The first time I thought I really love seafood bouillabaisse is when I tried it as a restaurant called Graze MCA adjacent to the Museum of Contemporary Art in Sydney in Circular Quay. It is a venue not only to go to if you want an excellent view of Sydney Harbour and the Opera House but they do an excellent seafood bouillabaisse too and if they don’t already call it as such, I would call it their signature dish having come back to try it a few times. It is one thing to have fresh seafood at hand when making a dish and it’s another to give it enough depth of flavour so that the seafood, particularly if using a denser sort of fish like barramundi or salmon, are seasoned and balanced with enough flavour where you are looking for something more than just salt and a squeeze of lemon. After perusing one of my favourite recipe book in my spare time from Depot Eatery, a little establishment run by Al Brown I went back to numerous times when I visited Auckland in New Zealand earlier in the year, I came across a bouillabaisse stock recipe the book suggests, which gave me enough confidence that if I spent the time creating it, I think it would be a pretty damn good seafood bouillabaisse judging from the food I tried at that venue. Having tasted the Graze MCA seafood bouillabaisse, I was a little sceptical on recipes that label a bouillabaisse recipe as ‘Easy Bouillabaisse’ as I think from tasting the Graze MCA bouillabaisse there is quite some complexity in this broth that an ‘easy bouillabaisse’ short cut recipe cannot replicate or do justice too.
You will need time if you want to make a good seafood bouillabaisse – time to go to the Sydney Fish Markets in the morning to select fresh fish, shellfish, crustaceans; time to shop at your local grocer to pick up vegetables and spices and time to get a really good, fresh loaf of artisan bread. And it will be worth it as this recipe worked for me, it’s labour intensive but it worked and I got a “it’s pretty good” thumbs up from my husband. Creating my own seafood bouillabaisse dish is one of the most rewarding things I’ve made.
So here is the recipe from the Depot Eatery biography and recipe book and there were some ingredients where I thought “what’s that?” thinking perhaps it was New Zealand jargon or produce so just Googled it and used the next best substitute instead and I will indicate below if I have done that.
I did it all in one day but you can do it in parts and put part of it in the fridge and come back to the later parts another day. The key ingredient in a seafood bouillabaisse is the stock and there are two parts to making the broth alone: the fish stock and the bouillabaisse stock. Just enjoy the process of creation!