CREOLE BOUILLABAISSE
Thackeray wrote The Ballad of Bouillabaisse: This bouillabaisse a noble dish is- a sort of soup, or broth, or stew, or hotchpotch of all sorts of fishes.....
Provided by Molly53
Categories Creole
Time 45m
Yield 12-15 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 16
Steps:
- Cut mushrooms into thin slices and allow to stand until needed.
- Melt butter; saute onions, garlic and flour until golden brown.
- Add tomato pulp and 2 cups of water, 4 cloves, bay leaves, curry, 1/4 cup of sherry and Tabasco sauce.
- Simmer for 30 minutes.
- Season with salt.
- While sauce is simmering, cook fish fillets in simmering water with 4 cloves and remainder of sherry for 15 minutes.
- Combine mushrooms and sauce with fish and cook for five minutes.
- Remove pieces of fish from sauce, place on buttered toast on a large platter; pour sauce over fish and serve.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 217.5, Fat 3.4, SaturatedFat 1.5, Cholesterol 88.2, Sodium 347.5, Carbohydrate 7.7, Fiber 1.4, Sugar 3.3, Protein 36.2
NEW ORLEANS-STYLE BOUILLABAISSE
Provided by Rachael Ray : Food Network
Categories main-dish
Time 1h45m
Yield 4 servings
Number Of Ingredients 32
Steps:
- For the broth: Heat the oil in a medium pot over medium-high heat. Add the shrimp heads and shells and saute a few minutes until starting to brown. Add the celery, bay leaf, leeks, onions and peppercorns; stir for a couple of minutes. Add the herb bundle and cover with the stock, then add the saffron and bring to a simmer. Let bubble gently for about 30 minutes. Strain and reserve.
- For the spicy garlic aioli: Whisk together the egg yolk, garlic, Dijon and lemon juice in a small bowl. Whisking constantly, slowly stream in the oil to emulsify. Season with salt, pepper and hot sauce.
- For the bouillabaisse: Heat 1 tablespoon of the oil in a medium to large Dutch oven over medium-high heat. Add the andouille and cook until browned and crisp. Remove from the pan and set aside.
- Reduce the heat to medium and add the remaining tablespoon olive oil to the Dutch oven. Add the garlic, celery, onions, fennel and bell peppers. Let sweat for 8 to 10 minutes, adding the tomatoes during the last few minutes of cooking. Raise the heat to medium-high, add the beer and bring to a simmer. Let reduce for a few minutes, then add 2 to 3 cups of the shrimp stock and bring to a simmer. Add the redfish and shrimp and let cook through, 3 to 4 minutes. Remove from the heat and stir in the crabmeat to heat through. Season with Old Bay and hot sauce and add the andouille back to the pot.
- To serve: Spread the aioli on the toasted baguette slices and divide among four shallow bowls. To each bowl, add three pieces of fish, three pieces of shrimp, some crab and some Andouille. Pour in some of the broth, making sure to include the vegetables in the broth. Garnish with the reserved fennel fronds.
COMMANDER'S PALACE CREOLE BOUILLABAISSE
The dish known today as bouillabaisse was created by Marseille fishermen who wanted to make a meal when they returned to port. Rather than using the more expensive fish, they cooked the common rockfish and shellfish that they pulled up with their nets and lines, usually fish that were too bony to serve in restaurants, cooking them in a cauldron of sea water on a wood fire and seasoning them with garlic and fennel. Tomatoes were added to the recipe in the 17th century, after their introduction from America. This zesty version is courtesy of Chef Jamie Shannon of Commander's Palace in New Orleans, as featured in the Louisiana New Garde television show. The broth can be made up to two days ahead, covered and stored in the refrigerator.
Provided by Molly53
Categories Creole
Time 2h
Yield 8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 31
Steps:
- To make the broth base: Heat olive oil in a large pot; saute the garlic until golden.
- Add the crab and shrimp shells; saute for ten minutes.
- Add the rest of the vegetables and cook until tender, about 20 mintues.
- Add stock or water and wine, herbs and saffron; simmer for an hour.
- Puree in batches and strain.
- To make the bouillabaisse: In a large pan, heat 1/4 cup of olive oil over medium heat and saute garlic until golden.
- Add mussels, shrimp, seafood sausage and fish; cook for about five minutes.
- Pour in the whie wine and cook, scraping the bottom of the pan to remove any browned bits.
- Add 8 cups of the broth and bring to a boil.
- In a medium pan, heat 1/4 cup olive oil and saute the vegetables until tender.
- Add oysters and crab meat to the broth and seafood mixture.
- Add sauteed vegetables to the mixture and season to taste with salt and pepper.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 865.4, Fat 35.9, SaturatedFat 5.6, Cholesterol 244.2, Sodium 1729.5, Carbohydrate 68.9, Fiber 9.9, Sugar 14.2, Protein 63
BOUILLABAISSE
This simply prepared fish stew is a classic French recipe from Marseilles. Serve with a slice of hot toast topped with a spoonful of rouille.
Provided by Mary Young
Categories Soups, Stews and Chili Recipes Soup Recipes Seafood
Time 40m
Yield 12
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Heat the olive oil in a large saucepan, and add the onions, leeks, chopped tomatoes, and garlic. Cook and stir over a low heat for a few minutes until all vegetables are soft.
- Stir in the fennel, thyme, bay leaf, and orange zest. Add shellfish and boiling water; stir to combine. Season to taste with salt and black pepper. Turn up the heat to high, and boil for about 3 minutes to allow the oil and water to combine.
- Add fish, and reduce the heat to medium. Continue cooking for 12 to 15 minutes, or until fish is cooked. The fish should be opaque and tender, but still firm. Fish should not be falling apart.
- Taste the bouillabaisse and adjust the seasoning. Stir in saffron, and then pour soup into a warmed tureen or soup dishes. Serve immediately.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 365.3 calories, Carbohydrate 6 g, Cholesterol 124.5 mg, Fat 18 g, Fiber 1 g, Protein 42.9 g, SaturatedFat 3 g, Sodium 202.9 mg, Sugar 2.3 g
BOUILLABAISSE
Steps:
- Make croutons:
- Put oven rack in middle position and preheat oven to 250°F.
- Arrange bread slices in 1 layer in a shallow baking pan and brush both sides with oil. Bake until crisp, about 30 minutes. Rub 1 side of each toast with a cut side of garlic.
- Make soup:
- Plunge lobster headfirst into a 6- to 8-quart pot of boiling water, then cook, covered, 2 minutes from time lobster enters water. Transfer lobster with tongs to a colander and let stand until cool enough to handle. Discard hot water in pot. Put lobster in a shallow baking pan. Twist off claws with knuckles from body, then crack claws with a mallet or rolling pin and separate claws from knuckles. Halve body and tail lengthwise through shell with kitchen shears, then cut crosswise through shell into 2-inch pieces. Reserve lobster juices that accumulate in baking pan.
- Cook tomatoes, onion, and garlic in oil in cleaned 6- to 8-quart pot over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, until onion is softened, 5 to 7 minutes. Meanwhile, peel potatoes and cut into 1/2-inch cubes. Stir potatoes into tomatoes with fennel fronds, bay leaf, saffron, sea salt, and pepper. Add stock and bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer, covered, until potatoes are almost tender, 8 to 10 minutes.
- Add thicker pieces of fish and cockles to soup and simmer, covered, 2 minutes. Stir in mussels, shrimp, lobster, including juices, and remaining fish and simmer, covered, until they are just cooked through and mussels open wide, about 5 minutes.
- Stir 3 tablespoons broth from soup into rouille until blended.
- Arrange 2 croutons in each of 6 to 8 deep soup bowls. Carefully transfer fish and shellfish from soup to croutons with a slotted spoon, then ladle some broth with vegetables over seafood.
- Top each serving with 1 teaspoon rouille and serve remainder on the side.
CREOLE BOUILLABAISSE
This hearty soup will warm your heart on those cold winter nights. It is easy and so delicious with a salad and warm rolls.
Provided by Mary Stroud @Mary_Stroud
Categories Fish Soups
Number Of Ingredients 16
Steps:
- In a large soup pot, over medium heat, melt the margarine. Add the flour to margarine and stir until the flour is light brown. This is the roux which is the base for the soup.
- Add the onions, celery, garlic and parsley and continue stirring until the vegetables are tender.
- Gradually stir in chicken broth and add remaining ingredients except the seafoods.
- Bring to a boil and then reduce heat to simmer for 10 minutes. Add the fish and oysters and simmer for an additional 5 minutes.
- Add the shrimp and cook for an additional 5 minutes or until all seafood is firm and cooked through. Cook on low heat for an additional 40 minutes. Serve with a salad and warm rolls.
MARK BITTMAN'S BOUILLABAISSE
You can make any soup with water instead of stock, but the soups that drive you wild usually have a beautiful stock as their base. This is doubly true of bouillabaisse, which should start with a stock so delicious that you can barely imagine improving on it. There are a few ways to do this: Grab fish bones when you see them, and make the stock incrementally. Another is to use shrimp shells. A third is to accumulate lobster bodies, which make fantastic stock. In any case, you combine whatever you have with some aromatics (thyme branches, onion, celery, carrot, garlic, peppercorns) add water and simmer for 15 to 30 minutes. Cool, strain and freeze if you like. When you're ready to make the soup, procure your seafood - pretty much any combination of fish and shellfish will do, but avoid dark-fleshed fish - and go forth. From there, it's no more difficult than making a pot of vegetable soup.
Provided by Mark Bittman
Categories dinner, soups and stews, main course
Time 1h
Yield 4 to 6 servings
Number Of Ingredients 20
Steps:
- Heat oven to 400 degrees; brush bread liberally with olive oil, and bake on a sheet, turning once, until golden and crisp, about 5 minutes. Set aside.
- Add enough olive oil to a Dutch oven, deep skillet or shallow pot to make a thick layer (don't skimp) on the bottom. In it, cook onion, garlic, celery, carrot, potato, fennel and saffron until glossy. Add stock and tomato and bring to a moderate boil; cook until thick and stewy rather than soupy. Season to taste; it should be so delicious that you don't even care whether you add fish.
- Lower heat to a simmer, and, as you add fish, adjust heat so that the liquid continues to bubble gently. Add fish in order of how long they will take to cook. Monkfish, striped bass and squid are fish that might require more than a few minutes, so add them first. About five minutes later add clams and mussels, holding back any fish that has been cooked or will cook in a flash. When mollusks open, add remaining fish. Cut scallops into quarters and place in the bottom of 4 bowls.
- Add pastis if you're using it; taste and adjust seasoning. Ladle hot soup and fish over the scallops, distributing clams and mussels evenly. Garnish and serve with croutons and rouille, if you're using.
Nutrition Facts : @context http, Calories 325, UnsaturatedFat 7 grams, Carbohydrate 27 grams, Fat 10 grams, Fiber 4 grams, Protein 33 grams, SaturatedFat 2 grams, Sodium 1002 milligrams, Sugar 6 grams, TransFat 0 grams
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