your knowledge and skills have come! Onward!!
Every time you say "bowl me" I simply die in admiration. What a cool move! To top it all, when you call yourself as this, it's a joy. You're a champ!!! And that admiration to her mousaka, that meant a lot of work: it is simply amazing.
Charlotte mould!!! Welcome back! Edit: I see many attributing today's improvement to someone else. But you and I know it was the Very Important Pan that kept the whole rigamarole together and gave the viewers a lovely presentation. Take a bow, Charlotte. And it was nice for screaming siren to swing by briefly, wasn't it? It's the guest stars that bring the joie de vivre to the show. Also, washed mushrooms are pretty good. Know what's even better? 48-hour soaked mushrooms.
Congratulations on the redemption. Greek persons would add the garlic with the lamb along with oregano. I think that would better this dish a lot. This seems a more trimmed down version, perhaps served more as an appetizer rather than a main? Or perhaps she was planning a very heavy dessert to follow.
I’ve been a fan from the start of this project. It’s so fun to see how your skills, comfort and instincts in the kitchen have evolved! You are a joy to watch❤
I just can't help and be surprised each time, in how many recipes Julia is able to sneak in such a specific tool (only one the first glance, obviously) like this damn Charlotte mold.
I hate it. I'm not going to get a unique, highly specific tool to make one thing and never use it again. I think Julia Childs is extremely overrated, and overcomplicates food to the point where it's just not enjoyable. Like, why does the mirepoix have to be so tiny? Why do you need to dirty a pan boiling the beef stock before adding it to the mirepoix? Why can't a heavy-bottomed,oven safe sauce pan with a fitted lid work, why is it so vital to have that damn mold?
Just so you know I’m super picky about cooking shows and you and Sorted Food have my attention. I love your reality and watching you go thru these hard recipes makes me want to try all! Thank you 😊
Owning a Charlotte mold is now a status symbol. Inspiring. Maybe one day I, too will learn the art of deciphering and creating the most obscure of recipes.
Wow! Really? As a Greek you would know, but I’m surprised because it is unlike any moussaka I’ve ever seen or eaten in Greek restaurants. But Jaime said it was good, so that’s what counts!
This recipe is so much harder than it needs to be. No one I know makes Moussaká like this. No restaurants go through the trouble to make it like this. You’re in NY now, yeah? If you’re in the City you can’t go 1/2 a mile without hitting a Greek restaurant. Next date night, go to one, get the Moussaka and see. It might be beef instead of lamb at some places, but it won’t be that.
@@sopdox you’re wrong lol, have you ever tried making it yourself? it’s honestly pretty similar- and I’ve had many from restaurants that look quite similar (not from New York btw I don’t know why you assumed that)
@@sopdox See, in a restaurant setting, this wouldn't actually be very hard, which is where I think the disconnect is. Most of this dish is made with things that would already be prepped. No need to spend hours making different sauces because you would presumably already have those sauces for all your other dishes.
Being Greek, I love moussaka, but also being Italian, I have to say that tomato sauce was more complicated than it needed to be Actually when I saw the title of the vid, I thought you were going to redo the liver in aspic. I was like "please, no" 😅
I’m really excited to see you re-tackle a recipe and how it comes out! That said, it was still really enjoyable to see someone who didn’t really know what they were doing take on these almost indecipherable to a modern audience recipes and come out on the other side with an usually fairly edible dish. It was its own thing but I love seeing how far your skills have developed, not only your kitchen skills but your pretty much translation skills in figuring out what Julia means😆
Congratulations! It was a lot of fun watching this remake. It was great to see you tackle the recipe with your increased experience and of course, the Charlotte mold is priceless! It does seem to be a lot of work for the end result but kudos for sticking with it. Well done and thanks so much for sharing.🎉🎉🎉
Jamie and commentators. I've now watched AntiChef from the beginning and am now watching the new ones as they are uploaded. The first attempt was amusing and understandable. I am vicariously happy for you that you've finally conquered this recipe. Bravo.
Congrats on making that look like something! And, also, yeah. That's an insane amount of work for the end product. I find so many of Julia's recipes needlessly complicated and, frankly, dumb😂
WTG Jamie! Redemption! I agree that the missing components (Bechamel) are odd in this recipe. Personally, it’s not Moussaka without bechamel in my universe, but, as you said, there are many iterations of the dish. However, you accomplished what you set out to do and achieved Julia’s vision, and gave us an awesome video. Many thanks and congrats! ❤️😊
16:24 I saw this on Sorted Foods a few weeks ago, instead of risking it with the raw eggs or guessing with the seasoning you can nuke a little bit in the microwave to cook the eggs.
there's very little risk in raw eggs. The risk from eggs comes from the shell, not the yolk/white. You're waaaaay more likely to get sick from meat or even uncooked flour than you are from american washed eggs. If an egg is bad you'll know immediately because it will look, smell, and have a different texture than it should. Also remember that a lot of people eat raw eggs every single day and never get sick.
I made a moussaka today, the kind with bechamel sauce and potatoes, and I was thinking of you and of this version as I was making mine. And as much as I love the bechamel-and-potatoes one, I don't really get this version at all, seems to be overcomplicated for no apparent reason
To be honest, most people would just buy tomato sauce and brown sauce instead of making them from scratch. So, actually the recipe is not that complicated.
Fabulous as always! I appreciate the occasional utterance of Canadian public school French. I do the same thing. 😂 Also, I made moussaka once….It’s like making 4 recipes all at the same time! So much work!
Great job. I was so happy when you flipped it out of the charlotte mold and it looked good. You've come a long way. So glad you did your own thing with the sauce. 😊
I didn't know there was a different Moussaka version like this one, without the béchamel sauce. That's what makes the dish to me. Interesting. Thank you for this video. You've come a long way. Congrats.
Im not a fan of eggplant, but my son needed an eggplant parmesan recipe for a school project. Found one straight from Italy, he explained that the salt just doesn't remove the moisture but also a lot of the eggplants bitterness. Completely changed my outlook on it. It wasn't just a good recipe of something I never liked, it was amazing. Btw great work on how far you've come.
My grandmother always salted eggplant slices and drained, rinsed, and patted them dry to remove the bitter brown liquid from them before using them in any recipe. I always do this too. When I started watching TV cooking shows and then TH-cam cooking shows, I was shocked that almost all of the presenters (I am loath to call them chefs or even cooks) skip this step in preparing eggplants for cooking. It is no wonder that people who have only tasted eggplants that have not been properly prepared for cooking say they don't like the taste of eggplant.
The bay leaf thing still making me smile today. "get the flesh in Bertha" sure is a statement isn't it! That weird niche little mold that was so hard to come by is certainly earning its keep! I didn't expect how useful it would be! You've come so far!! Things contained/wrapped in other things used to be so difficult for you, it always ended up breaking and turning into a huge mess. Here? Not so much as a hiccup, even when turning it over!
I'm glad you redid this recipe! Moussaka is one of my favorite meals ever (like one of the top three last meals I'd request if I was on deaths row), so I was sorry to see your first attempt not work out. It's a testament to your improvement as a chef that this second attempt came out so well. Congrats!
would love for you to take a recipe you've done and do your own thing with it and see how you do. I think it would be really cool for you to put your full skillset on display since we've watched you grow over all these episodes. btw, I'm oddly proud of you for how far you've come!
Jamie, the lamb is cooked as a whole piece (think roast leg of lamb), and THEN minced. Julia did not intend for the recipe to be made with ground lamb. That’s why it says ‘’Lamb can hardly be considered a leftover…‘’.
I think Julia wrote the recipe expecting her audience to just have leftover cooked lamb, leftover brown sauce, and leftover tomato sauce. So, yeah, if all you have to go buy is eggplant, it’s a simple-ish recipe. But totally not simple if you have to make the sauces, too!
Came to say this about folks already having several of these things around!
It’s like Julia’s cassoulet. That was a Saturday dish using up everything from the week. No one was making it from ground zero.
This- which is why she says ' nobody will consider lamb leftover " .
and that still is simplicity only if you made all those things over the week and had any leftovers to speak of (certainly not at my house, leftovers are breakfast the next day)
Ah, for the days when having leftover lamb and brown sauce was actually a thing. These days, you're lucky to have leftover leftovers.
You've come so very far, but I kind of miss the doofus who scraped the vanilla seeds from the pod and threw them away.
Yep that was hilarious 😂
😂🤣🤣
we must never let jamie forget that
😳I just address him as “ vanilla bean” now…feels good 😂
I just watched his first aspic video, where he licked raw chicken liver juice off the plastic and burned himself twice on boiling water. He's come such a long way.
"I'm not driving" is a real joke that I have taken and now use in my own life consistently about silly things, and I love it.
Same, some people don’t really get the joke but it doesn’t stop me. 😅
What
Same. About ANYTHING
Love it too. 😀
My husband and I were cooking a few days ago and I threw in extra garlic and said "it's ok, i'm not driving" and he looked at me like I was crazy. 🤣
One of your skills that has improved drastically, is deciphering Julia's instruction hieroglyphics it seems. Glad to see you tackle this again
The "who cares? I'm not driving" line after doubling the bayleaf amount makes me chuckle every time.
When you took off the charlotte mold and I saw the moussaka done I genuinely smiled!! So proud of you Jamie!
Me at home watching:
Nodding and grinning at how it turned out.😊
It looked so foul in the making phase 😂
Yesterday, I met a lady who told me she has hundreds of cook books and loves to cook. Trying to make conversation, I suggested cooking videos on TH-cam. I said "I have been watching this guy cook Julia Child's recipes" and the lady, to my astonishment, said she had all of Julia Child's cookbooks and cooked them all the time. I am sending your channel to this lady.
When I saw "Julia Child's worst recipe" I immediately assumed this would be about the aspic. Since I can't imagine that ever being redeemed (the mistake is the recipe, not the chef!) I'm quite glad it was the moussaka instead!
Yes, but now we do need the aspic!
I thought he was going to aspic as well. 🤮 I shiver just thinking about aspic.
That was exactly my first thought! 😂
That aspic is gastric nightmare fuel. I simply fail to understand every aspect of that recipe, including what could possibly possess someone to shove it into their gob. Not a chance!!
now imagine... tasting history going through the history of Aspic since victorian england had a lot of X in aspic
Julia Child's old school recipes are a glimpse into to another time. What recipes as hers fail to mention is one key ingredient: A full time middle class housewife raised with the expectation that she is supposed to make fancy food happen.
The other missing key ingredient is a culture with aspirational attitudes. In that worldview there are upper class pursuits that have high value (like classical music, french haute cuisine, proper manners) and all people should try to know them to elevate themselves.
Our culture is more nihilistic believing things like there is no hierarchy between music genres or food traditions, do what you want etc.
Actually, Julia came from a very wealthy family and her parents were mystified and horrified that she was learning how to cook. Her father was so upset that his daughter was forced to be in the kitchen that he sent her extra money to hire herself a cook. Julia was never expected to make fancy food happen -- she was supposed to have staff to do that. The fact that Julia threw herself into learning how to cook shows her immense curiosity and intellectualism, her desire to learn and achieve, and an enthusiastic willingness to roll up her sleeves and get stuck in.
Julia worked her whole life.
With 3-5 kids!
This comment. I’ve worked full time my entire adult life and love to throw down a fantastic meal for my family. Cooking is therapeutic and a joy for most cooks. If you see it as work then I guess you’d feel this way. Idk. 🤦🏻♀️
I've eaten really good Moussakas, for example in Greece and it's supposed to be a homey, simple dish. I respect Julia, but I think she overcomlicated this one a bit.
no I make Moussaka and it is HARD WORK !!! It takes forever to make and I feel like I need to lie down for 2 days after I make it. I think it is a dish leftover from the days when it was normal to have 4-5 women living in the house and they all spent all day in the kitchen cooking. Moussaka is fabulously delicious though.
I am Greek and grew up on it - you never see it done like Julia's recipe. But I figure it's a Gaulic interpretation?
I'm still trying to figure out why this recipe is in Julia's cookbook about FRENCH cooking in the first place 😂😂
Yes, it is a lot of work. Delicious but a lot of work. As questioned in the video, is it worth the effort? Once you realize that Moussaka is a fancy Shepherd's/Cottage Pie or Tourte Au Chou then you either divert or press on to honor Grecian gastronomy for whatever personal motives.
@@kirbyculp3449 moussaka is WAAAAY better than Shepherd's/Cottage Pie. it is not the same category at all. Shepherd's/Cottage Pie is ok. Moussaka is delicious.
I love the old moussaka video so much because when I was 11, my mom had just had my little sister and I volunteered to cook dinner for everyone, her choice. She picked moussaka, and I made the whole thing from scratch (not a Julia Child recipe, but similar). We sat down to a very late dinner, and my mom's first comment was "I never expected a packet mix to taste so good."
I did not know we had a packet mix (it's probably why mum suggested it, to be fair to her), and had I used one it wouldn't have taken me two hours to clean up after myself.
Like you, Jamie, I got way better at cooking after that and have been known to enjoy making moussaka, but for me it took decades!
Your mother must have been very impressed when you said you made it yourself!
@@nonapis9783 Well, when she was finished laughing she said it was delicious!
I felt that one in my soul lol
she made it so complicated for absolutely no reason... I think it takes me like 1 hour prep time, depending on how quick I move and then cook time is also an hour-ish. But you did amazing trying to do exactly what it says and you've improved so so much!
most of julia's recipes are complicated for no reason because she's taking old recipes and trying to bring them to her audience. Recipes and cooking used to be VERY different than they are today. There's a lot of "old wisdom" that doesn't make much sense in her recipes.
I think a lot of her recipes are for dinner parties. Back in the 50s and 60s adults did do adult only things.
My relatives did fabulous Mad Men style dinner parties, where there was not a crumb cruncher to see seen. My mom baby sat the kids.
Her moussaka looks delicate and easy to eat. My relatives hated sliced potatoes in casseroles, so this would be up their alley. They said potatoes were cheap filler. God love French Canadians lol.
If you watch her early shows, the tables are set for dining, and I assume adults only dining. She’s not whipping most of her recipes together for a family of 5.
considering she describes the cooked lamb as leftovers, I'm guessing she's intending you to make this when you happen to already have most of this leftover, perhaps at the end of several days of entertaining multiple guests. Different era
Bob Ross once said talent is pursued interest. Its so interesting seeing you improve your skills, practicing techniques, Seeing you cook with confidence is so satisfying. Real talent.
Ive been a subscriber for a couple months, but I kinda binged your episodes 😂 and it's getting better and better and better. Thanks Jamie!
Delicious Moussaka does not need to be this complicated. Great video. I am exhausted watching you.
exactly
im starting to learn many julia child recipes have that in common, impractical but makes for an entertaining video lol
You being unable to resist the "I'm not driving" joke made me laugh aloud.
I'd love to know: 1) total elasped cooking time 2) total number of cooking vessels used 3) total cleaning time and I know this probably isn't possible, 4) energy usage. Julia's recipes are intense.
And money for ingredients
I've made moussaka a few times. I don't know what Julia Child was trying to accomplish with that, but I've never made or had moussaka that was anything like that. Looks fantastic this time, but the normal version is much easier and probably tastier.
I think a lot of big french chefs dont appreciate the delicacy of the taste of fresh ingredients sometimes. Only in french cuisine do i keep seeing recipes that just keep adding and adding and adding........
@@gaswe9236 they'd probably tell you to stuff a stick o butter in yer...
This might seem a little dramatic but as a person who grew up around chefs in a family of food lovers, I think it's an absolute privilege to witness your food journey! It's so fun to see you go from following recipes to an absolute T to going with your gut - even if it fails sometimes. An Anti-chef day is always a good day! :)
I've never seen moussaka that looked like what Julia calls mousaka.
Give the french a simple, home-style casserole and they're gonna make it into a fiddly molded cake with two time-consuming sauces.
@@kralevic3297
🤣👍
When you had to make the tomato sauce my mind immediately went to Marcella Hazan's recipe. I'm willing to bet that sauce is great for this recipe too.
I LOVE this idea of revisiting your old fails! You've grown so much as a chef! 👏👏
We have some eggplant allergies in the fam so I'll probably never try it, but it reminds me of a big stuffed pepper.
Having had moussaka a few times from Greek restaurants (which was very tasty) Julia’s recipe seems so overly complicated with results not worth the effort! I am a huge fan of Julia’s, but not that recipe. But you mastered it! ✅
Same. I’ve had moussaka a million times. I wouldn’t even consider that recipe moussaka.
congratulations Jamie on making a beautiful dish and redeeming yourself. i love seeing you remake a previously failed recipe.
Awesome to see your improvement over the years. Also the eggplant skins in the Charlotte mold reminds me of the facehugger eggs from "Aliens" and I can't unsee it.
My nana taught me that with cooking/baking back in the day, you were expected to read the whole book front to back and then begin with the first recipe. The books she was referring to also taught things like proper measuring techniques, terminology, different tools in the kitchen, safety, and so forth. I wonder if Julia's book was also made like this, or if it was expected that the reader already knew the basics.
This is one of those recipes that makes the kitchen look like a war zone. It looks very impressive when you put it in front of your guests. Definitely a redemption arc for this one. Thanks.
It's so amazing to see people redo older things and just be able to visualize how far you've come.
As an artist, I appreciate this sort of thing greatly! I've been with you a while, and you've been amazing!
Really good job! For the record, I agree that this recipe is much more trouble than it needs to be. I once made Bobby Flay's chocolate cake with the goats milk, etc. and it took me ALL day. It was really good - it was chocolate cake after all - but it weighed about 15 lbs, cost a ton and I decided that if I ever did it again it would be done over two days! Live and learn.
The moussaka I know has bechamel sauce and potatoes, but it looks like solid comfort food, which always seems to involve a lot of work. I love eggplant, but I'm allergic to it, so I often substitute zucchini or yellow squash. It doesn't taste as good, but the texture is similar. Just cut the cooking time in half.
Yeah, 2023 Jamie's skills, camera work, and stage presence stand head and shoulders above 2020 Jamie.
Jamie's style of editing is so organic, where funny creators use funny noises, visuals, or editing highjinks to enhance their humor, with Jamie it just feels like you're sitting at your friends kitchen counter occasionally setting timers and taste testing while he does his own silly thing
So proud of you, Jamie! It looks great, and you did an awesome job interpreting Julia's recipe instructions. You've come so far in your cooking skills. Bravo!
So I did see the original video back in the day and was excited to see him retry this. As he was making it, when he added the eggs, I thought to myself “he’s making an eggplant and lamb meatloaf basically, cool”. I felt vindicated when he made the same comparison at the end 😂
Wow! What a difference from last time. I admire your determination...and patience. So many steps!
Look how far you've come in your cooking skills? You did a marvelous job, well done you.
The moussaka I know is different and simpler. But I’m happy you were able to complete this beast!
I appreciate Julia's exacting methods, her testing recipes time again, her whole presence in commanding a batterie de cuisine and the ingredients to pull together visions like this -even if personally, I find it not that appetizing looking by today's standards. I also appreciate how far your knowledge and skills have come! Onward!!
Every time you say "bowl me" I simply die in admiration. What a cool move! To top it all, when you call yourself as this, it's a joy. You're a champ!!! And that admiration to her mousaka, that meant a lot of work: it is simply amazing.
Charlotte mould!!!
Welcome back!
Edit: I see many attributing today's improvement to someone else. But you and I know it was the Very Important Pan that kept the whole rigamarole together and gave the viewers a lovely presentation. Take a bow, Charlotte. And it was nice for screaming siren to swing by briefly, wasn't it? It's the guest stars that bring the joie de vivre to the show.
Also, washed mushrooms are pretty good. Know what's even better? 48-hour soaked mushrooms.
as someone who binged a lot of your videos semi-recently it's really heartening to see the hard-earned progress!! congrats on the re-do
Congratulations on the redemption. Greek persons would add the garlic with the lamb along with oregano. I think that would better this dish a lot. This seems a more trimmed down version, perhaps served more as an appetizer rather than a main? Or perhaps she was planning a very heavy dessert to follow.
I’ve been a fan from the start of this project. It’s so fun to see how your skills, comfort and instincts in the kitchen have evolved! You are a joy to watch❤
I just can't help and be surprised each time, in how many recipes Julia is able to sneak in such a specific tool (only one the first glance, obviously) like this damn Charlotte mold.
Those are all standard, but in French haute cuisine, not home cooking.
I hate it. I'm not going to get a unique, highly specific tool to make one thing and never use it again. I think Julia Childs is extremely overrated, and overcomplicates food to the point where it's just not enjoyable. Like, why does the mirepoix have to be so tiny? Why do you need to dirty a pan boiling the beef stock before adding it to the mirepoix? Why can't a heavy-bottomed,oven safe sauce pan with a fitted lid work, why is it so vital to have that damn mold?
@@WobblesandBeanthat’s where personal interpretation comes in, you can do all of those things differently
Just so you know I’m super picky about cooking shows and you and Sorted Food have my attention. I love your reality and watching you go thru these hard recipes makes me want to try all! Thank you 😊
You did a great job! It's still horrific looking, but it absolutely looks like you did it very well despite the realities of the dish itself lol
Owning a Charlotte mold is now a status symbol. Inspiring. Maybe one day I, too will learn the art of deciphering and creating the most obscure of recipes.
Jamie! Call the food processor “The Whizzard”!
I admire him so much he's persistent and cheerful and playful and just such a joy to watch! Go Jamie!
as a greek and greek food lover, THAT is a true Moussaka! I hope you enjoyed 🎉
Wow! Really? As a Greek you would know, but I’m surprised because it is unlike any moussaka I’ve ever seen or eaten in Greek restaurants. But Jaime said it was good, so that’s what counts!
@@977400Dana well, I’ve been to a few places where it actually is served very similarly minus the eggplant skin on the outside! it’s so good!
This recipe is so much harder than it needs to be. No one I know makes Moussaká like this. No restaurants go through the trouble to make it like this. You’re in NY now, yeah? If you’re in the City you can’t go 1/2 a mile without hitting a Greek restaurant. Next date night, go to one, get the Moussaka and see. It might be beef instead of lamb at some places, but it won’t be that.
@@sopdox you’re wrong lol, have you ever tried making it yourself? it’s honestly pretty similar- and I’ve had many from restaurants that look quite similar (not from New York btw I don’t know why you assumed that)
@@sopdox See, in a restaurant setting, this wouldn't actually be very hard, which is where I think the disconnect is. Most of this dish is made with things that would already be prepped. No need to spend hours making different sauces because you would presumably already have those sauces for all your other dishes.
Thank you for redoing this, I was almost screaming at the last video’s techniques and misunderstandings.
I thought it was aspic
Same😂
I think he memory-holed the aspic honestly 🤣🤣
Yesterday's poll excluded the aspic. 😉
You can always encase the "moussaka" in gelatine with pickling water.
Me too, but he has tried it one or two more times and I think he’s given up
Can’t be worse than the Aspec……..😂😂😂❤❤❤ my favourite Jamie line is “ cuz I’m not driving “😅😅😅
Being Greek, I love moussaka, but also being Italian, I have to say that tomato sauce was more complicated than it needed to be
Actually when I saw the title of the vid, I thought you were going to redo the liver in aspic. I was like "please, no" 😅
I follow many cooking channels and just found yours. I love it because you keep the struggles real.
Yay!!! Can’t wait to see the moussaka redemption!
Love that you retried a recipe! Thank you for showing us how we grow as a cooks how practice adds to the experience differently
Julia Child was a master at making even the simplest meals overly complicated and pretentious!
I have never seen moussaka prepared Julia's way, but you definitely can be proud of how much you've learned since your 1st attempt!
I never skip salting the eggplant. It always tastes a lot better. I never thought about squeezing them.
Jamie, your skills..... so proud of you ❤
You cooking channel is seriously my favorite out of all the ones I've seen on youtube. They're just so fun!!
Hope you can redo aspic someday man!😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
😂 no, just no. Waste of food in addition to being an abomination.
I’m really excited to see you re-tackle a recipe and how it comes out!
That said, it was still really enjoyable to see someone who didn’t really know what they were doing take on these almost indecipherable to a modern audience recipes and come out on the other side with an usually fairly edible dish. It was its own thing but I love seeing how far your skills have developed, not only your kitchen skills but your pretty much translation skills in figuring out what Julia means😆
When will you continue with country dish series? Want to see you tackle the Peking Duck
Congratulations! It was a lot of fun watching this remake. It was great to see you tackle the recipe with your increased experience and of course, the Charlotte mold is priceless! It does seem to be a lot of work for the end result but kudos for sticking with it. Well done and thanks so much for sharing.🎉🎉🎉
Rinsing the shrooms is the right thing to do. If you don't rinse them, it's like eating dirt.
So complicated yet you keep it interesting. I love that.
Was preparing myself for a redux of liver in aspic ahah
Hah, I thought it was aspic from the thumbnail. I'm surprised it's not. xD
I don't think aspic is going to taste good, even if you follow the recipe perfectly. It's basically beef jello.
Jamie and commentators. I've now watched AntiChef from the beginning and am now watching the new ones as they are uploaded. The first attempt was amusing and understandable. I am vicariously happy for you that you've finally conquered this recipe. Bravo.
Congrats on making that look like something!
And, also, yeah. That's an insane amount of work for the end product. I find so many of Julia's recipes needlessly complicated and, frankly, dumb😂
She’s trolling us all 😅
WTG Jamie! Redemption! I agree that the missing components (Bechamel) are odd in this recipe. Personally, it’s not Moussaka without bechamel in my universe, but, as you said, there are many iterations of the dish. However, you accomplished what you set out to do and achieved Julia’s vision, and gave us an awesome video. Many thanks and congrats! ❤️😊
16:24 I saw this on Sorted Foods a few weeks ago, instead of risking it with the raw eggs or guessing with the seasoning you can nuke a little bit in the microwave to cook the eggs.
there's very little risk in raw eggs. The risk from eggs comes from the shell, not the yolk/white. You're waaaaay more likely to get sick from meat or even uncooked flour than you are from american washed eggs.
If an egg is bad you'll know immediately because it will look, smell, and have a different texture than it should. Also remember that a lot of people eat raw eggs every single day and never get sick.
The Redemption Arc that all of us have been waiting for! Always enjoy your work.
As much as I’m glad you were able to get a result that you liked out of this recipe, this is as close as I ever want to get to a dish of moussaka.
I love how far you have come on your cooking journey. Good for you to revisit this one.
I made a moussaka today, the kind with bechamel sauce and potatoes, and I was thinking of you and of this version as I was making mine. And as much as I love the bechamel-and-potatoes one, I don't really get this version at all, seems to be overcomplicated for no apparent reason
To be honest, most people would just buy tomato sauce and brown sauce instead of making them from scratch. So, actually the recipe is not that complicated.
@@Xerxes2005
In the US, maybe. I am in Europe however
DUDE ... SUPER proud of you. It looked gorgeous! Well done!
I have NEVER seen a moussaka like that! I have made moussaka many times and that is simply a completely different dish!
Fabulous as always! I appreciate the occasional utterance of Canadian public school French. I do the same thing. 😂 Also, I made moussaka once….It’s like making 4 recipes all at the same time! So much work!
The first try was awesome entertainment, I remeber when I watched that video! But this one is an absolute joy to watch, good job Jamie!
Great job. I was so happy when you flipped it out of the charlotte mold and it looked good. You've come a long way. So glad you did your own thing with the sauce. 😊
I think the old moussaka video was my first from you! This was so fun!
I didn't know there was a different Moussaka version like this one, without the béchamel sauce. That's what makes the dish to me. Interesting. Thank you for this video. You've come a long way. Congrats.
The Egyptian Mouska is tomato based and does not have the béchamel sauce.
@@nmn7813my Sephardi friend’s moussaka is very similar Egyptian and this version.
Im not a fan of eggplant, but my son needed an eggplant parmesan recipe for a school project. Found one straight from Italy, he explained that the salt just doesn't remove the moisture but also a lot of the eggplants bitterness. Completely changed my outlook on it. It wasn't just a good recipe of something I never liked, it was amazing.
Btw great work on how far you've come.
My grandmother always salted eggplant slices and drained, rinsed, and patted them dry to remove the bitter brown liquid from them before using them in any recipe. I always do this too.
When I started watching TV cooking shows and then TH-cam cooking shows, I was shocked that almost all of the presenters (I am loath to call them chefs or even cooks) skip this step in preparing eggplants for cooking.
It is no wonder that people who have only tasted eggplants that have not been properly prepared for cooking say they don't like the taste of eggplant.
The bay leaf thing still making me smile today.
"get the flesh in Bertha" sure is a statement isn't it!
That weird niche little mold that was so hard to come by is certainly earning its keep! I didn't expect how useful it would be!
You've come so far!! Things contained/wrapped in other things used to be so difficult for you, it always ended up breaking and turning into a huge mess. Here? Not so much as a hiccup, even when turning it over!
I'm glad you redid this recipe! Moussaka is one of my favorite meals ever (like one of the top three last meals I'd request if I was on deaths row), so I was sorry to see your first attempt not work out. It's a testament to your improvement as a chef that this second attempt came out so well. Congrats!
I thought we were making Aspic (again) for a second there. 😂
would love for you to take a recipe you've done and do your own thing with it and see how you do. I think it would be really cool for you to put your full skillset on display since we've watched you grow over all these episodes. btw, I'm oddly proud of you for how far you've come!
You've come a long way, congratulations, so glad to see the progress! This video made me smile, keep it up!
I started saying "I'm not driving" when cooking because of you. Don't change ❤
Wow that’s beautiful Jamie! So glad you revisited 🤘🏻
Haha, I guessed it right in the poll u posted earlier! Am surprised not many people guessed this is the one u're gonna remake...
I'm so happy for your progression!!! You've come so far! ❤
Haaaaa! I did answer your poll correctly. It's wild that I've been watching you cook for years.
Jamie, the lamb is cooked as a whole piece (think roast leg of lamb), and THEN minced. Julia did not intend for the recipe to be made with ground lamb. That’s why it says ‘’Lamb can hardly be considered a leftover…‘’.
Nice work! I watched the fruit tart video last night to prep for this one. You’re now a bonafide chef, anti-chef. 🎉
I was convinced it would be the revenge episode of either the rolled cake or aspic. Well done on surprising me.
You took the words from my mouth man.
Although still mad respect for trying these out. You're the best!😊😊😊😊❤❤❤❤❤
Congratulations! You've come so far since the tiny kitchen. Can't wait to see where your culinary adventures take you next.
It was so cool to see it come out of the Charlotte mould!
You have come so so far!!!
Love this!!! Great throwback to show how much youve improved! Like the soufflé
Keep going Jamie!! ❤❤