This deranged Julia Child aspic creation should be sent straight to hell

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  • Опубліковано 4 тра 2023
  • This is dressy Chicken in Aspic Surrounded by Chicken Liver Mousse - a recipe from the Way to Cook
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    Ingredients:
    will anyone really make this?
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,2 тис.

  • @heathercfinley
    @heathercfinley 6 місяців тому +191

    I made the huge mistake of getting my dad some Julia Child's VHS tapes for Christmas in the 1980's.
    He went through an aspic PHASE! There were so many different vile tureens of meat, aspic, and other decorative vegetables in our refrigerator over the course of 6 months.
    He only stopped when my mother threatened to throw his latest monstrosity across the kitchen at him if he didn't stop.
    It was a dark time.

    • @cassandrachristian4328
      @cassandrachristian4328 4 місяці тому +3

      😂

    • @ChristmasCarolyn
      @ChristmasCarolyn 4 місяці тому +6

      😅😅😅🤣🤣🤣 U had me ded at your story. Thanks for sharing! Made my day.

    • @mcd5478
      @mcd5478 4 місяці тому +2

      😅😂😂😂😂😂 love this

    • @cjb8010
      @cjb8010 4 місяці тому +3

      Hilarious. Particularly the PHASE all-caps.

  • @takke9830
    @takke9830 11 місяців тому +363

    Whoever thinks having a fine palette means enjoying cold meat Jello is psychotic.

    • @DJMarcO138
      @DJMarcO138 6 місяців тому +14

      Palate. Palettes are for wood or paint. The more you know!

    • @barobaro1
      @barobaro1 6 місяців тому +10

      We all know julia was a psycho, you don't need to remind us😅

    • @holliwatkin1233
      @holliwatkin1233 5 місяців тому +6

      whoever thinks palette = palate has worse problems than cold meat jello

    • @kell_checks_in
      @kell_checks_in 5 місяців тому

      Actually, the French version of a lemon escabeche* in Mastering... is pretty good. (I now do an easier version using Joy of...'s instructions but using Julia's herbs.) Kinda like eating leftover lemon chicken breast straight out of the fridge.
      *The Mastering... version is more herbal than spicy, especially compared to the traditional South American & Spanish versions of an escabeche.

    • @cjb8010
      @cjb8010 4 місяці тому +5

      @@holliwatkin1233I like it when the palates talk to the palettes. Those who object are snobs. Homonyms rule!

  • @OrlaHoulihan
    @OrlaHoulihan Рік тому +613

    I ordered rabbit in aspic once in a fancy restaurant. When they brought me the dish all I could see was fancy cat food that had been molded into a pretty shape. It made me gag, even though it actually tasted great. The texture did me in. Like you, I forced myself to struggle through it, but I would never order anything in aspic again.

    • @alexia3552
      @alexia3552 10 місяців тому +55

      "Fancy cat food" 💀

    • @paulklee5790
      @paulklee5790 10 місяців тому +1

      Don’t give up! Lark’s Tongues are particularly good….

    • @KenS1267
      @KenS1267 10 місяців тому +35

      I worked in a French restaurant for a while and we got a new executive chef who insisted on putting an aspic on the menu. There was a general revolt over making the stuff amongst the line cooks prep cooks and then no one, I mean literally no one, ordered it for the whole weekend we had it on the menu. Aspic is one of those recipes that is just not worth the trouble of making.

    • @beewallix3445
      @beewallix3445 9 місяців тому +2

      Lol. I only like the tomato aspic. That’s it.

    • @RobinTheBot
      @RobinTheBot 8 місяців тому +4

      I'm told the taste can be godly but no one has an appetite for the texture, i guess

  • @anne-marie9842
    @anne-marie9842 Рік тому +538

    The good thing about being an adult and cooking for yourself is that you don’t have to eat what you don’t like. Thank you Jamie.

    • @caittails
      @caittails 8 місяців тому +10

      Unless you’re poor like me and that meal is what you’re eating for the rest of the week. 😅

  • @3lapsed
    @3lapsed Рік тому +781

    "we've gotta accomplish our fears by diving straight into the deep end"
    That's how you drown Jamie

  • @kdhoude
    @kdhoude Рік тому +674

    You really have not experienced the horrors of aspic until you make a seafood version! Once at a very nice restaurant a good friend shouted in disgust "No way am I eating fish jello!"

    • @michelleramsey4302
      @michelleramsey4302 Рік тому +13

      Bwahhhhhhhhhhh😅😅😅😅😅

    • @Fragrantbeard
      @Fragrantbeard Рік тому +6

      Ha! That's what my mother calls lutefisk. She's not Norwegian...

    • @jill7759
      @jill7759 9 місяців тому +27

      Aspic has definitely seen its better days in terms of popularity and a good thing too in my view. Ugh, it’s just nasty, immature palate be damned. I’m not even a fan of jellied anything and definitely not meat/fish jelly. Not hungry thanks, not gonna be hungry tomorrow either or any time in the foreseeable future, not if that’s on the menu.

    • @awelotta
      @awelotta 7 місяців тому

      not me eating leftover steamed fish cold with rice porridge, with all the solidified fat

    • @mattjames257
      @mattjames257 7 місяців тому +9

      I associate aspic with the gelatin in cat/dog food and I don't think I'll ever not be able to.

  • @mazeofmind3181
    @mazeofmind3181 Рік тому +369

    My grandma used to make aspic, but totally different than yours :D The aspic was "happening" without gelatine, just from cooking broth with spices. Then in small bowls she was placing small pieces of chicken breast, green peas, cooked diced carrots, parsley. She served it with vinegar or horseradish and it was really deligious. Although the aspic part was just basically keeping the chicken and veggies together. It tasted like nice, home made chicken soup with a shaprer note of toppings. Maybe it isn't totally hopeless yet :D

    • @Rose-jz6sx
      @Rose-jz6sx Рік тому +64

      Gelatine comes from bone broth, so there was gelatine in your grandma's aspic but it wasn't *additional* gelatine. It would have just come from the chicken bones/skin.

    • @Gtown215
      @Gtown215 Рік тому +5

      ​@@Rose-jz6sx you produce gelatine out of bones, but its not the same.

    • @Rose-jz6sx
      @Rose-jz6sx Рік тому +13

      @GTown215 yes it is.

    • @maddiedoesntkno
      @maddiedoesntkno 11 місяців тому +12

      @@Gtown215 that’s literally where the packers come from-boiled bones. Gelatine factory just processes through bones, cartilage and feet (hoof/claw)

    • @KazakhToon
      @KazakhToon 11 місяців тому +15

      The word deligious is kind of perfect for aspic right

  • @NegaLomie
    @NegaLomie 5 місяців тому +44

    If Jamie ever writes a cookbook, I fully expect him to use his equipment nicknames in the recipes.

    • @malinstella6965
      @malinstella6965 5 місяців тому

      Yep! "the silver fox" & "big bertha" HILARIOUS!

  • @kaylynno7764
    @kaylynno7764 Рік тому +1296

    I like how when there are sirens in the background he says "Hope everyone's okay" instead of being annoyed like other UA-camrs. It's nice.

    • @cannotthinkofaname7904
      @cannotthinkofaname7904 Рік тому +38

      I mean... he does clearly sound annoyed when he says it, too

    • @dorinachan113
      @dorinachan113 Рік тому +73

      He's Canadian, it's what we say when we hear emergency vehicles. I say "oh dear, hope that person is ok." and back to work we go.

    • @rf3811
      @rf3811 9 місяців тому +4

      He's a real one, definitely a keeper! 🫶💗
      I laughed so hard when he was eating it.😅😂😩

    • @caittails
      @caittails 8 місяців тому +1

      Idk, the way he says it sounds like an annoyed, impatient tone. 😂

    • @pamelacoles4634
      @pamelacoles4634 8 місяців тому +2

      What is it ? It’s formal French cuisine…. Rarely seen today !

  • @KassFireborn
    @KassFireborn Рік тому +277

    The moment I saw we were back in aspic country, I was pulling up a chair and clearing my next half-hour.

    • @marcus3173
      @marcus3173 Рік тому +4

      Lol same

    • @NZKiwi87
      @NZKiwi87 Рік тому +5

      It’s comedy gold 😂

    • @KassFireborn
      @KassFireborn Рік тому +6

      @@NZKiwi87 It's the building tension for me. So much work! So many steps! He correctly tempered the eggs! All for an end that feels inevitable.

    • @Iceman259
      @Iceman259 8 місяців тому +1

      @@KassFirebornturns out aspic is a perfect metaphor for life

    • @asourpo1yphony
      @asourpo1yphony 8 місяців тому

      @@KassFirebornb😢brb 😢😢

  • @LostinMayberry
    @LostinMayberry 10 місяців тому +75

    My Mom was always so proud of her aspic dishes. No one had the heart to tell her fish jello had peaked in the late 50’s.

  • @flibblemunch
    @flibblemunch 7 місяців тому +13

    There is roughly a 0% chance that I would ever take a bite of anything on that platter. Well done!

  • @bubblegumplastic
    @bubblegumplastic Рік тому +959

    You tackling Julia's aspics is comedy gold every time

    • @alanholck7995
      @alanholck7995 Рік тому +23

      The fact that it is pronounced 'ass-pick' is a clue.

    • @bubblegumplastic
      @bubblegumplastic Рік тому +19

      @@alanholck7995 Oh haha, I love aspic! I grew up on it because my grandmother who lived through WW2 as a child grew up on it, since it was a way to stretch cheaper parts of meat. And she developed a taste for it since she was a child still, and unintentionally passed it along to me. We also don't call it aspic here, maybe that helps its palatability :)
      It's nice to see Jamie try to explore cuisine unfamiliar to him with a genuine heart.

    • @ewilborn5
      @ewilborn5 Рік тому +11

      I agree! It’s the genuine attempt that is so nice to see!

    • @CleoHarperReturns
      @CleoHarperReturns Рік тому +4

      This is exactly why I kept Jamey's notifications on while turning off all my other food-related channels (on a diet). His timing never disappoints.

    • @Malryth
      @Malryth Рік тому +11

      Agreed, I was laughing my ass of when he first got the mouss out of the mould. His reactions were so honest.

  • @AJDunnReadsandWrites
    @AJDunnReadsandWrites Рік тому +193

    The "I'm not drivin'" bit never gets old.

  • @beachspirit2455
    @beachspirit2455 Рік тому +19

    I ,for one, am so glad you gave this another try - just because it shows off your increased cooking skills in a great way in such a short time (aspic time). It also reminded me that my grandmother (born in 1896) used to try one of her favorite dishes from her childhood on us to our utter horror. Beef tongue in aspic. Not knowing a single positive fact about why anybody would do this. So here it is, thanks to the google monster:; The earliest detailed recipe for aspic is found in Le Viandier, a collection of haute cuisine recipes produced in the 1300s. Cooks in the Middle Ages had discovered that thickened meat broth cooled into a jelly and the gelatin kept out air and bacteria, preserving the cooked meat inside for longer periods of time. So food preservation, that was a good thing....in the Middle Ages. I think we can retire than method.

    • @antichef
      @antichef  Рік тому +10

      beef tongue in aspic is the most horrifying thing i've ever heard. Just give me the beef tongue, hold the aspic.
      Also, that middle ages preservation method is fascinating!

  • @FullmetalDE
    @FullmetalDE Рік тому +34

    Honestly, I think what you created looked quite good. I would ditch the olives but otherwise I would definitely eat it.
    I'm from Germany and we have dish, or rather a category of dishes, called "Sülze". It is diced meat (mostly pork) and sometimes diced vegetables as well in aspic and you can get it sliced to put on bread or in some restaurants you get thick slices served with hot, fried potatoes and tartar sauce. I really like it but it is kind of an old-fashioned taste.
    I'm not a fan though of this 1950s, 1960s motion to just put everything in jello. I can imagine that this didn't work out in many cases.

    • @Norther78
      @Norther78 3 місяці тому +1

      We have a similar dish in Finland. We call it syltty. It's also made with pork and sometimes with vegetables. It's also one of my favourite foods to eat with bread.

  • @laurabritton1613
    @laurabritton1613 Рік тому +371

    I think I speak for the whole internet when I say that we are ok if you never make meat jello again.

    • @beachspirit2455
      @beachspirit2455 Рік тому +14

      Are you kidding these are the most belly laughs on the planet.

    • @yvonneburns2786
      @yvonneburns2786 11 місяців тому +3

      But if you have the meat cut finely and pressed into a dish plus the aspic, and left to set, you'd have cold cuts for sandwiches or salads.

    • @cianmoriarty7345
      @cianmoriarty7345 8 місяців тому

      Speak for yourself weirdo. Nothing wrong with some cold soup. Get a grip man!

    • @katiewillison2730
      @katiewillison2730 8 місяців тому

      Yes!

  • @schreix27
    @schreix27 Рік тому +156

    No, I would not eat that dish. My husband, who is always up for trying practically anything, said that he would also not try that dish. I find it impressive that you attempted an aspic dish after your first reaction.

  • @captainnathan3690
    @captainnathan3690 Рік тому +9

    My blender is my Jaguar (can go zero to 200 in a half second).The Kitchen Aid Mixer is the Jeep. The food processor is the Mercedes. I named them because if I asked my husband to get one of them for me I had to go into full-on explanations of what they looked like. Now I just say “get me the Jag honey”😂
    Love, love, love you vids!

  • @cutecat2165
    @cutecat2165 Рік тому +7

    I thought I was a little crazy testing hundreds of recipes from an old Betty Crocker cookbook lol, This was great to watch.

  • @laperlenoir
    @laperlenoir Рік тому +370

    Never met an aspic dish I liked. You are a saint to attempt aspic again.

    • @internet_introvert
      @internet_introvert Рік тому +13

      Who doesn't like meat jello? The jelly from the corners of the Spam can are the best part

    • @prcervi
      @prcervi Рік тому +2

      i've found ways to make it work enough, like here it'd work nice on a slightly stale loaf as a light spread for more interesting toppings

    • @clarinetJWD
      @clarinetJWD Рік тому +24

      Right? "Immature palette" my ass... There's a reason no one serves aspic anymore. It's bad. The liver mousse looked great, though!

    • @dogshake
      @dogshake Рік тому +8

      @@internet_introvert I gagged reading this

    • @Nixx0912
      @Nixx0912 Рік тому +2

      We kind of used to savery jelly where I grew up. My mum used to prepare carp in jelly for Christmas everybody loved that. There is always a side of horseradish and for meet jelly either lemon or a bit of vinegar it really makes it taste better.

  • @sterlingross919
    @sterlingross919 Рік тому +161

    I think on a subconscious level Jamie felt so good about making Thomas Keller’s donuts and cappuccino that he felt he needed to punish himself by attempting not just another aspic, but aspic with chicken liver mousse.

    • @qwopiretyu
      @qwopiretyu Рік тому +2

      The Salmon Mousse from Monty Python always haunts me

    • @beachspirit2455
      @beachspirit2455 Рік тому +2

      No, I think he is pretty feisty on overcoming challenges of any kind and this was one he wasn't satisfied with.

  • @aMondayMorning
    @aMondayMorning Рік тому +45

    I don't know if you read your comments, but I'd like to say that you're probably one of the best food youtubers I've ever come across. I just hope you continue to keep it as real as you do when and if you become more successful on this platform, and not get too big for your britches.

  • @jakewastaken
    @jakewastaken Рік тому +8

    I’d definitely try it, but I’m not sure it would wind up being my thing at all. You like olives more than I do. I’d maybe prefer the truffle more. I love seeing you bravely tackle things that are intimidating, and as always, this series is easily one of the best I’ve seen. Thanks for sharing such an authentic experience with the rest of us. It’s truly unique.

  • @Terminator21111
    @Terminator21111 Рік тому +185

    Here in Poland, where I'm from we have a long lasting tradition of eating aspic. Typically it is made out of vegetables, chicken and pork but we traditionally don't use gelatin packets because most of it comes from pig trotters. Most often it is portioned into personal serving containers and then inverted onto a plate before eating. It's a nice meaty, salty, savoury treat eaten with a pinch of salt a bit of freshly squeezed lemon on top and of courese fresh sourdough bread.

    • @feliciacoffey6832
      @feliciacoffey6832 Рік тому +14

      Sounds alright if served like that.

    • @lulaufey
      @lulaufey Рік тому +13

      Norwegian aspic is similar. We use veggies and eggs in ours, and my family (maybe this is common?) eat it on bread with some mayonnaise.

    • @kralevic3297
      @kralevic3297 Рік тому +22

      I've been to a high-class banquet thing in Poland, years ago. An anniversary celebration of a cultural institution. There were about 20 different dishes that the catering company provided, and except for a chicken stew and a strawberry cake, EVERY SINGLE DISH had aspic. There were eggs in aspic, meats in aspic, vegetables in aspic, pate in aspic, cheeeses in aspic, even canopes that had a little pearl of aspic on top. I don't have anything against aspic, but damn, you guys seem to be obsessed by it. It was a strange and hilarious experience and I remember it to this day.

    • @feliciacoffey6832
      @feliciacoffey6832 Рік тому +5

      @@kralevic3297 This is hysterical!!! Bring on the aspic!!!

    • @Katrina-mi2gm
      @Katrina-mi2gm Рік тому +11

      In Russia, it is called holodets and was usually made for special occasions, mainly because it was not easy to get pig trotters during Soviet era. It also took a long time to cook for broth to become gelatinous and set when cooled down ( no gelatine) . The meat was shredded, mixed with spices and minced garlic, placed onto the bottom of the serving dish a deep platter , often a soup plate, than the broth was pored over and slices of hard boiled egg arranged on the top, and into the fridge overnight. It was a shared dish, so hostess would pre- cut it into individual portions and guests will help themselves, Served with home made horseradish ( strong enough to clear any head cold you might have) and dark rye bread.

  • @hollisticbomber2660
    @hollisticbomber2660 Рік тому +242

    Hello Jamie - I am a life long cook, and currently run a restaurant by the water. Your channel brings me so many ideas, so much joy, so much inspiration - I genuinely get excited to watch your content. I just made the cinnamon toast flan at the shop for the staff! (they loved it) Thanks for doing this.

  • @monik5693
    @monik5693 Рік тому +14

    Dear Jamie, as someone who passionately hates aspic since childhood I just want to tell you - you don’t have to like it! I’ve never eaten it and I don’t intend to start, however beautifully done, and believe me, both my grannies made real works of art, pictures made from meat and vegetables. (This Julia’s recipe is not even close to their endeavours.) So please next time when you decide to spend time and effort - just don’t taste it 😂

  • @rishansu
    @rishansu Рік тому +7

    I’m so glad YOU made it! Aspics are definitely outside of most peoples’ comfort zone. I myself have been dabbling with them to find where they might be “tasty” and “interesting.” So kudos to you!

  • @maryokeeffe3528
    @maryokeeffe3528 Рік тому +270

    I am really impressed by how your knife skills have improved over time, congratulations! As for aspic, it served a couple of purposes. Before gelatine was commercially available, you made your own aspic and used it to cover foods as a sort of primitive preservative for serving them cold. It also allowed you to create decorative dishes where the vegetables and meat pieces were suspended in jelly, so it looked impressive.And it adds moisture and flavour to foods. Aspic is not meant to be eaten on its own, any more than you'd eat a spoonful of pate or butter on its own. But it really is an acquired taste, and if you don't like it, then you don't like it and it's not your fault.

    • @SammyNail
      @SammyNail Рік тому +5

      does this mean im weird for eating pate on its own?

    • @bettyflipflop8823
      @bettyflipflop8823 Рік тому +6

      I love eating pate on its own.

    • @pallasproserpina4118
      @pallasproserpina4118 Рік тому +14

      on one hand, you're absolutely correct. on the other hand, I absolutely know people who would eat pate on its own

    • @unnaturalredhead1559
      @unnaturalredhead1559 Рік тому +8

      Don’t know what pate is but I have eaten straight butter before. Regretted it, yes, but not much.

    • @MrArgus11111
      @MrArgus11111 11 місяців тому +2

      @@SammyNail No. I don't see what's weird about that at all. It seems like a weird part of the list of things you should not eat alone. That said, it isn't typically served that way so. Yeah.

  • @hannakinn
    @hannakinn Рік тому +132

    I was a teenager in the 1970s and was exposed to fancy aspics as well as all of the weird jello dishes that were oh so trendy at that time. I actually really like meat broth based aspics. I might have grown to like them because they were usually so much better than the lemon lime tomato soup raw veggie jello mold dishes women so proudly served at every function involving food. I actually really love chicken livers. I'd gladly eat the lovely dish you made in this video. I would probably like it best without the port wine. I think my love of chicken livers is as a result of my mother making rumaki then developing her own version of it which was basically deconstructed rumaki over seasoned rice, so yummy. You did an excellent job of following Julia's recipe in this video. Your cooking skills have improved so much, it's awesome. I love watching you cut up whole chickens now like a boss. It was great watching you slay the egg white clarification method this time and so confidently too. It's always great to see how you learn from your previous mistakes so you don't repeat them, you're an intelligent man. I'm really happy that you finally named your food processor so I no longer have to feel weird about my concern for an inanimate object's feelings.

    • @lizcademy4809
      @lizcademy4809 Рік тому +12

      For the kids who don't know, rumaki was the classic 1979s cocktail party food. Take a chunk of chicken liver, half a canned water chestnut, wrap in bacon, spear with a toothpick. Broil until the liver and bacon are cooked. Serve next to an Old Fashioned with a whole fruit salad of garnish, or a gin martini.
      The rumaki actually aren't bad. Those parties though ... as a yuppie in the early 1980s, I went to far too many of them.

    • @lauramccoy8507
      @lauramccoy8507 Рік тому +2

      Oooo, rumakis sound yummy!

    • @cd3694
      @cd3694 Рік тому +1

      Lol, my mom made those tomato aspics. I hated them!

    • @mellie4174
      @mellie4174 Рік тому +1

      The chicken livers weren't the problem. He likes the mousse, he just doesn't like the aspic nor the combination of them together

    • @normarossi8843
      @normarossi8843 Рік тому +2

      Jamie, you ask would you eat this. NO

  • @LukaGoldbell
    @LukaGoldbell Рік тому +26

    Yes! I would 100% try this. I'm not terrified by aspic at all xD and I love the flavor of organ meat. There's probably some sort of texture element that's freaking you out with the aspic, since you keep calling it "meat jello", but its pretty much just coagulated stock. I'm sure it tastes wonderful! Love watching you tackle your fears though :D

    • @dmb5libra82
      @dmb5libra82 Рік тому +11

      Coagulated stock doesn't sound anymore appetizing, lol. But yeah, I think if you grew up with these things, this is a pretty fancy/neat dish!

    • @julienicol9202
      @julienicol9202 11 місяців тому

      It’s pretty much solid soup and I am honestly intrigued and kinda want to try it one day.

  • @natashalynn1425
    @natashalynn1425 Рік тому

    i’m new here and i loooooove your content lol i love that it’s just experimenting & raw. makes me want to get back in the kitchen😇

  • @tildessmoo
    @tildessmoo Рік тому +175

    Aspic definitely isn't for everyone (and adding wine straight to cold aspic definitely made me raise an eyebrow). It's a weird combination of familiar flavors and textures: a fortified stock chilled, or, like you said, meat jello. It's not so much a matter of an immature palate (I'm pretty sure an immature palate wouldn't have liked the first two French Laundry dishes you made, or a number of Julia's for that matter) as it is completely subverting your expectations of what flavors and textures ought to go together in the late 20th and early 21st centuries. If you can get past that, it's an amazing new experience; if you can't, it's disgusting.
    Honestly, I think this is probably as good an introduction to aspic as you can find, outside of just eating cold leftover potroast or gefilte fish and seeing if you prefer either one with or without the gel. If you don't like it, you don't like it, and that's up to your own personal preferences. Personally, I'm certain I wouldn't like this dish either, though not because of the aspic (it's not my favorite thing ever, but I'm not disgusted by it either), but because of the mousse. One of the things I've had to accept about my own palate is that, as much as I want to like everything, I just hate the iron-y flavor of blood and liver, so I can't eat black pudding, sundae (Korean blood sausage), liver and onions, or liver pate or mousse. (The closest I've come to liking liver was actually the veal liver from Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Vol. 1, which has enough mustard flavor to mostly overpower the relatively mild liver flavor from calf liver. Also my first experience with a Julia Child recipe, and my kitchen was a _wreck_ at the end.)

    • @lizcademy4809
      @lizcademy4809 Рік тому +10

      We wrote almost identical comment ... except I don't mind the taste of liver. [Chopped liver on a good Jewish rye brad? Yummy, once a year.]

    • @Setixir
      @Setixir Рік тому +6

      I eat pretty much anything except for three things. Cilantro... Which I'm unfortunately victim to the gene that makes it taste like soap so it's utterly repulsive. Olives, which I have tried to eat and enjoy in a variety of ways but just cannot get the taste for. Aspic... Which I just... Can't. I've come to terms with that reality, sad as it is. Well sad for the olives and cilantro. I don't think I'd miss aspic that much

    • @aileenbell6750
      @aileenbell6750 Рік тому +4

      My mom had a famous story that when pregnant with me, she craved liverwurst for the only time in her life. You would think that would make me love liver, but alas, no. 😝

    • @ADONISxxx
      @ADONISxxx Рік тому +2

      10/10 input

    • @tildessmoo
      @tildessmoo Рік тому +2

      @@lizcademy4809 Yeah, I was a real buzzkill at Rosh haShanah parties. (Worse: honey, apples, and raisin challah all at once? I have a definite sweet tooth, but that's just too much.) On the bright side, my misspent youth nauseated by anything remotely non-well-done-meat in meat has given way to a love of bone-in chicken, rare lamb, and tendon-and-tripe pho.

  • @bluewinkle123
    @bluewinkle123 Рік тому +89

    To toil and cook for hours on end to create a dish you know you will hate only to end with peanut butter on bread is why I watch your channel. This series has taught us all so much about why poor kids who were served aspic for dinner in the 40s and 50s went to bed hungry. Thank you for creating this wonderful record of these dishes.

  • @MistiPatrella
    @MistiPatrella Рік тому +1

    I love your honesty about these recipes. This show is hilarious AND informative. Thank you so much. :D Appreciate your courage!

  • @kimmeshelter
    @kimmeshelter Рік тому +3

    I was born in 1970. Aspic and Jell-O salads were the sign of an amazing bridal shower. Extra points if marshmallow were involved.

  • @mandyb7277
    @mandyb7277 Рік тому +36

    I love that you always say, “I hope everyone’s ok.” When you hear sirens outside.

  • @rudetuesday
    @rudetuesday Рік тому +21

    I was a child during the last gasp of aspic in the 1970s. It's difficult to acquire a taste for it without a lot of help, though I've long thought of it as more of an appearance thing than a taste thing. All that glistening. Imagine it on lovely plates by candlelight, for example.
    I prefer liver pâté to mousse. The spread texture's nice on very good bread, with some cornichons or chutney. Good on you for giving this one a go!

    • @beachspirit2455
      @beachspirit2455 Рік тому +2

      Yes please pate not mousse...a texture thing probably. Made a fabulous organic free range turkey liver pate at last T day- yum!

  • @carinetang776
    @carinetang776 10 місяців тому

    This video was so charming and entertaining, with several laughs at the end there - I love you Anti-Chef! PS. I would definitely choose the peanut butter on the baguette over liver pate with aspic! Au revoir from South Australia.

  • @waldenae
    @waldenae Рік тому

    I was literally scrolling down to suggest "Professor Processor" as you came up with it! Great minds...

  • @Starlysh
    @Starlysh Рік тому +48

    The first aspic video is how I found this channel. What a journey it's been! Aspic still looks gross.
    Welcome to the cast, Professor Processor!

    • @itzel1735
      @itzel1735 Рік тому +2

      P.P. is a good nickname. 😅
      I call my food processor Whizzy.

  • @abracadaverous
    @abracadaverous Рік тому +113

    Liking or disliking aspic doesn't really have to do with having a mature palate. You may not like the flavor, texture, or maybe you had a bad memory of that food, etc. Nearly everybody has some things they just don't like. The problem is when other people take someone else's dislike of a food that they like as a personal affront.
    Have you ever told somebody "I don't like mouse butt" and they immediately say, "I'm going to cook you some mouse butt because you'll like it the way I make it," and then you don't like it, because it's still mouse butt, and then they get offended? It's okay to not like some foods, and it's okay to let other people not like some foods. Just eat something everyone likes! There are a million things to eat that aren't aspic. Or mouse butt. Or mouse butt in aspic.

    •  Рік тому +8

      Mouse butt 😂😂😂😂

    • @mattshu
      @mattshu Рік тому +5

      Gotta know where you’re gettin the mouse butt from. Location matters

    • @ValeriePallaoro
      @ValeriePallaoro Рік тому +2

      @ Oh ... thanks, cause I read moose butt
      like chicken liver mousse but out of moose butt. So, thanks for setting me straight
      Hilarious tho

    • @TrappedinSLC
      @TrappedinSLC Рік тому +3

      If I ever find my missing mouse chocolate molds, I am going to do some kind of molded something in them in a plate of aspic in honor of this comment. 😂

    • @beanieweenietapioca
      @beanieweenietapioca Рік тому +5

      Look, everyone is so down on mouse butt, it's because you're getting factory farmed, tinned mouse butts. There's just no substitute for free range, grass fed mouse butt.
      If you have a vegan butcher shop in your neighborhood, do yourself a favor and ask about their mouse butts

  • @kajsahanses6100
    @kajsahanses6100 Рік тому

    YES that pb is the pallet cleanser that one would need after this !
    As always highly entertaining!
    Greetings from Norway

  • @himynameisjeff
    @himynameisjeff 3 місяці тому

    Looks incredible! Im new to your channel, im excited to check out your catalog of videos!

  • @ransomcoates546
    @ransomcoates546 Рік тому +21

    The aspic was not jellied enough. In classic dishes it is cubed and used as a garnish. If you want to try one more time, you’ll probably like chaud-foid better.

    • @bec_r_r
      @bec_r_r Рік тому +5

      Yes I agree, the aspic needed to be more solid. I was thinking the aspic is more of a decoration perhaps to tell diners it’s a cold dish idk. I would think the aspic may be eat by placing a little on your tongue and allowing it to melt releasing the flavours like a sauce but I don’t think you are meant to eat a whole lot. Back in those days people used gelatine a lot, It was a cheap and plentiful ingredient. People must have been fascinated by it being able to hold shapes.

  • @henlokitty3358
    @henlokitty3358 Рік тому +42

    I' m from Czechia and i grew up eating aspic with boiled eggs, pickles, ham, pickled peppers and other stuff. It tastes delicious, fresh and the aspic is a bit sour and more firm.
    We even have tlačenka (kinda like polish salceson) which is similar to meat jelly. Im pretty sure you´d like it, we eat it with some water mixed with vinegar, black pepper and raw onion and bread.

  • @blx77321
    @blx77321 Рік тому +2

    My husband and I love this channel, it's our favourite 😂

  • @dorinachan113
    @dorinachan113 Рік тому +1

    I am watching you today as I am home sick and I think you are comedy gold. thank you for the laughs and the really great try of this dish. :)

  • @michaeltres
    @michaeltres Рік тому +31

    I have made the two parts of this dish on many occasions, liver mousse and chicken in aspic, and I love them both. Maybe it's because I'm from the South, where we make a lot of chilled dishes to combat the heat. I'm also crazy for liver. I could probably eat a pound of foie gras in one sitting, if I could afford it. As for peanut butter, you might have heard that La Julia did not like airplane food so she always packed her own lunch, often a peanut butter and honey sandwich.

    • @itzel1735
      @itzel1735 Рік тому

      Exactly. I can understand the appeal of a chilled dish in the summer.
      Even before refrigeration, iceboxes would keep it cool.

  • @hatjodelka
    @hatjodelka Рік тому +97

    I can never understand why creations in aspic were once so popular. I think people ate it because they didn't want to appear unsophisticated. It's the culinary version of the Emperor's New Clothes.

    • @tallgrasslanestitches6635
      @tallgrasslanestitches6635 Рік тому +34

      Before the age of refrigeration, it was an effective way to keep some foods longer. It’s also a way to use more of the whole animal and get all the nutrition possible out of an animal, because you make aspic (traditionally, at least), by boiling bones like crazy. Nowadays, I suspect most North American palates can’t quite deal with a non-sweet jelly taste/texture combo. I’m guessing that if a person grew up with it, it wouldn’t be a big deal.
      Having said all that…I’ve never tried an aspic dish, but I strongly suspect I wouldn’t enjoy it either 😊

    • @Trish.Norman
      @Trish.Norman Рік тому +3

      Meat jello. Just no!

    • @bubblegumplastic
      @bubblegumplastic Рік тому +10

      I genuinely love it, so I guess it's just a matter of growing up with it or not

    • @GrammarSplaining
      @GrammarSplaining Рік тому +5

      Congealed liquid fat. I think it's another one of those country dishes that went uptown and put on fancy airs.

    • @petervansan1054
      @petervansan1054 Рік тому +1

      @@Trish.Norman yes please, I love aspic

  • @juneb4683
    @juneb4683 Рік тому +1

    genuinely that looks so good and the first aspic looked so good too i need to find a place to try this stuff. it's like right up my alley, i think.

  • @mariodimaio9291
    @mariodimaio9291 9 місяців тому

    I used to work as a waiter and served liver mousse and pates in aspic. I never ate them and have since stopped eating meat altogether. This was a great effort. I’m so glad I recently found you.

  • @mattshu
    @mattshu Рік тому +11

    after a year of watching your videos I still have no idea how you do the "bowl me!" cuts

  • @constances9753
    @constances9753 Рік тому +75

    You’re a brave, brave chef Jamie. I wouldn’t go near this recipe much less try to prepare it and eat it!

  • @user-hc9rl5hd2f
    @user-hc9rl5hd2f 10 місяців тому +2

    You tackling Julia's aspics is comedy gold every time. The "I'm not drivin'" bit never gets old..

  • @anjuneko
    @anjuneko 11 місяців тому +3

    Aspic seems to be the type of food that was reserved for times when better food wasn't available, or you grew up loving

  • @thetinysideoftiny7625
    @thetinysideoftiny7625 Рік тому +51

    Aspic is comedy gold. I help teach a high school food history class and the mid-century aspics are my favorite. The reaction from the kids is uncontrollable laughter with an equal measure of disgust. I can’t believe people actually ate aspic and thought it was good or at least chic.
    I love it when you tackle aspic Jamie!! The gaging and contorted expressions put me on the floor lol.
    I did think this one might be at least edible…but no 😂

    • @azblurbit
      @azblurbit Рік тому +6

      I remember reading that aspic was only considered gourmet because gelatin was once food for nobles because it required so much effort and time to extract. Then mid 20th century, gelatin became easily mass-produced and cheap and society just went wild with power

  • @kaybrown4010
    @kaybrown4010 Рік тому +37

    Seeing the words “deranged” and “aspic” in the same sentence from Jamie = Instant thumbs up. 👍🏻
    Edit: No. Hell no. I would never eat that. Sorry you didn’t love it.

  • @brianhudson4013
    @brianhudson4013 Рік тому

    What's the music you use in the intro for the Cooking from All Countries series? I can't find it and it's driving me crazy.

  • @melsyoutube
    @melsyoutube Рік тому +1

    silver fox, big bertha, charlotte mould, angry fridge, mandolin, the spatula twins charlie & snowman, vacuuming neighbor, the spinning bowls, dead snail, and now professor processor!

  • @marchi.fleming
    @marchi.fleming Рік тому +20

    I've had an **incredibly** bad 2 days & even tho inducing belly laughs is *probably* not your top goal, I cannot tell you how much I needed this & how much it raised my spirits 😂😂 . You are an absolute treasure.👍🏼😊
    (Oh & ftr...I don't exactly relish aspic but being Jewish, if I never see chicken liver ANYTHING ever again it'll be too soon. Bring on the meat jelly, all day long lol)

  • @spoonierv1543
    @spoonierv1543 Рік тому +11

    So the thing is I love pate, liver mousse, etc. I just made the Julia Child chicken liver mousse which was my first time making any of these kinds of things, and I was so overwhelmingly happy to have 16 oz of mousse for like $4 instead of $15+ from the store. I would eat it and be so happy!
    Oh the port was overpowering? I didn’t boil it off from the mousse! 😂 It was soooo good and sooo alcohol.

  • @ellenf7056
    @ellenf7056 9 місяців тому

    I grew up with aspic in the 50s, but it was tomato aspic. Then Jello introduced their savory gelatin products... Never exactly knew what to do with those. Anyway, glad you tried it again, your technique is admirable. Your inability to connect with aspic is just one of those things. Not to worry, because you accorded the recipe so much respect. Good to watch.

  • @SherriSLC
    @SherriSLC 9 місяців тому +1

    It's a ridiculous amount of effort for something I would not eat. Thanks for your service!

  • @annakout
    @annakout Рік тому +9

    I grew up eating aspic and I was never a fan of it but I’ll still eat it. Good for you for giving it another try but I do highly recommend finding someone of the Slavic/Eastern European community to make it for you. if done correctly, it is good.

  • @LeoFieTv
    @LeoFieTv 10 місяців тому +2

    Imagine looking at the glibber that sometimes happens at the edges of canned sausage and thinking: More of that please!

  • @peredhillover1
    @peredhillover1 6 місяців тому

    I enjoy your presentation so much. Thank you for entertaining me.

  • @pjef1956
    @pjef1956 Рік тому +13

    ANOTHER gem !! Thank you, Jamie, for more hearty laughs ... there's gotta be some sort of award for your type of video. It's not really a cooking show, per se. It's more of a documentary about your journey, plus your comedic talent and your movie-making and editing skills. The whole package, so to speak. BTW, when your episode's title makes me LOL, I KNOW it's gonna be another good one !!

  • @jennifergaston
    @jennifergaston Рік тому +7

    It’s ok James. I too am container/measurement challenged. I always think that I have the right sized container for leftovers and I usually have to get a bigger one and wash the first one 😮

  • @Insightfulgrass
    @Insightfulgrass 3 місяці тому

    Putting in the w bay leaves and going “I’m not driving” is the best thing I’ve seen on the internet ever 😂😂😂 makes my day every time I hear it

  • @tortillawrap6955
    @tortillawrap6955 Рік тому

    Theres an aspic i sometimes see in the cold cuts section of my local supermarket which is just veggies in the jello, kinda looks like slices of giardiniera.. Ive been tempted but never dared to try!

  • @qqLela
    @qqLela Рік тому +5

    Yay! New upload just in time for my weekend relaxation to begin ❤ keep up the amazing work

  • @PainflyErect
    @PainflyErect Рік тому +11

    How aren't you over 1M yet? Honestly, the comedy with cooking is great.

  • @zillionalb462
    @zillionalb462 11 місяців тому +1

    I was raised on aspic - don't know if I could stomach it if I hadn't been but now aspic on a bread roll with some dill pickle or mustard is an absolute comfort food

  • @snafooed
    @snafooed 4 місяці тому

    At the end I was wondering what you were wearing on your feet to make that sound. Thanks for preemptively answering my inner monologue lol

  • @justme0910
    @justme0910 Рік тому +22

    Aspic can actually be really good ... if you don't mess it up by overcomplicating it as the French are wont to do. In Germany, a very plain version of aspic (basically just water, gelatin, vinegar, sugar and salt) with chicken breast, turkey, beef or pickled vegetables and cut into slices is a popular type of lunch meat.
    It's one of my favorites. Tastes a lot like that sweet and sour sauce they serve at Chinese restaurants, only cold.
    The simplicity is what makes it work. I don't understand why people thought that aspic should be savory, booze-flavored meat jello instead.

    • @laurastenberg1311
      @laurastenberg1311 Рік тому +3

      I grew up near a big Dutch immigrant enclave in the US and the dish you're describing sounds a lot like what I know as head cheese! Lol I hated it as a child but I'd love to give it another go as an adult.

    • @Exeeter1234
      @Exeeter1234 Рік тому

      "are wont to do"
      uughhh.....

    • @glitteriable
      @glitteriable Рік тому +9

      @@Exeeter1234 i see u aren't wont to use varying grammar constructs

    • @7Nine7
      @7Nine7 Рік тому

      Yeah i really loved the german version! Now that I am vegetarian, maybe I need to do my own veg version of it.

    • @Lalucia
      @Lalucia Рік тому

      I am also German and in the 70ties we had aspic in the evening to put in on bread (another option with sausages and cheese). My father and my grandma obviously liked it. I as a kid could never understand that. It looked and tasted gross. Yikes 😝
      As we in Germany say: "Damit kannst du mich jagen!" Meaning: "I wouldn't eat this if you paid me!"
      And that never changed.
      Today I don't know anyone who would eat it.

  • @JimsKitschKitchen
    @JimsKitschKitchen Рік тому +11

    Gotta love an aspic!!!! I made a jellied chicken aspic- certainly memorable- not for good reasons

  • @robertkeffer3361
    @robertkeffer3361 Рік тому +4

    Jamie, you brought a tear to my eye. I'm proud of you. A few things:
    Your aspic was too dark with wine and needed more geletan. It should have been diced into small cubes.
    The chicken could have been trimmed better and covered with a white chaud froid sauce, and then the clear aspic. That's the classic way.
    Finally, aspic is only as good as the stock you make it out of. Yours was nice and clear, but perhaps could have had more flavor.
    I made this type of dish once with the chaud froid and aspic chicken stuffed with a chicken ham mousse. It was a two day affair, and people raved about its delicate flavor. They even liked the aspic cubes!
    Some people don't like aspic no matter how professionaly made, and that is fine. But I still think you may like it made by a trained chef. Whose to say?
    At any rate, an entertaining and informative episode as always.😊😊

  • @KarynHill
    @KarynHill Рік тому

    I would try it. I don't like liver but there are things I didn't like but grew to like over time. I wouldn't expect to like it but I'm open.
    I'm looking forward to future introductions of the Prof!

  • @moontoad6412
    @moontoad6412 Рік тому +10

    This might be the gelatin you ate growing up if you're "old enough." I grew up eating traditional Lithuanian food and they put random fish chunks in aspic, and random beef chunks in aspic, both also had some cooked carrot in there. The aspic was unflavored. I was not a fan as a kid, but I'd eat the beef one now. I am allergic to fish, imagine every Xmas eve celebration (we celebrate xmas on xmas eve, xmas day is a day for visiting people) and it's an all fish no meat meal. That fish aspic showed up sometimes, not often, it was more of an every day food. I wonder what you'd think of it.

  • @louiselage7740
    @louiselage7740 Рік тому +4

    Don't think I would like it either, Jamie...something about aspic ...back in the 70s my Mum decided to be adventurous and made an entire jellied meal for supper one hot Manitoba July. We all just looked at it all...veg in tomato aspic, some kind of flaked chicken in herbed lemon/lime aspic, and for dessert...orange jellied fruit salad with marshmallows, of course. It all went in the bin...we ate PB & J, and cheese sandwiches instead. Poor Mum....lol

  • @GoldenRtvrs18
    @GoldenRtvrs18 2 місяці тому

    The "I'm not driving" every time you double-up on something 🤣

  • @marthalorden8498
    @marthalorden8498 Рік тому

    Stellar video. Panache, style, and skilled prep!

  • @fancyfaceb
    @fancyfaceb Рік тому +6

    Honestly, I love aspic. What grossed me out about that was the sad cold white chicken. YUCK. The chicken liver moose and aspic looked delicious. Next time add some mustard on it. Delicious! I also agree that wine didn't belong in the aspic. Next time make it without the wine, and make sure it's well seasoned (it tones down when cold), add some herbs (we do basil) when you cook it with the gelatin and you'll be good to go. Aspic is just cold broth, it's not that scary. Yes, you add gelatin to it, but if you cooked your stock with enough bones/tendon/cartilage, you wouldn't need the gelatin.

    • @dougr.2245
      @dougr.2245 Рік тому +1

      I don't think Jamie cooked the alcohol out of the wine in the aspic. That might be why the taste was too strong & fought with the other flavors.

  • @calloway2109
    @calloway2109 Рік тому +3

    I love it when he says "I'm not driving."

  • @AuhidaChowdhury
    @AuhidaChowdhury 5 місяців тому +1

    I think the black things on the chicken liver are capers. If you fry them up, they add a nice crunchy pop and can top almost anything. Even...this.

  • @marksizer3486
    @marksizer3486 11 місяців тому

    It looks great! Better than the picture, even. I would not eat it, though. I tried meat jello (холодесц) in Moscow, years ago. Never again. There was a bit of editing, but I'm impressed with your chicken butchering skills! You've come a long way.

  • @lauramccoy8507
    @lauramccoy8507 Рік тому +9

    You did a lot better this time, no retching!😂 I don't mind aspic on or in things like pork pies and pate, but when you were talking about it and you said you didn't like the wine taste as it's kind of overpowering I realised that I think all of the aspic I've tried is just plain meat, or at least perhaps mildly flavoured with other things. Perhaps if I tried Julia's version I wouldn't like it either as its mostly set, meaty wine.

  • @Aleph-Noll
    @Aleph-Noll Рік тому +9

    THE MAD LAD DID ASPIC AGAIN

  • @rainbowtvz
    @rainbowtvz Рік тому +1

    i would love to see you make things a second time on camera just to see how you put your own spin into the dish. i watch this with my gf and we always make comments on how we would season and cook things differently.

  • @lucidality
    @lucidality 5 місяців тому

    Big Bertha is what my high school band referred to our 50 year old concert bass drum. She was our oldest piece of equipment and highly respected, for obvious reason

  • @maximiliandort3489
    @maximiliandort3489 Рік тому +6

    Honestly i can't imagine you saw the pic for this recipe and wen't "Yep, that's something i really wanna try!". There's just no way that happened, so i appreciate you trying this weird aspic stuff even more.

  • @sharendonnelly7770
    @sharendonnelly7770 Рік тому +6

    Yep, I'd eat that, it looks delicious! But, I grew up eating the gelatin that forms around cold chicken that has been stewed. Was a treat! If aspic isn't your favorite, it's understandable, especially if you were introduced to it as an adult, or the texture is off-putting. The French bread seemed perfect for the dish, good choice.

    • @GrammarSplaining
      @GrammarSplaining Рік тому

      That's the stuff I always melt down before eating it.

  • @alicetwain
    @alicetwain Рік тому

    When you add the bayleaf, give a couple cracks on the edge of each leaf (from the margin to the center spine). It will release more flavor.

  • @cutecat2165
    @cutecat2165 Рік тому

    I don't like gelatinous textures but would have def tried that..just with out the added extra aspic

  • @Milli8975
    @Milli8975 Рік тому +7

    Being German and always having chicken breast Florida style (chicken in aspic with tangerines of pineapple) at home, I can confidently say: Yes! Yes I would absoloutly eat that

    • @bonniehowell9206
      @bonniehowell9206 5 місяців тому

      I'm a Floridian and never heard of this! Now I'm intrigued

    • @Milli8975
      @Milli8975 5 місяців тому

      @@bonniehowell9206 I think it's just called that because someone thought it sounded fancy:P

  • @nokomarie1963
    @nokomarie1963 Рік тому +25

    Oh, Jamie. Looking at that picture, Your chicken liver mold needed to be about a cup (and tarragon?! Nutmeg, maybe). The chicken breasts needed to be split lengthwise to make four nicely-shaped servings. The aspic needed to be cooked down enough so that it totaled no more than two cups and half allowed to set to a firm, choppable glaze, the other half used to glaze the chicken. Not so much a hearty feed but a dainty luncheon entree to impress the hell out of your ladies' bridge club with. Still, I honor your determination. Hats off!

  • @theultimateusukfan
    @theultimateusukfan Рік тому

    i would genuinely try this. i havent had aspic or meat mousse before so im curious

  • @gaetan4164
    @gaetan4164 4 місяці тому

    I grew up in France. Every year on January 1st my mother would make some aspic with hard-boiled eggs, canned asparagus, ham and so on. I've always loved it. I love the light but still salty and refreshing taste of it. It was great after an evening of heavy party food. The texture doesn't bother me at all. Great memories.

  • @Nachopm88
    @Nachopm88 Рік тому +4

    My grandma used to do pheasant paté with gelatin and it was delicious i kinda think it would be something similar to this?

    • @dougr.2245
      @dougr.2245 Рік тому +2

      Grandmas dish sounds great!!!