Early years Henri Joseph Séverin Babinski was born in
Montparnasse, Paris on 2 July 1855, the elder son of Alexandre Babinski and his wife Henriette, Weren. The couple, originally known as Aleksander and Henryeta, were born and married in Poland and fled to Paris after the
Polish uprising in 1848. A younger son,
Joseph, was born in 1857. Alexandre found employment working for the Paris municipal authorities as a
surveyor-engineer, but in 1863 he returned to Poland to take part in
a new uprising, leaving his wife and sons in Paris. The two boys were enrolled at the
École polonaise – an establishment later described by Henri as one of ferocious austerity – and, from 1870, at the
Lycée René Descartes. Joseph remained there until 1875, receiving his
baccalauréat; Henri left before him, entering the (National School of Mines) in 1874.
Mining engineer Babinski graduated as a civil mining engineer in 1878 and in 1880 started to travel extensively, studying mineral deposits in many countries. He worked in South America, in the Equatorial region; in the western United States; in French Guiana and northern Italy. In 1893, returning to Chile, he set up a system for towing the coal barges through the
Strait of Magellan using locally mined coal to power the tugs. In 1896 he went to Brazil to examine diamond mines in the state of
Bahia, where he set up a successful mining venture. Another theory is that the name alludes to Babinski's visits to Turkey, drawing on the name of Ali Baba, of the
One Thousand and One Nights. In 1960,
Elizabeth David wrote of the seventh and final edition, "The proportions and ingredients for every recipe are given, with the precision of a scientist writing a formula, down to the last gramme. It is a remarkable work by any standards; for an amateur cook it is a quite extraordinary achievement". Ali-Bab divided the book into sections. It opens with a survey of cooking from prehistoric times to the present, in Europe and elsewhere. A section on the principles of cooking, and then sections on stocks and sauces, soups, mushrooms – a long section of 20 pages, wine (all French) and entertaining. There are then sections on menus for luncheons and dinners ranging from the small and informal to large and grand, and then, the bulk of the book, detailed recipes, divided into the familiar sections followed in 19th and 20th-century cookery books: soups, hors d'oeuvres, eggs, seafood, fish, game, meat, poultry, potatoes and other vegetables, desserts, preserves and drinks. The last section deals with diets for overweight gourmands, and received the approval of several medical journals. His recipes are not exclusively French: they include Italian pasta dishes and
risottos, as well as
Yorkshire pudding and
plum pudding from England, and
grog in both American and Indian versions. After was published, Ali-Bab was dubbed "the
Brillat-Savarin of the 20th century".
Julia Child wrote, "Ali-Bab is, I think, immediately appealing to anyone who loves cooking because his is the work of a devoted and tremendously well informed amateur chef who is addressing himself to people of like mind. In fact he unhesitatingly assumes that the reader will be glad indeed to go to any reasonable lengths to produce a magnificent dish". ==Notes, references and sources==