Julia Child’s Bouillabaisse a la Marseillaise (Marseille Fish Chowder)

Alicia Rouault
2 min readAug 11, 2016

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A classic, delicious, French fish stew!

For 6 to 8 people

The Soup Base

  • 1 cup sliced yellow onions
  • ¾ to 1 cup sliced leeks, white part only; or ½ cup more onions
  • ½ cup of olive oil
  • A heavy 8-quart kettle or casserole
  • 2 to 3 cups chopped fresh tomatoes, or 1¼ cups drained canned tomatoes, or ¼ cup tomato paste
  • 4 cloves mashed garlic

Cook the onions and leeks slowly in the olive oil for 5 minutes without browning.

Stir in the tomatoes and garlic, and cook 5 minutes more.

  • 2½ quarts water
  • 6 parsley sprigs
  • 1 bay leaf
  • ½ tsp thyme or basil
  • 1/8 tsp fennel
  • 2 big pinches of saffron
  • A 2-inch piece or ½ tsp dried orange peel
  • 1/8 tsp pepper
  • 1 Tb salt (none if using clam juice)
  • 3 to 4 lbs. fish heads, bones, and trimmings including shellfish remains; or, 1 quart clam juice and 1½ quarts of water, and no salt

Add the water, herbs, seasoning, and fish or clam juice to the kettle. Bring to boil, skim, and cook, uncovered, at the slow boil for 30 to 40 minutes. Strain, correct seasoning. Set aside, uncovered, until cool if you are not finishing the bouillabaisse immediately, then refrigerate.

Cooking the Bouillabaisse

  • The soup base
  • 6 to 8 lbs. assorted lean fish, and shellfish if you wish, selected and according to directions at beginning of recipe

Bring the soup base to a rapid boil in the kettle about 20 minutes before serving. Add lobsters, crabs, and firm-fleshed fish. Bring quickly back to the boil and boil rapidly, uncovered, for 5 minutes. Then add the tender-fleshed fish, and the clams, mussels, and scallops. Bring back to the boil again for 5 minutes. Do not overcook.

Serving

  • A hot platter
  • A soup tureen or soup casserole
  • Rounds of toasted French bread
  • 1/3 cup roughly chopped fresh parsley

Immediately lift out the fish and arrange on the platter. Carefully taste soup for seasoning, place 6 to 8 slices of bread in the tureen, and pour in the soup. Spoon a ladleful of soup over the fish, and sprinkle parsley over both fish and soup. Serve immediately.

At the table, each guest is served or helps himself to both fish and soup, placing them in a large soup plate. Eat the bouillabaisse with a large soup spoon and fork, helped along with additional pieces of French bread. If you wish to serve wine, you have a choice of rosé, a strong dry white wine such as Côtes du Rhône or Riesling, or a light, young red such as Beaujolais or domestic Mountain Red.

From The French Chef Cookbook, by Julia Child, Knopf, 1968, with permission from the Julia Child Foundation on Gastronomy and the Culinary Arts.

Read more: http://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/bouillabaisse-a-la-marseillaise-3598197/#lvVUtIwI2QUZlPhJ.99
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