Bouillabaisse
photo by The Kissing Cook
- Ready In:
- 40mins
- Ingredients:
- 17
- Serves:
-
8
ingredients
- 2 tablespoons olive oil
- 1 lb hot Italian sausage, casings removed
- 2 cups chopped onions, about 2 medium onions
- 1 (28 ounce) can diced italian tomatoes with garlic
- 1 cup dry white wine
- 1 lb fresh mushrooms, sliced
- 1 cup tomato sauce
- 1 (14 ounce) can stewed tomatoes
- 1 cup bottled clam juice
- 4 garlic cloves, minced
- 1⁄2 cup fresh basil leaf, chopped
- 1 bunch parsley, washed and large stems removed, chopped
- 2 dozen littleneck clams, well scrubbed
- 1 lb shrimp, cleaned and deveined
- 1 lb sea scallops
- 4 lobster tails, split down the center lengthwise
- fresh pasta
directions
- Heat olive oil in large Dutch oven or flameproof casserole over medium heat. Add sausage, mushrooms and onions and cook, stirring frequently and breaking up sausage with a fork until sausage loses pink color, about 10 minutes.
- Stir in tomatoes. Bring mixture to boil.
- Reduce heat to low and simmer 5 minutes. Pour in wine and clam juice. Return mixture to boil. Reduce heat to low, cover and simmer 20 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add basil and garlic and cook 5 minutes longer.
- Stock can be prepared ahead to this point. Either refrigerate until ready to use (usually 24 hours) or freeze.
- Before serving, transfer stock to a pot large enough to accommodate stock and shellfish. Bring to boil over high heat.
- Reserve half of the parsley for garnish and add remaining parsley to the pot. Add clams. Reduce heat to medium high and simmer until some clams open. Add remaining shellfish and simmer until done (about 5 – 10 minutes) DISCARD ANY CLAMS THAT DO NOT OPEN.
- Ladle into bowl and sprinkle with reserved parsley. Serve with fresh pasta.
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RECIPE SUBMITTED BY
I used to spend my summers with my grandmother in Northern Connecticut. She was a wonderful little Norwegian woman that stood about 5 feet high. My grandfather was a Swedish ship captain that stood well over 6 feet tall. My grandmother would wake up at 5 in the morning just to start making her bread (that had been proofing in the oven all evening) I would anxiously await the warm, crusty, tremendously tasty bread spread with home made strawberry jam or any other berry that she might have picked in the neighbors yard.
These memories of her and her patience in the kitchen with me made me the cook I am today. Not a day passes when I don't think of her...a smile crosses my face and I know she's in the room with me, making sure her measurements are just right.
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