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Simone "Simca" Beck (7 July 1904 – 20 December 1991) was a French cookbook writer and cooking teacher who, along with colleagues Julia Child and Louisette Bertholle, played a significant role in the introduction of French cooking technique and recipes into American kitchens.[1]

Simone Beck
Beck in 1972
Born(1904-07-07)7 July 1904
Normandy, France
Died20 December 1991(1991-12-20) (aged 87)
Châteauneuf-de-Grasse, France
Pen nameSimca
OccupationAuthor and cooking teacher
NationalityFrench
GenreCookbooks
Notable worksWhat's Cooking in France?

Early life


She was born on 7 July 1904, in Tocqueville-en-Caux, near Dieppe in Normandy. Her family was rich because they had a business in production of Benedictine liqueur.[1] When she was little, she liked helping her family cook to prepare desserts or entire meals. She spent some years learning bookbinding and being a sales representative, where she met her second husband, but subsequently Beck's career was devoted to food. In 1933, at the end of her marriage with Jacques Jarlaud, she applied for Le Cordon Bleu school in Paris. In 1937 she married Jean Victor Fischbacher, keeping her maiden name as a pen name and professionally, but using her husband's name socially.[2]


Cooking career


The start of Beck's professional career as a cook and teacher was after World War II, and after joining Le Cercle des Gourmettes, an exclusive women's culinary club. She became involved in the world of cooking. She was inspired to write a cookbook for Americans by Louisette Bertholle and her husband.

The first attempt at writing a cookbook wasn't successful, so Beck and Bertholle published the brief What's Cooking in France? in 1952. After that Beck published a booklet Le pruneau devant le fourneau: Recettes de cuisine (ca. 1952), Beck's only publication in French. In 1949, after she had met Julia Child, she became inspired to write a French cookbook for Americans again. She, Child, and Bertholle together wrote Mastering the Art of French Cooking, which was published in 1961. Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Vol. II (without Louisette Bertholle) followed in 1970, elaborating on several subjects (particularly baking and charcuterie) that the authors felt had received insufficient coverage in the first volume.

Both Bertholle and Child became members of Le Cercle des Gourmettes. After three years, the three women formed l'École des trois gourmandes to give lessons in French cooking to American women who lived in Paris. This school had been working up to the late 1970s. While Child became a successful television chef in the United States, Beck continued her teaching practice at home. In 1972 she published her own cookbook, Simca's Cuisine (with Patricia Simon), using some of the recipes that had not been mentioned in her previous books with Child and Bertholle. In 1979, she published the second volume, New Menus from Simca's Cuisine, with Michael James, who was her student, friend, and assistant since the 1970s. Food and Friends: Recipes and Memories from Simca's Cuisine, her autobiography and last cookbook (with Suzy Patterson), was published in 1991, the year she died.[3]


Death


Simone Beck died on Friday, December 20, 1991, at her home in Châteauneuf-de-Grasse, a small village near Nice. She was 87. Her cousin, Harold Earle said she had been having heart problems for several months and had stopped eating, he added, "The doctor said that because she wouldn't eat, she died".[1][4]




Bibliography



References


  1. Hall, Trish (December 21, 1991). "Simone Beck, a Cook, Dies at 87; Co-Wrote Book With Julia Child". New York Times.
  2. "Papers of Simone Beck, 1920-1993". Harvard Library.
  3. Citron, Jane (May 23, 1985). "MADAME SIMONE 'SIMCA' BECK REMAINS THE GRANDE DAME OF FRENCH CUISINE". Chicago Tribune.
  4. Ganley, Elanie (December 20, 1991). "Simone Beck, America's Celebrity French Cook, Dies". Associated Press.
  5. "'Julia' Episode Guide: How Many Episodes in HBO Max's Julia Child Series?". Decider. 31 March 2022. Retrieved 31 March 2022.
  6. Fienberg, Daniel (23 March 2022). "HBO Max's 'Julia': TV Review". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 31 March 2022.





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