Make Ahead

Julia Child's Tian de Courgettes au Riz (Zucchini Tian)

June 29, 2021
4.7
22 Ratings
Photo by Karen Mordechai
  • Prep time 25 minutes
  • Cook time 1 hour 10 minutes
  • Serves 6
Author Notes

Two-plus pounds of zucchini doesn't look so demanding once you shred, salt, and squeeze it dry. It sheds its water weight, leaving a tamed pile and a lot of green, lightly salted liquid. You could simply warm the shreds through with onions and garlic or simmer in cream -- or cook it into this smart zucchini and rice tian. From Mastering the Art of French Cooking, Volume Two (Alfred A. Knopf, 1970) —Genius Recipes

What You'll Need
Ingredients
  • Courgettes Rapées (Grated and Salted Zucchini)
  • 2 pounds zucchini (up to 2 1/2 pounds)
  • 1/2 cup plain, raw, untreated white rice
  • 1 cup minced onions
  • 3 tablespoons olive oil (up to 4 tablespoons)
  • 2 large cloves garlic, mashed or finely minced
  • 2 tablespoons flour
  • 2 1/2 cups warm liquid: zucchini juices plus milk, heated in a pan (watch this closely so that it doesn't curdle)
  • 2/3 cup grated Parmesan cheese (save 2 tablespoons for later)
  • 1 pinch Salt and pepper
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • Tian de Courgettes au Riz [Gratin of Zucchini, Rice, and Onions with Cheese]
Directions
  1. Courgettes Rapées (Grated and Salted Zucchini)
  2. Shave the stem and the tip off each zucchini (or other summer squash), scrub the vegetable thoroughly but not harshly with a brush under cold running water to remove any clinging sand or dirt.
  3. If vegetables are large, halve or quarter them. If seeds are large and at all tough, and surrounding flesh is coarse rather than moist and crisp, which is more often the case with yellow squashes and striped green cocozelles than with zucchini, cut out and discard the cores.
  4. Rub the squash against the coarse side of a grater, and place grated flesh in a colander set over a bowl.
  5. For each 1 pound (2 cups) of grated squash, toss with 1 teaspoon of salt, mixing thoroughly. Let the squash drain 3 or 4 minutes, or until you are ready to proceed.
  6. Just before cooking, squeeze a handful dry and taste. If by any chance the squash is too salty, rinse in a large bowl of cold water, taste again; rinse and drain again if necessary. Then squeeze gently by handfuls, letting juices run back into bowl. Dry on paper towels. Zucchini will not be fluffy; it is still dampish, but the excess liquid is out. The pale-green, slightly saline juice drained and squeezed out of the zucchini has a certain faint flavor that can find its uses in vegetable soups, canned soups, or vegetable sauces.
  1. Tian de Courgettes au Riz [Gratin of Zucchini, Rice, and Onions with Cheese]
  2. While the shredded zucchini is draining (reserve the juices,) drop the rice into boiling salted water, bring rapidly back to the boil, and boil exactly 5 minutes; drain and set aside.
  3. In a large (11-inch) frying pan, cook the onions slowly in the oil for 8 to 10 minutes until tender and translucent. Raise heat slightly and stir several minutes until very lightly browned.
  4. Stir in the grated and dried zucchini and garlic. Toss and turn for 5 to 6 minutes until the zucchini is almost tender.
  5. Sprinkle in the flour, stir over moderate heat for 2 minutes, and remove from heat.
  6. Gradually stir in the 2 1/2 cups warm liquid (zucchini juices plus milk, heated gently in a pan -- don't let it get so hot that the milk curdles!). Make sure the flour is well blended and smooth.
  7. Return over moderately high heat and bring to the simmer, stirring. Remove from the heat again, stir in the blanched rice and all but 2 tablespoons of the cheese. Taste very carefully for seasoning. Turn into a heavily buttered 6- to 8-cup, flameproof baking and serving dish about 1 1/2 inches deep, strew remaining cheese on top, and dribble the olive oil over the cheese.
  8. About half an hour before serving, bring to simmer on top of stove (you can skip this step if your baking dish isn't flameproof), then set in upper third of a preheated 425-degree F oven until tian is bubbling and top has browned nicely. The rice should absorb all the liquid.

See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • marchhare
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  • janet tipple
    janet tipple
  • Victoria G
    Victoria G
  • Nadia Hassani
    Nadia Hassani
  • Kate Monson
    Kate Monson
Genius Recipes

Recipe by: Genius Recipes

89 Reviews

marchhare August 19, 2023
Best savory zucchini recipe ever! I have made it numerous times and it never disappoints.
 
janet T. July 12, 2023
I tried this recipe for the first time last night. Since it’s just the two of us, I halved the amounts. I have a Cuisinart with a shredding disc that did the zucchini in short order. I’m going to try freezing some of the grated zuke to have on hand for après zucchini season. (I’m thinking it would be a great Thanksgiving side dish.) My husband gave it a thumbs up.
 
Paulp July 18, 2022
We love this and so do my visiting family. Can it be frozen? I cook to the point of transferring into a bakeproof dish anthe finish by sprinkling the cheese and olive oil. So freezing before the final 30 mins in the oven would make sense. Anyone tried this
 
Victoria G. March 6, 2022
By far and away my favorite (and first-prepared) recipe from Volume 2. I remember receiving the book as a Christmas gift welling with tears reading the vegetable recipes. Dramatic as it sounds, the recipes are beautiful and I had small kiddos who needed convincing on the subject. Mrs. Child's offerings saved the day. I make love this recipe, find it invincible, delicious and a crowd pleaser. So glad you featured it!
 
Nadia H. January 9, 2022
Fabulous way of using loads of frozen zucchini from my garden harvest. No need to add salt for draining when using frozen zucchini, they draw a lot of liquid as they thaw. I made this once as is and once veganized with almond milk and vegan parm, both were excellent. I know will be making this often.
 
Kate M. July 8, 2021
Simple but delicious. Relatively easy. Great savory option for using up the garden zucchini when you get sick of zucchini bread.
 
Therese June 29, 2021
Delicious. Will bake all summer long with my garden zucchini. Mine had a thick crispy cheesy crust and the inside was like risotto.
 
LisaD August 26, 2020
On my endless quest to use all of the zucchini that my husband grows, I was excited to try this recipe. As the other reviewers stated, it is excellent. The substitutions I made were using brown rice, and Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese. I was unsure how long to cook the brown rice, so I cooked it to almost completion. I did end up with a little bit of broth in the bottom of the pan at the end of the baking time *I baked it for about 35 minutes because I like the cheese brown* but even then, it was so flavorful and delicious. If anyone out there has used brown rice and has any suggestions, please pass them along. Next time I will probably cook the rice a bit less so it will sop up that extra liquid. I will also note that our zucchini was really watery. I pushed about 2 cups of water out, and probably could have squeezed out more! Aside from that it certainly did not deter me from making this again. Simple ingredients, easy, and delicious!
 
robin L. August 26, 2020
I've had my eye on this recipe for ages and it sounds so good. I recently salted and drained grated zucchini for a different recipe that called for squeezing out the liquid with cheese cloth or a nut milk bag (which I didn't have) and used a potato ricer to squeeze the zucchini out in small batches...Maybe a ricer would be too harsh on the zucchini for this recipe? But I'm going to try it and will report back. I too have some brown rice that I love, so I'm glad you had success with yours!
 
LisaD August 26, 2020
Oh, I didn't think of that! I do have cheese cloth and a potato ricer as well, but I didn't think of trying either, thank you for the suggestion! I'd love to know how yours turns out! It is really delicious.
 
LisaD September 1, 2020
So I made this again..I had this GIANT zucchini just over 3 pounds. I shredded it, and got about 1 3/4 c. water squeezed out. I added only 1/4 cup of milk. I cooked the onions as stated in the recipe, then added the zucchini and garlic. I cooked it for a bit to have some of the liquid reduce. I warmed the zucchini water and milk mixture in the microwave to lukewarm, and whisked in the flour. I took the zucchini off the heat, and added in the liquid. I also added cold pre-cooked brown rice. Approx. 2 cups. I put it back on the burner to bring it back up to a simmer, and stirred in Romano cheese. I then added the whole thing to my casserole dish, with an extra sprinkling of cheese on top. I baked it at 400 for about 35-40 minutes as soon as the cheese was golden and bubbling. It was FANTASTIC. I think from now on I will simply add the pre-cooked cold rice. It does the trick, and it is really such a great way to use a lot of zucchini. It is even good cold to put on crackers.
 
janet T. July 12, 2023
Seeds of Change sells packets of organic brown rice and quinoa already cooked. The foil packets are hermetically sealed so they keep just fine at room temp. When I tried this recipe for the first time, I used half a packet (approx. 1 cup) and just added when the recipe said to add the rice. Worked great.
 
LisaD August 26, 2020
On my endless quest to use all of the zucchini that my husband grows, I was excited to try this recipe. As the other reviewers stated, it is excellent. The substitutions I made were using brown rice, and Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese. I was unsure how long to cook the brown rice, so I cooked it to almost completion. I did end up with a little bit of broth in the bottom of the pan at the end of the baking time *I baked it for about 35 minutes because I like the cheese brown* but even then, it was so flavorful and delicious. If anyone out there has used brown rice and has any suggestions, please pass them along. Next time I will probably cook the rice a bit less so it will sop up that extra liquid. I will also note that our zucchini was really watery. I pushed about 2 cups of water out, and probably could have squeezed out more! Aside from that it certainly did not deter me from making this again. Simple ingredients, easy, and delicious!
 
prescott July 22, 2020
Wonderful, versatile Tian!
 
katstreet August 25, 2019
Julia knows what’s up:) This was pleasantly surprising. For a first time go at it, the dish came out really satisfying and a crowd pleaser. My kids had two helpings! Kept the cheese to a minimum and was still able to get a beautiful crusted top. Will definitely make this again, and even attempt a vegan version as another reader - Jeanne - suggested.
 
Ernest L. August 25, 2019
I'm sure you know, but there is a vegetarian Parm cheese out there, that is great. It's still animal product, but there is a different way they do it that makes it vegetarian. A good Parm keeps it tight and not too gooey.

Also, we almost always drink almond milk, and that's what I used in the recipe. It worked fine. I bet cashew milk would be even richer.

It's a yummy dish. My roommate brought home a zucchini from a friend at work that was the size of a newborn (I can't even exaggerate how big this thing was). I used all of it. It may have been more than 2 lbs, but it did the trick.
 
Jeanne August 26, 2019
Totally agree that parmesan is needed to bind the dish and wanted to pass along a vegan version that does the trick. It is Violife`s product called Just Like Parmesan, which comes as a hard `cheese` in a wedge shape. I`m not happy with how it turn out when shaved, but when it is grated on the small holes of a grater, it works just like a dairy parmesan. The downside is that it may be hard to find in a lot of markets.......I have to go from San Antonio up to Austin to a food co-op to get my stash, not a particular hardship for me but still a pain. But if your kitchen is completely vegan, then it might be worth searching it out.
By the way, has anyone used fine chopped broccoli that probably would need some light steaming as a prep, in this recipe?

 
Nadia H. January 9, 2022
I’ve made vegan parmesan for this dish for the first time with raw cashews, nutritional yeast, salt, and garlic powder and it came out great.
 
Jeanne August 18, 2019
This is a lovely recipe. I did have to make slight modifications as I only had 1.5 pounds of zucchini on hand, and adjusted the other ingredients to proportion. Plus used soy milk and wedge of plant based parmesan in order make the dish vegan. I love how Julia prepped the rice! Thank you also for reminding me to dig out my old volumes of her cookbooks!
 
Ernest L. August 17, 2019
The layout of this recipe is really confusing. I think the instructions (and possibly future ones) could be simplified a bit. Things like "Rub the squash against the coarse side of a grater," is easily put as "using the coarse side of a box grater, grate the zucchini."

It does seem like a great recipe. It's in the oven now. But the order of things and the verbosity could be tailored a bit.
 
Emily I. August 16, 2019
I've been making this recipe to the letter for the past 5 years and I am not over it. Every time I am amazed at how Julia Child was able to make the humble zucchini into something so decadent and gourmet. I use all of my very overgrown zucchini for this - scoop out the seeds/fleshy part and use the dense fruit. Comes out amazing every.single.time. Guests literally cannot believe it's primarily zucchini and zucchini 'juice'. Love it!
 
Jennifer Y. June 26, 2019
I made this for a work potluck and it was well received and I would say one of the best things I've ever frickin made! So I have lots of zucchini in the garden and was looking for something new. I followed all instructions and instead of baking in a dish I used a crock pot insert. I assembled the night before, let cool in the oven and in the morning baked to crisp the top. I pulled it out and put I the crock pot, let it sit until 20 minutes before lunch time and put on low. The pot was finished clean! For liquid I used heavy cream and cheese I put asiago in the mix and a Havarti chipotle on top as I like a little kick!
 
molly L. October 17, 2018
this was absolutely lovely -- i did parboil the rice but next time I make it I will try omitting that step. i was hesitant about so much liquid, but Julia was right. trust the recipe! i added the 2 tbs parmesan about halfway through baking and it worked wonderfully.
 
Bruce D. September 6, 2017
This has been a summer favorite of mine for over 25 years. I look forward to the onslaught of the big green monster every summer. My recipe is a little different, I use eggs and Gruyère cheese in addition to the Parmesan to thicken it. This dish comes out perfect every single time, and is great to bring to a summer potluck.
 
Talia August 4, 2018
At what point do you add your eggs?
 
Bruce D. October 18, 2018
Hi Talia - here's my recipe

Ingredients:

1 quart water
1/2 cup long-grain rice
1/4 cup olive oil
2 medium onions, sliced
1 1/2 pounds zucchini, coarsely grated
2 eggs
1/2 cup Gruyere cheese, grated
1/2 cup parmesan cheese, grated
2 cloves garlic, finely chopped
2 tablespoons parsley, chopped
1/2 teaspoon salt
ground pepper

Directions
Bring the water to the boil in a saucepan. Add the rice and cook gently for 15 minutes. Drain in a colander and then put in a bowl.

Meanwhile, heat 2 tablespoons of the oil over medium-low heat in a large frying pan. Add the onions and cook for about 20 minutes, stirring occasionally, until very soft. Add to the bowl.

Heat the remaining 2 tablespoons of oil in the frying pan and increase the heat to medium-high. Add the zucchini and cook for 10 to 12 minutes, until wilted. Add to the bowl with the rice.

Lightly whisk the eggs and add them to the bowl with 1/4 cup Gruyere cheese, 1/4 cup parmesan cheese, the garlic, parsley, and salt and pepper to taste.

Heat the oven to 375 degrees. Lightly butter an 8- by 10-inch baking dish. Turn the zucchini mixture into the baking dish and smooth the top. Sprinkle with the remaining cheese and bake for 15 minutes. Increase the oven heat to 450 degrees and continue baking for about 10 minutes more until the tian is lightly browned and set.

 
Bigjim August 5, 2020
Two questions:
1. Can I sue cast Iron?
2. Is this quiche-like so I can serve cold?
 
Puffin November 13, 2016
I probably boiled rice too long since it did not absorb the liquid much. Or 2-1/2 cup liquid could be too much. It came out more like risotto. I will try again with less liquid and less boiling rice next time. Tasted wonderful, though.
 
Susan L. June 24, 2020
Hi Puffin. I just added the zucchini to the pan without draining or squeezing. I also skipped the par cooking of the rice. I just added it to the pan and let it cook with the zucc.
 
tota August 5, 2016
I need to make this again, forgot about until I saw comments. So yummy, so Julia!!
 
Natalie R. August 4, 2016
I found the original recipe for the baking time, but in my oven it took longer (45 minutes, but it was in the upper third). Some people said to cover it, but I just waited to add the final cheese until the very end (last 5-10 minutes).

One note about this recipe (which I LOVE as a light summer meal) - don't be afraid to substitute pretty much any cheese. I used a very high quality cheese with the texture of Gruyere but with a slightly sweet and nutty flavor, and I've used completely different cheeses at other times. The only concern is the moisture content. I like doing this because it keeps the recipe interesting.

Another note is that you can use a variety of liquids to supplement the zucchini. I've used broth and even just the boiling water from the rice (which was actually very nice). For flour, I've used oat flour, wheat flour, and this last time I used the rice flour leftover from cleaning my grain mill. I think rice flour actually turned out the best for gluing it together.
 
Zita F. March 9, 2016
This is my new favourite dinner dish! I loved it
 
Susan L. February 24, 2016
Just made this for lunch. The renovation workers at my home in France loved it!
My zucchinis had only a tablespoon of water after draining for 2 hours so I just added them to the pan without squeezing. I also skipped the par cooking of the rice as my rice cooks very quickly and uses less water than some. I just added it to the pan and let it cook with the zucc. I also added herbs de provence and used pecorino instead of parm. The sauce thickened up well and was absorbed by the rice creating a light béchamel. I used the same pan in the oven as on the stove with a lid while the rice cooked, which I removed after 25 minutes for browning. I was surprised how lovely it tasted! Very complex flavour, light and creamy without too much fat. Will make this again and again.
 
TishNYC February 2, 2016
Leave it to Julia to give us such a splendid recipe. It's both delicate and flavorful at the same time, lovely with fish (I made mine to go with pan roasted salmon) but it would be equally good with meat or poultry. The only edit I made to the recipe was to add a few shot of Tabasco at the end when the rice is added and before the final cooking.

To the question of how long to bake it (and why would such a key piece of info be left out both here and in the Genius Cookbook?) -- I baked mine for about 20 to 25 minutes and it was perfect (I was using a 2" deep baking dish). Keep an eye on it and you'll begin to see it set up and the surface become slightly browned.

A last important step: let it sit for about 8 to 10 minutes before serving. It will still be hot and the dish will settle down and hold together for serving.

While on my first making I added the called for drizzle of olive oil, it's really not needed. It doesn't add flavor or help in the browning and it only add cost and calories.
 
Nabeela November 5, 2015
How long do I bake it for?
 
PegBee August 8, 2015
Wonderful recipe just as it is. I made a vegan version for my daughter by simply omitting the cheese and using an equal amount of drained zucchini juices, retained starchy par-cooked rice water and veggie stock for the 2-1/2 cups of juices the recipe calls for. I must say the vegan version was creamy and very delicious also!"
 
Claudia July 31, 2015
Followed the recipe as written this evening for dinner -- used 2% milk. Some recipes come out as only the sum of the ingredients -- but this rather small number of ingredients all amplified to make something more. It was a little soupy -- not surprising -- and next time I'll serve with a nice seedy bread to soak up the sauce.
 
jcasare April 19, 2015
This was delicious! I did make two changes to reduce time and dirty pans as suggested by others and it didn't seem to hurt the dish. I didn't parboil the rice- just added it after the zucchini. I didn't transfer the whole thing to another buttered dish, just did the whole thing in a cast iron skilled, stove top to oven. Worked great. Liquid/rice ratios are right on. Trust Julia.
 
robin L. November 23, 2014
What size/type of flameproof baking dish works here (one of the Staub ones at Provisions by Food52, and if so which size)?... Or, if nothing else, will a buttered cast iron skillet pan work for step 7?
 
Kristen M. November 24, 2014
Julia suggests a 6- to 8-cup, flameproof baking and serving dish about 1 1/2 inches deep -- I think the 12x9-inch Staub oval roasting pan would work well (or a large cast iron skillet). If you have a bit too much to fit in one dish, you can always bake off the rest in a smaller dish.
 
joann November 6, 2014
Made this for a party, and it was a huge hit... delicious1
 
peg D. September 10, 2014
I just had an amazing cooking experience with my garden squashes thanks to you, and I have to tell you about it! I made the zucchini butter - tons of it, because we love it. But then I saw this recipe and decided to sort of put them together. So to the zucchini butter I added brown rice and parmesan cheese - Oh My God! I'm sure it's pretty close to this, isn't it? If not, who cares? Man this stuff is good! Thank you for opening my eyes to other ways to cook.
 
SpaCook September 10, 2014
Peg, how long did you bake and how much rice did you use? Would love to try this iteration!
 
peg D. September 11, 2014
The brown rice was already cooking, so I added the entire 2 cups of rice to about 1/2 recipe of zucchini butter and 2/3 cup of parmesan, and baked it at 400 degrees until it was hot. Man, that's good stuff!
 
Mary E. August 17, 2014
How long should it bake at 425? I didn't see the time mentioned in her cookbook or above. Does anyone have an approximation? Thanks!
 
Nagi August 17, 2014
About 25 - 30 minutes. Cover it for the first 15 minutes, then remove cover. Otherwise the top gets too brown.
 
Ernest L. August 17, 2019
Yeah, I can't see how they missed putting a cook time on this. I'm just now trying it and shooting for 30 minutes. I'm also just leaving it in my cast iron skillet to put in the oven. No sense in messing up another dish.
 
Lori F. August 16, 2014
Saw this recipe this afternoon and decided to make it for dinner since I'm inundated with zucchini ... so amazing! I made it with half milk and half chicken broth for the liquids and the kids loved it. Thanks!
 
zeldie April 7, 2014
Found this recipe to be a pain. Why rice? It just doesn't belong. ISecond time I left rice out and simplified the recipe. I just found the pieces of rice in the dish out of place as did my guests. Preheat oven to 425. . grate zucchini as said. Sauté some onions in large skillet, bring bowl of zucchini near skillet and squeeze handfuls of zucchini (let liquid drain into bowl. toss the squeezed handfuls into skillet w onion till all zucchini is squeezed. . Ok to leave a few zucchini strands in liquid. Keep liquid. Toss zucchini w onions then sprinkle w flour, toss, pour 1/2 cup milk and 3/4 cup liquid into mix (no need to warm ) and toss around. Grate cheese in . But buttered dish in oven till butter sizzles then toss in zucchini mix. Smooth top lower to 350. 3rd time I added 2 eggs for a more soufflé kind of dish. Liked it even more.
 
Andreas D. April 7, 2014
Totally different dish. The original recipe is for a classic tian, yours isn't.
 
Megan August 19, 2013
Made this last night as a side to accompany my hubby's birthday dinner. It is amazing! Worth the effort - which is really not that bad!
 
Andreas D. August 12, 2013
One of my favourite Child recipes, and one of my children's favourite things to eat, but the recipe far too complicated, and needlessly so. There's no need at all to bother with salting the zucchini, there's no need to pre-cook the rice for exactly five minutes.

Saute onions, add zucchini and garlic, flour, milk, etc and proceed from there - much as one would for a baked risotto. I've made both and the results are identical.
 
Nagi August 14, 2014
Do you still use the same quantity of liquid?
 
Susan L. January 17, 2019
I agree that there is no reason to salt the zucchini or parboil the rice. If it seems a bit dry because the rice absorbs more liquid-add a touch more water or milk.
 
Than you for this great recipe. Made it, loved it and it is a keeper.
http://foodforthought-jelena.blogspot.com/2013/07/tian-de-courgettes-au-riz.html
 
Debbie L. July 15, 2013
I add the flour right after sautéing the zucchini and garlic and cook for 2 mins.Then I add 1 1/2 cup milk/zucchini juice. I blend this in then add the rice, thyme, pepper and 3/4 c parmesan. I don't reheat at this point before putting it in the baking dish. At this point you could easily refrigerate and cook the next day. I've done it many times and it comes out just as delicious! Bon appétit!
 
SpaCook July 15, 2013
Thanks a million!
 
SpaCook July 15, 2013
I've made this numerous time and have always LOVED it. I need something for a luncheon and would need to cook ahead of schedule. Any idea if this will keep overnight prepared up to step 5 or 6, then brought up to a simmer before popping in the oven?
 
Kater January 10, 2013
Delicious and risotto -like with brown rice, but a much longer parboil and eventual baking time...perhaps too much zucchini water, plus water in my case..no milk in the house. but quite delicious!
 
jstew52 October 12, 2012
Ditto to kapnic. So good!!
 
kapnic September 27, 2012
i couldn't resist and added a little cheddar on top too but oh my this is so yummy. i will definitely add it to my favorites list
 
fearlessem August 26, 2012
I'm confused at how 1/2 a cup of raw rice can wind up absorbing 2.5 cups of liquid (plus whatever residual liquid the zucchini releases... How does this work?
 
devendra October 7, 2012
I guess is similar to what happens when we make pudding. I frequently use 2 cups of rice to thicken whole gallon of milk.
 
tota August 26, 2012
Tihis was super easy and absolutely delicious! Even pulled straight out of fridge, cold, as a leftover the next day...I think my first Julia Child recipe ever, but one I will use again often.
 
Laurie A. August 25, 2012
This was the first Julia Child recipe I've made and it came out fantastic! I'm not ashamed to say that I ate the whole thing. I'm making it again tomorrow to take to a brunch - here's hoping the first time wasn't just beginners luck!

Thanks for sharing the great recipe!
 
dennisbrennan August 21, 2012
Is there something wrong with the slide show for this recipe? Some (not all) of the photos are "overshooting" when going from one to the next, resulting in my only seeing half of each photo. I've tried the obious (re-starting computer, re-loading your site, etc) but it seems to be solidly there annoying me to no end.
 
tota August 26, 2012
I had same problem with slide show, so I just ignored and got on with it!
 
dymnyno August 21, 2012
Changing ingredients in a recipe is one of my pet peeves. I made this twice: once exactly as Julia specifies with white rice and once with faro. The Julia recipe with white rice was a very elegant tian perfect for a nice dinner party that I cooked for. The second time I made the recipe I made it with faro which I love for it's nutty rustic quality. The flavor was fabulous and my husband really loved it. Both were great, but the original was a much more refined recipe.
 
Cookwithwhatyouhave August 18, 2012
I just made this and tossed the uncooked dry, white rice in with the sauteing onions and it worked beautifully. Spared myself that extra step. Also did the whole thing in an 11-inch cast iron pan that went right into the oven. It was perfect!
 
tota August 18, 2012
I used a lot of Deb's Seattle version--1-1/2 c cooked brown rice, 3/4 c parmesan, but kept the moisture at 2 cups and it was perfect! seemed rich and yummy, like a risotto. My first Julia Child recipe (I really haven't been all that tempted bu others) and I will pass it along to zucchini-laden friends. Really a perfect summer meal, with a side plate of heirloom tomatoes and basil, we were in heaven.
 
SpaCook August 17, 2012
How long do you think this would hold refrigerated?
 
mrsdailey August 16, 2012
I made this recipe as a beginning cook in the early 70's. Thanks for reminding me!
 
Spork August 15, 2012
Delicious! Even the six year old had seconds :)
 
mmggrr August 15, 2012
It's Julia Child...JUST use the HALF cup of white rice or don't bother...:-) Seriously?
 
LeBec F. August 15, 2012
i think if you followed deb's seattle recipe above, by using cooked orzo, and cutting down on the liquid- to 1 1/2 cups- that that might work, but you'd want to keep a check on it liquid wise ( too little)
 
MicronCat August 15, 2012
I think any of the substitutions mentioned in the above comment/questions section would work, except maybe the orzo - might get too starchy with pasta.
 
JORJ August 15, 2012
any reason why you can't use the food processor shredding blade instead of hand-grating the zucchini?
 
haitiansensation August 16, 2012
along with bastardizing parts of the recipe, that's exactly what i did. with the processor, it took no time at all. i say go for it! sorry, julia girl.
 
JORJ August 26, 2012
thanks for the validation! I want to try this recipe for sure!
 
btglenn August 15, 2012
An easier and less fussy way to drain the grated zucchini: Place the grated zucchini in the middle of a clean kitchen towel, gather up the ends, and squeeze gently to drain out the liquid. Continue squeezing the zucchini until no more liquid appears. Use the dried zucchini as called for.
 
Panfusine August 15, 2012
Just what I was looking for... needed a vegetarian recipe to celebrate JUlia CHild today, and this is PERFECT! Thank you sooo much!
 
Debbie L. August 15, 2012
I have made a very similar recipe for years that was posted in the Seattle Times years ago. It is slightly different in that it calls for slightly different proportions and doesn't have you salt the zucchini before draining in a sieve. It uses 2 lbs. Zucchini, 3-4 cloves garlic. It calls for wheat flour and only 1/1/2 c total liquid. I use 1 1/2 c cooked brown rice and I use nonfat milk. It uses 1/2 t thyme and uses more parmesan (3/4 c mixed in and 2 T for the top). It bakes at 425 for about 45 mins.

I don't see why you couldn't use quinoa as I've used quinoa in another dish that's made with spinach, tomatoes and cheese and is baked as well.
 
LeBec F. August 15, 2012
hooRAHHHHH debbie! many of your thoughts are exactly mine. DEF brown rice. DEF more cheese, def wheat or spelt flour, and yes, MORE garlic! I think sunflower seeds would also add some neat crunchy texture. yummmola!
 
Lorenza August 15, 2012
Aaaaah, I have been waiting all morning to receive this posting from A & M. I was wondering how they would commemorate our national treasure, Julia Child, on the occasion of her 100th birthday. I spent my years in graduate school tuning in to episodes of the French Chef and have been smitten ever since. Mastering The Art Volume One is a treasure and reading the recipes with her exquisite details always brings that signature voice of hers into my ears. Felice Compleanno, Julia! Buon Appetito!
 
Ed C. August 15, 2012
How about substituting brown rice? Any suggestions about how long to parboil it?
 
Scarla August 15, 2012
It's kismet! I just received a lot of zucchini in my CSA box, and was trying to figure out something different to do with them. Thank you!
 
Silvia August 15, 2012
we are trying to avoid rice, can I sub it with quinoa?
 
SpaCook August 17, 2012
I would avoid the sub as this appears to be a key component of the recipes and quinoa and pasta do not behave similarly to rice.
 
nolongrecipes August 15, 2012
Don't have any white rice on hand. Do you think I could sub orzo?