The battle of the bouillabaisse: Young chefs are daring to tinker with the classic dish

Marseille's signature dish has been the same for generations. But revolution struck in 2003 in the form of a bouillabaisse milkshake and modern chefs have continued to experiment

In Marseille, the église de bouillabaisse is a broad church, and its members don't always agree, or even recognise each other. Sitting in the panoramic first-floor window of his restaurant Une Table, au Sud, looking out over the Vieux Port at the last of the morning fishermen packing up their stalls, an up-and-coming young chef named Ludovic Turac showed me his bouillabaisse redesign.

A long, narrow crouton of homemade focaccia thickly smeared with rouille and studded with slivers of raw vegetables, a glass carafe of creamy tan fish soup for dunking, and a selection of lightly fried fillets of fish. Absolutely delicious, but absolutely not the traditional dish of stewed fish, broth and roundels of toast.

I mentioned Chez Michel to Turac, by contrast. Michel is the most classic of the Marseille fish restaurants, opened in 1946. The staff still wear white jackets with gold epaulettes and it's gained, lost and regained its Michelin star over the decades without, according to its founder Michel Visciano, ever having changed a single detail. Another of the legendarily acerbic M Visciano's quotes, in response to a complaint that the bouillabaisse didn't contain rascasse, which hadn't been in the morning catch due to a force eight mistral, was "Madame, I am a restaurateur, not a meteorologist". Ludovic Turac smiled. "I must try Chez Michel, but it always looked like an old people's home to me." Cheeky lot, the Marseillais.

Another chef, commenting on another rival classic, the Miramar, highly successful due to its prime pitch on the quayside and its red plush Fifties decor, opined that it was "a place for Japanese tourists".

The Miramar and Chez Michel on one hand and Une Table, au Sud on the other represent two ends of the bouillabaisse spectrum; old-school classic, and innovative. The traditionalists follow the Bible, or the Reboul, as it's known, Jean-Baptiste Reboul's 1897 La Cuisinière Provençale, now in its 28th edition. The fish must consist of half a dozen species from a list including John Dory, whiting, conger eel, sea bass, bream and angler fish, known in Marseille as baudroie, galinette or sea hen, gurnard, little crabs, occasionally langouste, or crayfish.

The basic method consists of cooking the fish rapidly in a pan of water, oil, onion, garlic and tomato flavoured with bay, thyme, fennel and saffron, boiled fast so as to amalgamate the liquids, then serving the bouillon poured over the fish and thick croutons of bread.

In modern Marseille, what Reboul calls the bouillabaisse riche has come to predominate, the simple water-and-oil bouillon replaced by a thick sieved reduction of rockfish and shellfish similar to Provençal fish soup, invariably dosed with a slosh of pastis, while most chefs now make their rouille with half olive, half grapeseed oil, emulsified with crushed garlic, ground red Espelette pepper, breadcrumbs and sometimes a little fish broth.

The soup is served first with croutons and rouille, then the plate of fish, with more soup as required.

But that's for the old people's home. Revolution struck in 2003, instigated by one Lionel Lévy, former proprietor of Une Table, au Sud, now executive chef of the new InterContinental Hotel. A decade ago, Lévy unveiled his startling new creation, the bouillabaisse milkshake, which involves a glass of purée of saffron potatoes, emulsion of egg, oil and mascarpone, fish broth foam and poached John Dory. "I was fed up with Marseille being overlooked gastronomically," he told me, "but the milkshake outraged some people."

Nonetheless, it was soon joined by the bouillabaisse hamburger, courtesy of Sylvain Robert, chef at L'Aromat'.

There are two other tendencies: cheap trad and deconstructed de luxe. Cheap trad is the tourist bouillabaisse offered by touts around the Vieux Port for as little as €18 and ridiculed by serious professionals. Though the dish began as a cheap fisherman's staple, thrown together using the poor remains of the catch, the price of increasingly rare rockfish and the large quantities needed for reduction for the rich broth mean that anything less than about €55 is simply not realistic, or so the argument goes.

It's worth mentioning, however, that some cut-price variations on bouillabaisse shouldn't be disregarded: the marmite du pêcheur façon bouillabaisse at the OM Brasserie is a first-rate dish for about €20.

King of the deconstructed de luxe tendency is Marseille's only Michelin three-star, Le Petit Nice, the luxurious Corniche-front domain of Gérald Passédat, a ruggedly photogenic scion of an old Marseille family. M Passédat charges €170 for ma bouille-abaisse, the Citroën SM of fish suppers, whose three-stage specification, shellfish and shellfish fritters in a broth of algae, other fish and shellfish in saffron bouillon, followed by other fish poached in riche soup, does sound pretty rarefied.

One category of bouillabaisse is even rarer nowadays, perhaps extinct: the homemade fisherman's version. Elizabeth David quotes a wonderful meal of just-caught fish cooked over an open fire on the banks of the Étang de Berre: does such a thing ever happen now? Fishermen are having a hard time in Marseille, as everywhere. A dozen stalls are all that remain on the Vieux Port, the main fish market having long ago moved to a warehouse complex down the coast at Saumaty.

Nonetheless, all the serious chefs still buy directly from small boats whose owners will phone them as soon as a choice catch lands on deck. I tried to prise a recipe out of Ludovic Turac's favourite fisherman Sébastien Izzo, as he laboured at the dockside on his boat, where he'd been since 2am, but he didn't respond with sufficient alacrity.

The church of bouillabaisse does have its heretics, it must be said. Elizabeth David apparently wasn't particularly keen. Jonathan Meades, who moved to Marseille a couple of years ago, told me he hasn't eaten a bouillabaisse since he arrived, preferring supions, the delicious little sautéed cuttlefish that are a cheaper speciality of the city. To be frank, I'm a bit of a bouillabaisse agnostic myself, favouring the creamier tomato-less bourride, but that's a different casserole of baudroie.

VIDEO
Voices

voicesJust when you thought you could find a man, get married, and have a baby by the age of 35... it turns out you’re too late, says Grace Dent

Arts & Entertainment
Damian Lewis has attempted to make amends with Sir Ian McKellen after offending him in a recent interview
arts + ents
Voices
A cultivator of marijuana smelling a plant at his house in Montevideo, Uruguay
voicesOwen Jones on the 'war on drugs'
Arts & Entertainment
Jenna Coleman and Matt Smith in the Doctor Who Christmas special 2013
TV
Sport
Olivier Giroud of Arsenal, Fernando Torres of Chelsea, Sergio Aguero of Manchester City and Wayne Rooney of Manchester United
sport
Arts & Entertainment
Peter Sellers, as President Merkin Muffley in Dr Stragelove, using the mythical red phone
film
Arts & Entertainment
It is 40 years since Abba won the 1974 Eurovision Song Contest
music

Swedish stars ask fans for £195 pledges on crowd-funding website

Arts & Entertainment
Carol singer: Mariah Carey’s ‘All I Want for Christmas is You’, from 1994, is one of the last huge Christmas hits

musicAs Mariah Carey and Noddy Holder rake in the royalties from their classics, why there hasn't been a decent festive hit for 20 years?

Arts & Entertainment
Accidents happen: Diana Rigg in Tom Stoppard’s ‘Jumpers’ at the Old Vic in 1972

theatreAuthor Daniel Rosenthal recalls the mishaps that almost brought the curtain down on the likes of John Gielgud and Diana Rigg

News
A cafe in France has started charging extra to customers who forget their manners
newsSometimes it pays to be nice
Life & Style
The wheel thing: a postman and his trusty companion

lifeAs the Royal Mail plans to phase out deliveries on two wheels, it's no wonder posties are in a spin

Arts & Entertainment
Sam Smith with his Critics' Choice Award

musicThe 21-year-old beat Ella Eyre and Chlöe Howl to win the honour

Life & Style
Food bank volunteers take a break in Rochdale run by Trussell Trust

lifeFull of the joys and want to help your fellow man? December isn't the time to do it

Elephant Appeal donate now >
Independent Dating
and  

By clicking 'Search' you
are agreeing to our
Terms of Use.

ES Rentals

    iJobs Job Widget
    iJobs Food & Drink

    Travel Consultant

    £21000 - £27000 per annum + Benefits: Corporate Traveller: We're looking for t...

    Travel Consultant - Start January

    £23000 - £27000 per annum + £18K & Uncapped Commission & Benefits: Flight Cent...

    Business Development Manager

    £30000 - £35000 per annum: Flight Centre Limited: Exceptional opportunity for ...

    Round The World Travel Consultant

    £23000 - £27000 per annum + Award-Winning Benefits: Round The World Experts: L...

    Day In a Page

    The death of Nelson Mandela: A last chance to offer last respects for Madiba

    A last chance to offer last respects for Madiba

    They came and waited patiently in their thousands for a momentary glimpse of their hero, Nelson Mandela
    We want women to sit at boardroom tables – but we fetishise motherhood

    Grace Dent

    We want women to sit at boardroom tables – but we also fetishise motherhood
    Church versus state: Scientology faces unholy war after court ruling

    Church versus state: Scientology faces unholy war after court ruling

    The Supreme Court judgment  has profound consequences, meaning it could gain charitable status – and opens the floodgates to claims by other organisations
    Your Money, Money, Money please - Abba ask fans for £195 pledges on crowd-funding website

    Your Money, Money, Money please

    Abba ask fans for £195 pledges on crowd-funding website
    Lost Peter Sellers films found in skip to be screened at festival

    Lost Peter Sellers films found in skip to be screened at festival

    The two thirty minute films have not been seen for 50 years
    Volunteering is for life, not just for Christmas

    Volunteering is for life, not just for Christmas

    Full of the joys and want to help your fellow man? Volunteering in December isn't the way to go about it
    Christmas hits: Jingle sells

    Christmas hits: Jingle sells

    As Mariah Carey and Noddy Holder rake in the royalties from their classics, why hasn't there been a decent festive hit for nearly 20 years?
    Is this the end of the road for the postman?

    Is this the end of the road for the postman?

    The postman on his bike could become a thing of the past thanks to Royal Mail's plans to phase out deliveries on two wheels. No wonder posties are in a spin
    Not all right on the night

    Not all right on the night

    Author Daniel Rosenthal recalls the mishaps that almost brought the curtain down on the likes of John Gielgud and Diana Rigg
    The Ashes: The century men: Captains Alastair Cook and Michael Clarke in Test landmark

    The century men

    Captains Alastair Cook and Michael Clarke in Test landmark
    Mo Farah: Breaking marathon world record excites me

    Mo Farah: Breaking marathon world record excites me

    With training for his first race in London in full swing, double Olympic champion tells Matt Majendie he is aiming high
    Steve Bunce: As Nelson Mandela's favourite fighter, 'Baby Jake' Matlala, who also died last week, gave hope to post-apartheid South Africa

    Steve Bunce on Boxing

    As Nelson Mandela's favourite fighter, 'Baby Jake' Matlala, who also died last week, gave hope to post-apartheid South Africa
    Mandela's prison: ‘This is an island. Here you will die’

    Mandela's prison: ‘This is an island. Here you will die’

    As the world remembers Mandela the hero, the prison where he spent 27 years seems all the more brutal
    Contenders for Time's Person of the Year

    Contenders for Time's Person of the Year

    The American magazine's shortlist is a mixture of the good, the bad and the holy
    Revealed: how prehistoric 'des res' gave Stone Age Brits a perfect diet

    Revealed: how prehistoric 'des res' gave Stone Age Brits a perfect diet

    25-site survey shows that early humans chose predominantly to live on islands in the flood plains of major rivers