Recipe for Marseille Classic Bouillabaisse
The fish scraps and a few herbs were thrown into a pot of boiling salty water. This meagre meal marked the end of a long day for the fishermen of Marseille. Fast-forward to today, and this fish soup is no longer considered a humble meal. You can read more about the origins of Bouillabaisse here.
The Provence Gourmet shares his recipe for a gourmet version of bouillabaisse. If you are interested in cooking classes and learning some traditional Provencal meals, contact Gilles (Provence Gourmet) to learn about his classes.
For the traditional Marseille bouillabaisse, you must persevere to find all the different types of fresh Mediterranean fish. If you are far from the Mediterranean, use your local white-fleshed fish. The recipe below consists of poaching the bigger fish into small fish soup. It is the luxury version of the recipe, as it differs from the original fishmongers who recuperated the damaged and unsold parts for their broth.
Image Credits: All photos were provided by and published with the permission of Provence Gourmet
Marseille Classic Bouillabaisse
Equipment
Ingredients
For the Fish Soup
- 4 1/2 lbs small fish such as bream, bass, haddock, mullet or gurnard
- 2 1/4 lbs fish trimmings and bones including the heads
- 2 leeks
- 1 medium onion
- 2 large ripe tomatoes
- 4 tbsp tomato paste
- 4 garlic cloves
- 1 tsp saffron threads
- 3-4 dried fennel branches
- 2 bay leaves dried
- salt and black pepper
- olive oil
For the Rouille
- 1/4 cup oil ½ olive oil and ½ sunflower oil
- 2 garlic cloves
- 1 egg yolk
- 1 tsp mustard
- lemon juice from ½ of a fresh lemon
- 1/2 tsp saffron threads
- 1 tsp paprika
For the Bouillabaisse
- 4-6 lb assorted rockfish 1/2-3/4lb (300-400g) per person - see note below
- 2 medium onions
- 2 garlic cloves
- 2 medium potatoes per person
- 2 large ripe tomatoes Beefsteak or Cœur d'Antan a Provencal variety
- 2 tsp saffron threads
- 2 dried fennel branches
- 2 bay leaves dried
- olive oil
- salt and black pepper
- 1 tbsp Pastis
Instructions
For the Fish Soup
- Clean and cut the leeks and the onions and brown them in a large stock pot on high in 4 tablespoons of olive oil.
- Add the roughly chopped tomatoes, the bay leaves, fennel branches, crushed garlic, 4 tablespoons concentrated tomato paste.
- After about 5 minutes of stirring, add the small fish, the trimmings, bones and heads.
- Keep stirring above on high heat for 5 minutes add salt and pepper.
- Add 2 liters of hot water and a dose of saffron. Once the pot is boiling, turn the heat to low-medium for an extra 15 minutes. Then allow to cool.
- After it has cooled, strain the liquid into a pot. Retain the bones, fish heads, branches, etc., in a strainer (China cap strainer works best).
- To maximize the flavour press remaining liquid out of the leftover bits using a pestle or heavy spoon. Empty your strainer from the more solid parts, and repeat.
- The slightly cloudy liquid is considered the soup, the base for the fish. The soup is delicious on its own as the flavour is quite intense.
For the Rouille
- In a small mixing bowl, add the egg yolk (at ambient temperature).
- Add salt and one teaspoon of mustard.
- Mix the ingredients together, and add the oil pouring very slowly. It is important to always keeping stirring with a fork or a whisk while you are adding the oil.
- Before you finish adding the oil, add the lemon juice, the crushed garlic, saffron, paprika and pepper.
- Sample the rouille and add more of the spices to suit your taste.
- Set aside in the fridge for later.
For the Bouillabaisse
- In a large stock pot (large enough to have all of your bigger fish laying flat), spread successively the following ingredients laying flat.
- First the thinly sliced onions and the crushed garlic with olive oil, then the potatoes sliced ½ cm (1/5 of an inch), fennel branches, bay leaves, the peeled and thinly sliced tomatoes, saffron and pastis.
- Add salt and pepper.
- Add the hard flesh fish on top of the above ingredients. On a high heat leave leave the pot 5 to 10 minutes without stirring, but lightly shaking the pot to avoid burning the onions.
- Pour the re-heated soup (step #1) over the fish to cover. If there is not enough add a little water. The timing for cooking is now crucial.
- When the soup in the pot is boiling, lower the heat to medium (to a light boiling) for 5 minutes.
- Then add the tender fleshed fish (they should be covered by the soup as well). Cook for another 5 minutes.
- Check if your fish is cooked (white to the bone). If not, put it back in the warm soup for a few extra minutes.
- Remove the fish as they are cooked and keep warm.
- Remove the potato slices and set aside (keep warm).
- Filter the soup through a strainer to recuperate the soup only.
- On table set the soup, the fish with potatoes and the Rouille.
- Some will prefer starting with the soup, adding garlic croutons topped with rouille and grated cheese, and finishing with the fish. Others will have their fish and potatoes sauced with the soup, using rouille as a mustard.
Notes
More Bouillabaisse Recipes from Provence
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