Content ID:
Field:


  • About Smithsonian
  • Email Updates
  • Member Services
  • Shop
  • Archive
Smithsonian.com
  • Smithsonian Institution
  • Smithsonian Channel
  • goSmithsonian
  • Air & Space magazine
  • Home
  • History & Archaeology
  • People & Places
  • Science & Nature
  • Arts & Culture
  • Travel
  • Photos & Videos
  • Games & Puzzles
  • Subscribe
  • People & Places

Bouillabaisse a la Marseillaise

Julia Child's recipe

  • Smithsonian.com, November 26, 2007

Article Tools

  • Font
  • Share/Save/Bookmark Share
  • Email
  • Print
  • Digg Digg
  • Comments
  • StumbleUpon StumbleUpon
  • RSS
  • Reddit Reddit

    Related Topics

    Recipes


    Video Gallery

    The Joy of Cooking with Julia Child

    Through her television shows, Julia Child was able to share her love for culinary arts with the world


    More from Smithsonian.com
    • Marseille's Ethnic Bouillabaisse

    From The French Chef Cookbook (Knopf, 1968), by Julia Child:

    How to make the authentic bouillabaisse is always a subject of lively discussion among French experts; each always insists that his own is the only correct version. If you do not happen to live on the Mediterranean, you cannot obtain the particular rockfish, gurnards, mullets, weavers, sea eels, wrasses, and breams which they consider the absolutely essential fish for bouillabaisse, but you can make an extremely good facsimile even if you have only frozen fish and canned clam juice to work with, because all the other essential flavors of tomatoes, onion or leeks, garlic, herbs, and olive oil are always available.

    Bouillabaisse is really a fish chowder; whole small fish or large fish cut into serving pieces are boiled in a deliciously aromatic fish broth. The fish are served on a platter, and the broth in a tureen, and you eat both together in large soup plates.

    For the best and most interesting flavor, pick six or more varieties of fish, which is why a bouillabaisse is ideally made for at least six people. Some of the fish should be firm fleshed and gelatinous, like halibut, eel, and cusk; some should be tender and flaky like hake, whiting, and sole. The firm fish hold their shape, and the tender fish partially disperse in the soup. Shellfish are optional, but always add glamour and color if you wish to include them.

    Except for live lobsters and crabs, all the fish may be cleaned, sliced, and refrigerated several hours before the final cooking. The soup base may be boiled, strained, and refrigerated. The actual cooking of the fish in the soup will take only about 20 minutes, and then the dish should be served immediately.

    The Fish

    Fish for bouillabaisse should be lean, and of the best and freshest-smelling quality. Here are some suggestions: bass, cod, conger or sea eel, cusk, flounder, grouper, grunt, haddock, hake or whiting, halibut, perch, pollock, rockfish or sculpin, snapper, spot, sea trout or weakfish, wolffish. Shellfish—crab, lobster, mussels, clams, scallops.

    Have the fish cleaned and scaled; discard gills. Save heads, bones, and trimmings for the soup base. Cut large fish into crosswise slices of 2 inches wide. Scrub clams; scrub and soak mussels; wash scallops. If using live crab or lobster, split just before cooking; remove sand sack and intestinal tube from lobsters, and tail flap from under crabs.

    Bouillabaisse a la Marseillaise
    (Mediterranean Fish Chowder)
    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.

    From The French Chef Cookbook (Knopf, 1968), by Julia Child:

    How to make the authentic bouillabaisse is always a subject of lively discussion among French experts; each always insists that his own is the only correct version. If you do not happen to live on the Mediterranean, you cannot obtain the particular rockfish, gurnards, mullets, weavers, sea eels, wrasses, and breams which they consider the absolutely essential fish for bouillabaisse, but you can make an extremely good facsimile even if you have only frozen fish and canned clam juice to work with, because all the other essential flavors of tomatoes, onion or leeks, garlic, herbs, and olive oil are always available.

    Bouillabaisse is really a fish chowder; whole small fish or large fish cut into serving pieces are boiled in a deliciously aromatic fish broth. The fish are served on a platter, and the broth in a tureen, and you eat both together in large soup plates.

    For the best and most interesting flavor, pick six or more varieties of fish, which is why a bouillabaisse is ideally made for at least six people. Some of the fish should be firm fleshed and gelatinous, like halibut, eel, and cusk; some should be tender and flaky like hake, whiting, and sole. The firm fish hold their shape, and the tender fish partially disperse in the soup. Shellfish are optional, but always add glamour and color if you wish to include them.

    Except for live lobsters and crabs, all the fish may be cleaned, sliced, and refrigerated several hours before the final cooking. The soup base may be boiled, strained, and refrigerated. The actual cooking of the fish in the soup will take only about 20 minutes, and then the dish should be served immediately.

    The Fish

    Fish for bouillabaisse should be lean, and of the best and freshest-smelling quality. Here are some suggestions: bass, cod, conger or sea eel, cusk, flounder, grouper, grunt, haddock, hake or whiting, halibut, perch, pollock, rockfish or sculpin, snapper, spot, sea trout or weakfish, wolffish. Shellfish—crab, lobster, mussels, clams, scallops.

    Have the fish cleaned and scaled; discard gills. Save heads, bones, and trimmings for the soup base. Cut large fish into crosswise slices of 2 inches wide. Scrub clams; scrub and soak mussels; wash scallops. If using live crab or lobster, split just before cooking; remove sand sack and intestinal tube from lobsters, and tail flap from under crabs.

    Bouillabaisse a la Marseillaise
    (Mediterranean Fish Chowder)
    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.


    Related topics: Recipes

     
    Comments

    I have wonderful memories of having this dish exquisitely made in London and France.

    Posted by Carmen Estrada-Anderson on December 5,2007 | 01:00 AM

    Thank you! I look forward to making this and serving to friends!!!! Wow!

    Posted by Liza Bakewell on December 10,2007 | 08:35 PM

    Please oh please what is a Mountain Red? I feel like this must be a class of wines rather than a label. I need help fromsome who knows sixties wines. Thanks!

    Posted by Anne on August 17,2009 | 07:58 PM

    i will making this for girls night out friday

    Posted by KIM on September 2,2009 | 05:23 PM

    Post a Comment


    Name: (required)

    Email: (required)

    Comment:



    Advertisement


    Most Popular Video

    • Newest
    • Most Viewed
    The Quirky Ways of the Postal Service

    The Quirky Ways of the Postal Service

    (05:09)

    Farewell, Tai Shan

    (3:17)

    Poaching the Venus Flytrap

    (02:33)

    Remembering the Horrors of Auschwitz

    (5:47)

    Hiding in a Coconut

    (1:14)

    Remembering the Horrors of Auschwitz

    (5:47)

    Poaching the Venus Flytrap

    (02:33)

    Renoir Through the Years

    Most Popular

    • Viewed
    • Emailed
    • Topic
    1. Henrietta Lacks’ ‘Immortal’ Cells
    2. Family Ties
    3. Easter Island
    4. Myths of the American Revolution
    5. Tattoos
    6. Uncovering Secrets of the Sphinx
    7. Renoir's Controversial Second Act
    8. Top 13 U.S. Winter Olympians
    9. Volcanic Lightning
    10. Ten Plants That Put Meat on Their Plates
    1. 28 Places to See Before You Die—the Taj Mahal, Grand Canyon and More
    2. Henrietta Lacks’ ‘Immortal’ Cells
    3. Students of the Game
    1. Culture and Lifestyle
    2. United States
    3. Cultural Institutions and Parks
    4. Smithsonian Institution
    5. Science and Technology
    6. Nature and the Environment
    7. History
    8. Museums
    9. Wildlife
    10. Washington

    - - - Advertisements - - -


    Join Us

    Facebook

    Facebook

    Become a fan of Smithsonian magazine's official Facebook page!

    Twitter

    Follow Smithsonian magazine on Twitter

    In The Magazine

    February 2010 Issue Cover

    February 2010

    • Uncovering Secrets of the Sphinx
    • Picture of Prosperity
    • The Venus Flytrap's Lethal Allure
    • Can Auschwitz Be Saved?
    • Renoir Rebels Again

    View Table of Contents »

    Smithsonian magazine presents

    6th Annual Smithsonian Photo Contest Winners

    Out of more than 17,000 entries, Smithsonian and its readers select the year's best

    • Smithsonian Store
    • Smithsonian Journeys

    Ace of Cakes - Signed Copy

    Item No. 10375

    Treasures of Angkor Wat and Vietnam

    Expert local historians enhance your journey to Thailand, Cambodia, and Vietnam (Multiple departures in 2010)



    View full archiveRecent Issues

    • February 2010 Issue Cover
      Feb 2010

    • January 2010 Issue Cover
      Jan 2010

    • December 2009 Issue Cover
      Dec 2009

    Newsletter

    Sign up for regular email updates from Smithsonian magazine, including free newsletters, special offers and current news updates.

    Subscribe Now

    About Us

    Smithsonian.com expands on Smithsonian magazine's in-depth coverage of history, science, nature, the arts, travel, world culture and technology. Join us regularly as we take a dynamic and interactive approach to exploring modern and historic perspectives on the arts, sciences, nature, world culture and travel, including videos, blogs and a reader forum.

    Explore our Brands

    • goSmithsonian.com
    • Smithsonian Air & Space Museum
    • Smithsonian Institution
    • Smithsonian Catalogue
    • Smithsonian Journeys
    • Smithsonian Channel
    • Site Map
    • Privacy Policy
    • Copyright
    • About Smithsonian
    • Contact Us
    • Advertising
    • Reader Panel
    • Subscribe
    • RSS
    • Topics

    Smithsonian Institution

    Produced by Clickability