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Dish
Bouillabaisse paired with Clos Sainte Magdeleine 2020
Chef Daniel Drexler from Marseille in New York
Côtes de Provence
Ingredients
- Fennel
- Spanish onions
- Saffron
- Pernod
- Oranges
- Coriander seeds
- Star anise
- Paprika
- Armagnac
- White wine
- Thyme
- Rosemary
- Fish bones (usually bass bones)
- Lobster heads
Direction
Steps for making your stock over two days:
Day One
- To start the bouillabaisse, heavily sear the lobster heads in a rondeau the take them out. Then add the fish bones for about 5 minutes on both sides
- Sweat out the vegetables with the coriander and saffron until the onions are golden and sweet with its natural sugars (slow and low temperature)
- Once the onions are golden and sweet, add the paprika and tomato paste and cook that until it’s almost dry but not burning
- Once the tomato paste and vegetables are dry, add the Pernod / Armagnac and reduce
- Add the white wine and orange peels, cook that until the alcohol is evaporated, then add water, cover, and bring up to a boil for 5 minutes
- After it boils shut off and put the aromatics in (thyme, rosemary)
Day Two
- Now that you have the base to the bouillabaisse, the next day repeat the process with only the onions, lobster heads, alcohol, and coriander
- When you do the process for the second day, make sure to reduce by half and pass EVERYTHING through the food mill
Cooking the fish (the most important part): Depending on all the sizes of the different shellfish and fish I usually start with:
- Mussels in the bouillabaisse sauce
- Bass
- Scallops (depending on the size I sometimes like to score them not only for the stunning presentation it gives but also helps with the even caramelization and cooking)
- Shrimp I start off with a sear, then I add them to the mussels in the bouillabaisse broth
Rouille Sauce:
- Saffron
- White wine
- Bouillabaisse broth
- Egg yolks
- Garlic confit
- Chili powder
- Olive oil
- First, bloom the saffron and chili powder in some white wine until all the aroma comes out and the color is red, then strain (very well)
- In a robot coup, combine egg yolks and olive oil until it’s a thick consistency
- Then loosen the egg yolk mixture with the saffron that has been infused in white wine
- Once the mixture is loosened once again, add the garlic confit thicken it, and finally add the bouillabaisse broth to create the end product
How to serve
In a round bowl
- Plate the bass first, directly in the center as it’s the STAR of the plate
- Next the mussels
- 1 shrimp in between every mussel
- 2 scallops on opposite sides of each other
- Bouillabaisse broth poured table side
- Served on the side is some rouille and at Marseille, we serve it with a saffron walnut bread that is made in-house