Judith Jones, Editor
A new biography tells the story of the legendary book editor. Plus: A recipe from Judith Jones x Julia Child.
You think you know a person...and then you start reading the galley of Sara B. Franklin’s THE EDITOR and realize just how much you still have to learn about her subject (and one of my heroes), Judith Jones.
The word “legend” is often attached to Jones, and she deserves it. She’s perhaps remembered most for two things.
She retrieved a copy of The Diary of a Young Girl (published in the Netherlands in 1947) from a reject pile while working in the Paris office of Doubleday. Judith championed its 1952 publication in America with the new title Anne Frank: The Diary of a Young Girl.
And early in her career at Alfred A. Knopf, Jones saw the value in the 800-page manuscript of Mastering the Art of French Cooking. She became Julia Child’s editor and friend and Mastering was a groundbreaking success.
But, wow, there’s so much more to Judith’s richly interesting life and Sara B. Franklin has shared it in her book. It’s a compelling and poignant portrait.
Ms. Franklin interviewed, spent time with and befriended Judith Jones starting in 2013. When Ms. Jones died in 2017 at the age 93, her stepdaughter, Bronwyn Dunne, gave access to Judith’s papers, correspondence and notes to Ms. Franklin.
The work of John Updike, Anne Tyler, Sylvia Plath, Edna Lewis, Madhur Jaffrey, Marcella Hazan, Claudia Roden,Joan Nathan — the list goes on and on — all bore the marks of Judith Jones’ green editing pencil.
And the support and care for the writers Jones shepherded was genuine.
As Ms. Franklin rightly asserts, Judith Jones influenced American culture over the course of her sixty-year career in publishing.
The publication date for THE EDITOR is scheduled for May 28, 2024 and is currently available for pre-order: HERE
Thank you to Atria Books/Simon & Schuster for graciously providing the galley to me.
I’ll be writing a guest post in March for Elizabeth Held’s
about Judith Jones and her memoir The Tenth Muse: My Life in Food, so stay tuned.Judith Jones, The Pleasures of Cooking for One, 2009
In the introduction to Judith Jones 2009 book The Pleasures of Cooking for One she writes this:
After my husband, Evan, died in 1996, I was not sure that I would ever enjoy preparing a meal for myself and eating alone. But as I described in The Tenth Muse: My Life in Food, I was wrong, and I soon realized that the pleasure that we shared together was something to honor.
Evan and Judith had been married since 1951.
Judith continues:
I found myself at the end of the day looking forward to cooking, making recipes that work for one, and then sitting down and savoring a good meal.
I love this book and besides the great recipes I also love the photos and the way Judith set a pretty table every evening for herself.
I’ve adapted her very simple Baked Eggs recipe and given them the Julia Child treatment (cooked in a water bath “Bain-Marie”) and made Oeufs en Cocotte. I had what I’ve come to call one of my “Cutting Board Lunches” and made it fancy, just for myself.
Recipe:
1 cups of fresh spinach, wilted
1/4 cup of Gruyère (or whatever cheese you have on hand) grated
2 tbsp. cream
2 large eggs
Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Butter an 8 oz. cocotte or ramekin. Place wilted (microwaved) spinach at the base of the ramekin and add 2 tbsp. cream. Place half of the grated cheese over spinach. Place cocotte/ramekin in a pan of simmering water (water should be about halfway up) and let it heat the ingredients a bit. Then, make a well in the center and crack two eggs in. Add a grind of fresh pepper (no salt, Julia says that makes eggs tough - salt after) add remaining cheese on top. Place in oven and bake for 10 minutes (more if you want firmer yolks).
It’s fitting that the green pie pan I used for the water bath is by the company Great Jones. Their products take inspiration from both Judith Jones and Great Jones Street in NYC. For more on their story and this connection to Judith, here’s the link:
https://greatjonesgoods.com
Of all the many qualities I’ve admired about Judith Jones, it was her endless curiosity that really got to me.
So the next time I make a scrumptious cutting board lunch for one, I’ll raise a glass of something delicious in her honor and thank her for the reminder to stay curious.
Have a great weekend, everyone.
Jolene
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Oh, Jolene, you keep adding to my reading pile! I must have this book about Judith Jones! I can't believe how many classics she shepherded into the world--Anne Frank's diary and Julia Child's masterwork. Your table decor is a masterwork too--and now I'm hungry!😋
Love the idea of the cutting board lunch! What a sweet and nurturing practice. I always learn the coolest things here from you. *adds book to the to be read stack* it may sound silly but I like to place favorite food items on a cutting board just to remind me of the sweet abundance of food and life. Something as simple as a beefsteak tomato and a baguette. Like charcuterie for one. It’s like food art. Thank you, Jolene, for all this.