Wow, I was going to post that with Michigan cherries probably on their way out for the season (only one stand at Logan Square Farmer's Market had them today), I made an authentic clafouti from Julia Child's recipe today (as opposed to the Robuchon recipe referenced above) for the very first time. But then I read this:
I finally made an authentic one and I have to say, I liked Robuchon's "clafouti tart" (which is what it really is) better than a true clafouti, which seemed very eggy. So I agree with Jim!
Funny, I have no memory of that at all. Anyway, I made the Julia Child recipe
again, apparently, and the texture and lack of a pie crust kind of grew on me. It may be that using better farm eggs helped with the flavor too. But I also think Robuchon's refinements, which made the version I used to make doubleplus good, could be adapted to the traditional recipe Child popularized. So I think what I would do is:
1) do Robuchon's technique of sprinkling the cherries with sugar and kirsch and cooking them down a bit with the alcohol
2) use vanilla sugar in the batter
Not sure if I would add the kirsch-cherry concentrate to the batter or not; it would dye it purple, which isn't bad, and probably add a nice flavor.
Anyway, here it is, and a lovely summer dessert it was indeed:

Yes, I pitted them, because otherwise my wife would be sure the kids were going to choke on them, and she'd probably be right.