Julia Child was easy to please in the same way that Sir Winston Churchill was. The British statesman famously said that all he wanted was perfection; Julia just wanted food to be delicious.
With that sole criterion in play, she would eat just about anything — except pasta salad. I never knew why she had such an aversion to the wildly popular dish, but her dislike was so deep that during the summer of 1995, when we filmed the PBS series “Baking With Julia” at her house in Cambridge, Mass., she gave the caterer of the day free rein with only one caveat: Pasta salad was a deal-breaker for our crew of 15 to 20. And she was good to her word. Two caterers were fired the afternoons when the forbidden dish hit the table.
Not surprisingly, I can’t look at a pasta salad without thinking of Julia, and she was at the top of my mind when I put together the accompanying recipe. I don’t think of it as a salad, but there’s no doubt that it was inspired by one. This is my take on one of my favorite cold dishes: salad Ni?oise.
The celebrated French Riviera salad is known for its handful of iconic ingredients: olives (Ni?oise, if possible); anchovies (I thought I’d get these out here early; I know they’re controversial, so I’ve made them optional); capers; green beans; tomatoes; potatoes (the pasta can stand in for these or you can add them); eggs (optional); garlic; and, most important, tuna.