Julia Child's Husband, Paul Child, Made Great Cocktails

The new HBO Max series Julia serves up a charming, somewhat fictionalized version of Julia Child's legendary career, and the loving, cocktail-filled marriage she came home to. Food & Wine has the recipes.

Julia Child
Photo: Lee Lockwood/Getty Images

Julia Child's culinary works are celebrated around the world, but as a small collection of 3-by-5 index cards discovered in her archives reveals, she wasn't the only one in the family jotting down recipes. Until they were unearthed, Paul Child's cocktail recipes had been forgotten. In them, Paul carefully notes his cocktails' names, ingredients, and preparation tips, often with the date and place of the recipe's creation, such as "Garnet, Paris, 1950."

In that way, these drinks offer glimpses into the Childs' lives. When Paul came up with that cocktail in 1950, he and Julia were living in Paris. Julia was studying at Le Cordon Bleu, the launching pad for her first book, Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Volume 1. And before dinner, they often entertained friends with gin, dark rum, rye whiskey, and vermouth-based cocktails, a custom they continued when they returned to the U.S.

Chef and cookbook author Jacques Pépin was a frequent guest. "I remember Paul making a cocktail with fresh orange juice that he called 'A la Recherche de l'Orange Perdue,' a witty take on Proust's Remembrance of Things Past," he recalls.

Barbara Haber, formerly of Harvard's Schlesinger Library at the Radcliffe Institute, where Julia's papers now reside, remembers get-togethers with the Childs in the '60s: "Paul was a very accomplished photographer. He'd been in the Office of Strategic Services, a precursor to the CIA, during World War II. He was a storyteller, quick to laugh, a raconteur, and a man of great wit."

Mixing up one of these forgotten drinks isn't quite the same as sitting down with Julia and Paul for dinner. But it's a way to raise a toast to one of the legends of American cooking — and to offer a nod of thanks to her cocktail-talented husband.

Paul Child's Lost Cocktail Recipes

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Carioca Quencher

Carioca Quencher
Christopher Testani

Falling between a tropical drink and a Rum Collins, this highball by Paul Child originally called for Tom Collins mix, a sweet-and-sour carbonated mixer popular in midcentury cocktails. We've updated it with contemporary ingredients if you can't find it at your local store.

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Tourmaline

Tourmaline
Christopher Testani

Named for the gemstone, this cocktail by Paul Child gets its ruby color from beet juice. Use fresh or bottled beet juice, or even leftover liquid from cooking beets, to impart color and a faintly earthy-sweet aroma.

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Butterfly's Breath

This sweet, apricot brandy–laced cocktail is a clever, fruity riff on the Gimlet.

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