Joan Didion’s Favorite Recipes (2024)

I have a voracious appetite for unusual cookbooks, particularly ones at the intersection of cuisine and literature — from vintage treasures like The Artists’ and Writers’ Cookbook and Found Meals of the Lost Generation to loving homages like The Alice in Wonderland Cookbook and those real recipes from Roald Dahl’s children’s books to creative twists like Dinah Fried’s magnificent photographs of meals from famous fiction. How irresistible, then, to devour the recipes and menus that Joan Didion, one of the greatest writers of our time, holds most dear. “Part of Didion’s innovation was to feminize the literary myth,” Nathan Heller wrote in his beautiful essay on the writer’s living legacy — and her relationship with cuisine was an epicenter of that revolution.

Joan Didion’s Favorite Recipes (1)

As a supporter of the Didion documentary, I was treated to a copy of the author’s personal cookbook — a florilegium of sorts, assembling handwritten recipes, culinary clippings from various magazines and books, and menus of meals she served while entertaining at her home, to guests like Patti Smith (chicken hash with roasted yellow peppers and baguettes) and Richard Roth (baked ham with mustard and Alice Waters’s coleslaw).

Tucked into the recipes and menus are subtle clues to Didion’s life and social circle — sometimes amusing (parsley salad for 35 to 40?), sometimes poignant (fewer and fewer guests listed on the menus as the years roll by), always deeply human (cross-outs, inconsistent punctuation).

Recipes, by their very nature, are also strangely reflective of Didion’s stylistic signature as a writer — a directness at once unembellished and undry.

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Here are a few favorites.

BORSCHT
(for 6)

2 lbs lean stew beef.

brown + put in stewpot w/ 1 c bouillon, 2 qt water, clove, Worcestershire, Tabasco, garlic, 1 chopped onion.

Simmer 1 hr.

Add:

4.5 peeled + grated beets,
1 cut-up potato (large)
3/4 head shredded cabbage.
Thyme.
Juice a couple of beets. (Brown Sugar)
Dill weed.
Simmer another hour.
Serve with bowl of sour cream.

Joan Didion’s Favorite Recipes (3)

ARTICHOKES AU GRATIN
(Serves 8)

2 (9 oz.) pkgs. frozen artichoke hearts
1 T. lemon juice
1/4 cup butter
dash white pepper
1 t. onion salt
1/2 t. prepared mustard
3/4 t. salt
1/3 cup flour
1/2 cup reserved artichoke liquid
1 1/2 cups hot milk
1 egg slightly beaten
1/2 cup grated Swiss cheese
2 T. dry bread crumbs
Paprika

Heat oven to 450 F.
Cook artichokes according to pkg. directions adding lemon juice to water. Drain, reserving 1/2cup liquid. Place artichokes in a single layer in a 9-inch shallow casserole.

Sauce: melt butter, add spices and flower, stir until smooth. Gradually add artichoke liquid and milk. Cook, stirring, until thick. Remove from heat, add egg and half of cheese. Blend. Pour over artichokes. Sprinkle with remaining cheese, bread crumbs and paprika.

Bake for 15 minutes.

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Joan Didion’s Favorite Recipes (5)

RISOTTO

Sauté 1 onion, chopped, in 2 T olive oil, until soft.

Add 1 c rice, stir to coat, add 1/3 c white wine, let evaporate — add, bit by bit, 5 cups broth (1 can beef broth plus water to 5c).

Joan Didion’s Favorite Recipes (6)

DEVILED CRAB

For 1 pound of crabmeat:

Melt 4 T butter, sauté 1/4 tp 1/2 cup chopped celery and 3 chopped scallions. Stir in 1/2 t dry mustard, 1 T flour, cayenne and salt. Add 1 container heavy cream, thicken a bit, stir in crabmeat.

Pour into baking dish, finish with dried bread crumbs, Parmesan, and paprika. In oven 15 minutes, finish under broiler until brown.

PESTO

For a pound of pasta,

a cup and a half (about one ounce) of basil leaves, loosely packed
a handful of parsley leaves
1/8 ¼ cup pine nuts
several garlic cloves
a teaspoon of red pepper flakes
a quarter ½ cup olive oil

Blend together, gradually adding oil and then mixing in pepper flakes.

VODKA SAUCE
(for pound of pasta)

1 stick butter, 1 t red pepper flakes, 1 c vodka, 1 8-oz can tomato sauce, 1 tomato, 1 c heavy cream

CRÈME CARAMEL
(For 12)

  1. Melt 1 cup sugar in 1/2 cup water in saucepan + cook until golden. Line 12 cups with this caramelized sugar + let it set.
  2. Scald 4 cups milk with long piece of vanilla bean. Meanwhile, beat together 6 eggs, 4 additional egg yolks, and 1 cup sugar.
  3. Remove vanilla bean + trickle hot milk into egg mixture, whisking constantly. Pour this mixture with care over caramel in cups.
  4. Place cups in pan of hot water + into 350° oven for 20-25 min, until point of knife comes out of center clean. (water must not boil.) Chill + unmold.

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SHORTCAKE

2 1/2 cups Bisquick
3 T sugar
3 T melted butter
1/2 cup milk

Knead 8-10 times —
Roll 1/2 in thick — cut — ungreased pan — 10 min at 425°.

Joan Didion’s Favorite Recipes (8)

PARSLEY SALAD
(35–40)

8 bunches Italian parsley
Blend 16 T olive oil with one head parsley until smooth
Blend in 4 T balsamic vinegar, salt and pepper
When ready to serve place parsley in 1 1/3 C grated parmesan in bowl, toss with dressing

Complement with a reading list of Didion’s all-time favorite books and her sublime meditations on grief and self-respect, then treat yourself to The Modern Art Cookbook, Salvador Dalí’s little-known erotic gastronomy, Patti Smith’s lettuce soup recipe for starving artists, and a few favorite recipes of favorite poets.

Joan Didion’s Favorite Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What was Joan Didion's most famous quote? ›

But I've had enough of Didion's most famous quote, “We tell ourselves stories in order to live.”

What are some interesting facts about Joan Didion? ›

Didion recalled writing things down as early as age five, although she said she never saw herself as a writer until after her work had been published. She identified as a "shy, bookish child," an avid reader, who pushed herself to overcome social anxiety through acting and public speaking.

What is considered Joan Didion's best book? ›

Most people will tell you to read “Play It as It Lays” (1970), her second novel, and they're not wrong. Like the screenplay version she and Dunne later wrote, Didion's novel is a bleak tale of a melting-down actress in a tumultuous 1960s Hollywood. But of her five novels, the best is “Democracy” (1984).

Why is Joan Didion so good? ›

In Didion's words, learning how to think means learning how to write, and vice versa— an eerily prescient message. Didion's honesty, as well as her commitment to form over abstraction in writing, is what makes her a versatile writer particularly throughout changes in society's values.

What is Joan Didion's illness? ›

Joan doesn't write much about her experience with Parkinson's disease, focusing more — in some popular, later works — on grief and loss. But she does say she was initially diagnosed with multiple sclerosis when in her 30s. Some people first experience Parkinson's with symptoms that often mimic other syndromes.

What was Joan Didion's religion? ›

Didion often refers to herself as Episcopalian in contrast to her husband's Catholicism, which is firmly established throughout.

Why was Joan Didion's daughter in a coma? ›

Several days before Christmas 2003, John Gregory Dunne and Joan Didion saw their only daughter, Quintana, fall ill with what seemed at first flu, then pneumonia, then complete septic shock. She was put into an induced coma and placed on life support.

Who writes like Joan Didion? ›

If you like Joan Didion, try these authors:
  • Luke Allnutt. Born in the U.K, Luke Allnutt is a writer and journalist based in the Czech Republic. ...
  • Paul Auster. Paul Auster was the bestselling author of 4 3 2 1, Sunset Park, The Book of Illusions, Moon Palace, and The New York Trilogy, among many other works.

What happened to Joan Didion's daughter? ›

In August 2005, just a few weeks before the publication of "The Year of Magical Thinking," Didion's daughter died of pancreatitis after spending much of the preceding two years in ICUs.

Who had a crush on Joan Didion? ›

The writer Susanna Moore revealed that Warren Beatty had a crush on Didion and would always try to get himself seated next to the hostess so be sure to seat yourself beside a lothario.

What is the legacy of Joan Didion? ›

Didion was one of the most distinctive and important contemporary writers, transforming the American essay—and the terrain of American thought—in the process. Her writings were centred around the disintegration of American ideals and cultural turmoil, with individual and social fragmentation as the overarching theme.

Who was Joan Didion's husband? ›

Writers Joan Didion and John Gregory Dunne shared four decades of marriage and literary partnership and left behind an intertwined legacy. The two met in the late 1950s in New York City when Didion was working as an editor at Vogue and Dunne a writer at Time.

What popular quote is often recited from It's a Wonderful Life '? ›

Teacher says, every time a bell rings an angel gets his wings. George Bailey: That's right, that's right. George Bailey: Attaboy, Clarence.

What is Joan Didion's Goodbye to all that about? ›

“Goodbye to All That” is a narrative about narrative, like so many of Didion's essays. The setting is New York, and the narrative in this case is the story of arriving in New York young and leaving for California not so young, with the point being something less readily condensed.

What is the meaning of Joan Didion's on keeping a notebook? ›

Didion finds the purpose of keeping a notebook not to record events or to capture thoughts and ideas to use later, but to “jot down what I see, what I hear, what I remember, what I think.” She believes the act of writing things down helps her clarify thoughts and discover connections between seemingly unrelated things.

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