Willan's Recipes

25903Anne Willan has quietly made a significant international contribution as both a teacher and a cookbook author specializing in French cuisine for over 35 years. With the support of Julia Child, Willan opened the La Varenne Cooking School in Paris in 1975. In the mid-1970s, as Willan writes in her memoir, “French cuisine was becoming a portal by which Americans were rediscovering the culinary arts after a long dormant period that began in the 1930s with the taming of vegetables in cans, followed by the 1950s and frozen foods. Julia had opened the front and led the battle, and now La Varenne was the place people could have the Julia Child experience, a working laboratory of classical French cuisine.”

As recent guests of the UC San Diego Library, Willan and co-author Amy Friedman offered morsels from Willan’s autobiography, “One Souffle at a Time: A Memoir of Food and France.” Together, they share stories, pictures and secret ingredients to a life well-lived.

With the cooking season upon us, how about trying one Willan’s delicious recipes that you can find here: La Varenne Cooking. Or check out our favorites below: Happy Holidays everyone!

roast-leg-of-lambRoast Leg of Lamb with White Beans

Roast leg of lamb is the French cook’s pride, paraded for guests, or a birthday, or for family Sunday lunch. To make the most of this expensive cut, a gigot is invariably cooked on the bone, with a clove of garlic tucked into the shank so it permeates the whole roast. The meat may be spiked with more garlic and herbs, and is basted with butter to ensure a golden finish and tasty gravy.

Serves 6 to 8

One 4- to 5-pound/about 2-kilogram leg of lamb

[Read Full Recipe]

 

Winter-Salad-of-Counrty-Ham-with-Beets-Endive-and-Lambs-LettuceWinter Salad of Country Ham

Endive and lamb’s lettuce are among the treats of winter, a glimpse of green among the seasonal roots on the vegetable stand. Teamed with beets for color and hazelnuts for crunch, they are a classic French combination, delicious with thinly sliced Virginia or Smithfield ham, or some imported prosciutto.

Serves 4 for supper

70g/2½oz/½ cup hazelnuts

450g/1lb cooked baby beets

[Read Full Recipe]

 

Volcanic-Apples-editVolcanic Apples 

These apples are hollowed to the shape of a volcano so they take more stuffing, hence their name in our family. For the filling, I’m calling for muesli as it is so easy to find, but you’ll save a bit of time if you use granola, which is already toasted.  Simply mix it with the other ingredients. You’ll need a tart variety of apple that will be fluffy and juicy when baked; traditional favorites are Rome Beauty or McIntosh (Cox’s or Reine de Reinettes in theUK), though you can always fall back on the ubiquitous Granny Smith.

Serves 4

[Read Full Recipe]

 

Join the conversation on Twitter @UCTelevision, @AnneWillan, & @ucsdlibrary

Books That Changed America with Jay Parini

756UCTV is proud to announce the launching of  UC San Diego’s Library Channel. Our first spotlighted program is Books That Changed America with Jay Parini — Dinner in the Library.

Renowned author and Middlebury College Professor Jay Parini offers a compelling narrative on the evolution of the American psyche with selections from his “Promised Land: Thirteen Books That Changed America.” Parini was the keynote speaker at the UC San Diego Library’s “Dinner in the Library,” which takes place annually in Geisel Library.

Parini explains, “These thirteen books must be seen as representative, not definitive, works. They are nodal 25715points, places where vast areas of thought and feeling gathered and dispersed, creating a nation as various and vibrant as the United States, which must be considered one of the most successful nation-states in modern history, and a republic built firmly on ideas, which are contained in its major texts. Where we have been must, of course, determine where we are going. My hope is that this book helps to show us where we have been and engenders a lively conversation about our destination, which seems perpetually in dispute.”
—from Promised Land

Jay Parini’s 13 books that changed America:

1. “Of Plymouth Plantation,” William Bradford

2. “The Federalist Papers,” Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay

3. “The Autobiography of Benjamin Franklin”

4. “The Journals of Lewis and Clark,” Meriwether Lewis and William Clark

5. “Walden,” Henry David Thoreau

6. “Uncle Tom’s Cabin,” Harriet Beecher Stowe

7. “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn,” Mark Twain

8. “The Souls of Black Folk,” W.E.B. Du Bois

9. “The Promised Land,” Nicholas Lemann

10. “How to Win Friends and Influence People,” Dale Carnegie

11. “The Common Sense Book on Baby and Child Care,” Dr. Benjamin Spock

12. “On the Road,” Jack Kerouac

13. “The Feminine Mystique,” Betty Friedan

 

Join the conversation: @UCTelevision & @ucsdlibrary

November – News & Highlights

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Featured This Month
Program Highlights
New to Video On-Demand


FEATURED THIS MONTH

The Atlantic Meets the Pacific

Recorded during a 3-day forum hosted by UC San Diego and The Atlantic, this series brings together the world’s top thought leaders in health, technology and innovation including: Deepak Chopra, Eric Topol, Clifton Leaf, Roni Zeiger, Chris Anderson and more.

New Episodes available throughout the month.

Don’t want to wait?

Watch them all now

New Channel Explores the Brain

Explore the world of neuroscience and the secrets of the brain. William C. Mobley, Distinguished Professor and Chair of the Department of Neurosciences at UCSD, is your guide – interviewing renowned experts and reporting on innovations. Discover how the brain works, technologies to harness brain power, ways to treat disease, and more.

Visit the Brain Channel

New Treatments for Stroke

Every 45 seconds, someone in the US has a stroke. What are the warning signs and how do you know you if you are at risk? Dr. Alexander Khalessi, Director of Endovascular Neurosurgery and Surgical Director of Neurocritical Care, joins Dr. David Granet to discuss how to recognize a stroke, preventative measures, and innovation surgical treatment options.

Innovations in the Treatment of Stroke – Health Matters

Premieres November 21 at 8pm

The Power of Practicing Dignity in Healthcare – Research on Aging

Lori Montross, PhD suggests defining care as a verb. She defines care and dignity and how the two concepts are related. Learn how how dignity therapy fits into the care model and what innovations in care are on the horizon.

When Everyone Deserves to Have Their Story Heard: The Power of Practicing Dignity in Healthcare – Research on Aging

Premieres November 14 at 8pm


PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS

All programs repeat throughout the month. Visit the Program Schedule on our web site for additional air dates and times.

Health & Medicine

Dietary Fats: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly

Integrating Complementary and Conventional Therapies in Cancer Care

More >>

Science

On Beyond: Superconductivity, Neanderthal Genetics, the Black Widow

Distant Worlds: Making Images of Other Solar Systems

More >>

Public Affairs

Drones and Other UAVs: Benefits and Risks — Exploring Ethics

More >>

Arts & Music Arts & Music

La Jolla Music Society SummerFest: Musical Crossroads

A Masked Ball – San Diego OperaTalk

More >>

Humanities

The Literary Imagination with Jonathan Lethem and Kim Stanley Robinson

The Poems of Billy Collins — Point Loma Writer’s Symposium By the Sea 2013

more >>

Check out the latest additions to our online video archive

Insufficient Sleep – Health Matters

Manta Rays: Majestic and Threatened Icons

More videos and podcasts>>

The Atlantic Meets The Pacific 2013

tamtpThe Atlantic and UC San Diego has once again teamed up to host The Atlantic Meets the Pacific, a must-attend event for top thought leaders in technology, the sciences, and health. Striking at the heart of health technology and innovation, this year’s event united scientists, engineers, business leaders, culinary experts, physicians, writers, and policymakers to discuss topics ranging from wireless health technologies and leaps in longevity research to the history of cancer and new approaches to food policy. Gathering in San Diego, one of the world’s nerve centers for breakthroughs in nanotechnology, cancer research, and medical device engineering, the program showcases progress being made on the frontier of health research and IT and critically examines the best policies and practices for bringing these innovations to life.

25779Cancer was a big topic at The Atlantic Meets the Pacific this year. In ”How Far Away is a Cure for Cancer?” Clifton Leaf, the author of “The Truth in Small Doses: Why We’re Losing the War on Cancer and How to Win It,” talks withThe Atlantic’s Steve Clemons about the future of cancer research. Siddhartha Mukherjee, author of “The Emperor of All Maladies” discusses with Clemons about what it’s like to take his best-selling book on the history of cancer to television in this live Skype interview.

In an innovative technology panel, “Domestic Drones: The Next Decade of American Airspace” Chris Anderson, the former Editor-in-Chief of Wired and now CEO of 3-D tamtp living longerRobotics, talks with The Atlantic’s James Fallows about the role of drones for civilian uses. In the healthcare arena, taking responsibility for one’s body is the common theme among three visionaries in personal health in “Living Longer, Living Smarter: Innovations in Longevity Research.” Larry Smarr of Calit2 joins Deborah Szekely, the co-founder of the highly acclaimed Rancho La Puerta wellness center and Kunal Sarkar, the CEO of the brain-trainer Lumosity for an invigorating conversation with The Atlantic’s Megan Garber and Corby Kummer.

If you enjoyed these panels, browse the full list of programs in The Atlantic Meets the Pacific 2013 series.

Join the conversation: @ATLANTIC_Live, @UCtelevision, #TAMTP

La Jolla Music Society SummerFest: Musical Crossroads

Enjoy the last moments of Summer with UCSD-TV’s coverage of this year’s La Jolla Music Society’s SummerFest!

UCSD-TV has been filming this annual three week festival of chamber music since 1999 and archives of these past performances can be found in our La Jolla Music Society’s SummerFest Series.

This year’s SummerFest did not disappoint with world premieres by three Pulitzer Prize-winning American composers: Steven Stucky, David Del Tredici and John Harbison.

Watch “La Jolla Music Society SummerFest: Musical Crossroads” to also see the “Sonata for Two Pianos and Percussion” by Hungarian composer Bela Bartok.

Watch other great chamber music concerts in the La Jolla Music Society’s SummerFest Series.