Double-baked crab soufflé recipe by Montrachet (2024)

Montrachet's double-baked crab soufflés are superb - thankfully, they've shared the recipe so you can enjoy them at home.

Nov 01, 2016 1:00pm
  • 1 hr preparation
  • 2 hrs cooking plus cooling
  • Serves 6
  • Double-baked crab soufflé recipe by Montrachet (1)

    Print

The double-baked crab soufflés from Brisbane's Montrachet are out of this world. Luckily, they've shared the recipe so you can enjoy them at home.

Ingredients

  • 40 gm butter, diced, plus extra for greasing
  • 50 gm plain flour, plus extra for dusting (1/3 cup)
  • 320 ml warm milk
  • 120 gm Comté, finely grated
  • 4 eggs, separated, plus 1 extra eggwhite
  • 200 gm cooked crab meat, well drained
  • Finely chopped chives, to serve

Bisque

  • 1 small (200 gm) cooked blue swimmer crab, cleaned, gills and tail discarded, top shell reserved
  • 300 gm uncooked prawns, peeled, deveined, shells reserved
  • 300 gm white-flesh fish (such as bream), cleaned, filleted, bones reserved (1 small)
  • 2 tbsp light olive oil
  • 1 onion, finely chopped
  • 2 garlic cloves, thinly sliced
  • 100 ml Pernod or other pastis
  • Pinch of saffron threads
  • 200 gm canned chopped tomatoes
  • 10 gm butter
  • 10 gm plain flour (about 3 tsp)
  • 125 ml thickened cream (½ cup)

Method

Main

  • 1

    Preheat oven to 150C. Butter and lightly flour six 180ml ovenproof ramekins.

  • 2

    Melt butter in a small saucepan over low heat, add flour and stir continuously until pale and combined (1-2 minutes). Add 80ml milk, stirring continuously until thick and smooth (30 seconds to 1 minute), then add remaining milk in 3 batches, stirring well between additions until smooth. Remove from heat, stir in cheese, then yolks and crab meat, and season to taste. Whisk eggwhites in an electric mixer to stiff peaks (3-5 minutes), fold into crab mixture in 3 batches, then divide among ramekins and place in a deep roasting pan lined with paper towels. Fill pan with hot water to halfway up sides of ramekins and bake until light golden and an inserted skewer withdraws clean (35-45 minutes). Remove ramekins from water bath and set aside to cool (1-1½ hours), then turn soufflés out onto a tray lined with baking paper, cover and, if time allows, refrigerate to chill (this makes them less likely to crack).

  • 3

    For bisque, crack crab legs and combine with prawn shells and fish bones. Heat 1 tbsp oil in a large saucepan over medium heat, then sauté a third each of onion and garlic until translucent (3-5 minutes). Add crab legs, shells and bones, stir until shells turn deep red (3-4 minutes), then add 750ml water and simmer until well flavoured (25-30 minutes). Cover and set aside. Meanwhile, stir remaining oil, onion and garlic in a separate saucepan over medium heat until translucent (3-5 minutes). Increase heat to medium-high, then add pastis and saffron and reduce by a third (2-3 minutes). Add seafood, tomatoes and 750ml water, and simmer until well flavoured (30 minutes). Strain shell stock into seafood pan and simmer until infused (30 minutes). Blend with a hand-held blender, then pass through a fine sieve, pushing to extract all the liquid. Return to pan, bring to the boil and cook until reduced by half (20-25 minutes). Mix butter and flour in a bowl until smooth to form a beurre manié, add to pan and whisk to combine, then add cream and simmer until slightly thickened (8-10 minutes).

  • 4

    Preheat oven to 220C or 200C fan-forced. Place soufflés in ovenproof bowls or gratin dishes and bake until puffed and light golden (8-10 minutes). Pour 80ml bisque around each soufflé and return to oven until soufflés are golden brown and bisque is hot (4-5 minutes). Scatter with chives and serve.

The Latest from Gourmet Traveller

  • Restaurant NewsThe Sanderson is launching a monthly co*cktail-pairing degustation

    Mar 22, 2024

  • Drinks NewsHow to make a Blackberry Buck co*cktail

    Mar 22, 2024

  • Travel NewsFour domestic and international flight sales worth checking out tonight

    Mar 22, 2024

  • Travel NewsFive reasons to road-test the new GWM Haval H6GT coupe SUV

    Mar 21, 2024

  • CruisesCunard’s culinary cruise itinerary for 2025 is as deliciously exclusive as you’d expect

    Mar 21, 2024

  • Restaurant ReviewsLola's: Restaurant review

    Mar 21, 2024

  • Crustacean crash course: A guide to the types of crustaceans to know

    Mar 21, 2024

  • Recipe CollectionsBest hot cross bun recipes for Easter

    Mar 21, 2024

  • Drinks NewsClassic co*cktail: How to make a Manhattan

    Mar 21, 2024

  • Restaurant NewsThe best new restaurants and bars in Melbourne

    Mar 21, 2024

  • Recipe CollectionsRecipes for the ultimate Easter lunch feast

    Mar 20, 2024

  • Destinations16 best Maldives resorts for an island getaway in 2024

    Mar 20, 2024

  • Restaurant News10 impressive Brisbane restaurants to book when visitors are in town

    Mar 19, 2024

  • Restaurant NewsThe best new restaurants and bars in Sydney

    Mar 19, 2024

  • Supersize Me: The future of dining out in Australia

    Mar 19, 2024

  • DestinationsBalearic beauty: Where to eat, drink and stay on Menorca Island, Spain

    Mar 19, 2024

  • Chefs' RecipesMassimo Mele's lemon-scented goat meatballs

    Mar 18, 2024

  • Recipe Collections40 best fish recipes for Good Friday, Easter and beyond

    Mar 18, 2024

Double-baked crab soufflé recipe by Montrachet (2024)

FAQs

What is the trick to a soufflé? ›

Heat matters. Make sure the oven is preheated; that initial hot blast expands the air trapped inside the bubbly foam of batter, which makes it rise. Having the soufflé base hot or warm when you fold in the egg whites helps the temperature rise quickly, too.

What is the secret of the soufflé? ›

There's only one serious secret to the perfect soufflé and that is careful whisking of the egg whites so they keep their volume and puff to a maximum in the oven. The whites should be at room temperature and you can reckon at least one and a half per person.

What makes soufflé difficult? ›

“The hardest part of making a soufflé is when you incorporate the beaten egg white with yolks, and the rest of the batter. You have to be very careful to fold the egg whites slowly, so that they don't melt.” “A KitchenAid is the best investment if you want to make soufflés regularly.”

What makes a good soufflé? ›

According to La Varenne Practique (a timeless masterwork you should consider owning if learning more about classic French cooking appeals), there are only a few critical points to perfecting a souffle: a base of the right consistency, stiff egg whites, and the careful folding of the base and the beaten whites.

What ingredient makes a soufflé rise? ›

When the egg mixture is baked in a 350-degree oven, those air bubbles trapped in the egg whites expand, making the souffle rise. The heat also causes the protein to stiffen a bit, and along with the fat from the yolk, it forms a kind of scaffold that keeps the souffle from collapsing.

How to make a successful soufflé? ›

Ten tips to keep your souffle high and handsome

Use eggs at room temperature to maximise your rise. Avoid super fresh eggs. Preheat your oven to 200C. A hot oven is crucial to souffle success because it cooks the outside making it hard for the hot air to escape.

What are the key factors in making a soufflé? ›

Tips for a successful soufflé
  1. Keep it clean. Make sure all the equipment you are using is clean and grease free. ...
  2. Cool it down. Soufflés generally consist of two parts: the beaten egg whites and rest of the 'sauce'. ...
  3. A light touch. ...
  4. Preheat the oven. ...
  5. Know how to grease it. ...
  6. Give it grip. ...
  7. Add a hat. ...
  8. No peeking.

Why is soufflé so hard to make? ›

If the egg whites are not mixed enough, they will be too heavy to rise, but if they are over-whipped they will collapse in the oven. Finally, and most problematically, any cross-contamination between yolks and whites will cause the whole concoction to collapse, which is the bane of many dessert chefs' days.

How to make soufflé rise evenly? ›

Greasing the ramekin and coating it in sugar helps a soufflé rise evenly and gives it a golden edge. -Brush the ramekins with softened butter then dip into a bowl of caster sugar. -Shake the sugar around the ramekins so that it is evenly coated, then tip out any excess.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rev. Leonie Wyman

Last Updated:

Views: 5737

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (79 voted)

Reviews: 94% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rev. Leonie Wyman

Birthday: 1993-07-01

Address: Suite 763 6272 Lang Bypass, New Xochitlport, VT 72704-3308

Phone: +22014484519944

Job: Banking Officer

Hobby: Sailing, Gaming, Basketball, Calligraphy, Mycology, Astronomy, Juggling

Introduction: My name is Rev. Leonie Wyman, I am a colorful, tasty, splendid, fair, witty, gorgeous, splendid person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.