A Hotelier’s Spicy Fish Stew

In One Good Meal, we ask cooking-inclined creative people to share the story behind a favorite dish they actually make and eat at home on a regular basis — and not just when they’re trying to impress.

In a former life, the Austin, Texas, hotelier Liz Lambert served as a trial lawyer in the Manhattan district attorney’s office. By the end of each grueling week, she’d be passed out on the couch and her brother Lou, who was then training at the Culinary Institute of America, would stop by her apartment and cook. “He’d be trying out some sauces,” Lambert says, “or ravioli and broth, or a roast chicken, and he’d wake me up — it was amazing.”

Lambert eventually left legal practice, and in 2006, back in her home state, founded Bunkhouse, the influential hospitality micro-chain that included the Hotel San José and the Austin Motel in the state capital and the chilled-out compound El Cosmico in Marfa. In 2015, however, she sold a majority stake to the Standard hotel group, then in 2017, Standard itself sold a large stake to a Thai real-estate developer, and on her birthday last September, after becoming what she half-jokingly calls “an unmanageable employee,” Lambert departed the company.

Now, at 56, she’s out on her own again, which isn’t so bad. She has a house in Los Angeles and another in Baja California, near the seaside Hotel San Cristóbal, which she once ran. She’s currently sheltering in place at her home in Austin with her wife, the makeup artist Erin Lee Smith, and their toddler, Lyndon. The hotelier, whose past two decades have revolved around work and travel, is suddenly, like many of us, a homebody with plenty of time to cook.

She gets a weekly bushel of farm-fresh produce delivered to her door and tries to use everything in it. She also grows her own herbs and strawberries. And when she’s not sure how or what to prepare, she knows just who to ask: “I’ll call my brother and talk to him about any number of things about cooking — how I should finish something, how long something will hold.” One of Lambert’s current favorite dishes is a sibling collaboration she and Lou call Baja Bouillabaisse, essentially a Tex-Mex twist on the San Francisco fisherman’s stew known as cioppino.

Beyond the quarantine kitchen, she’s figuring out her third act. “We’re working on restaurants,” Lambert says. “I keep thinking about other things to do, but I really like the whole placemaking [element] of hotels.” She already has plans to open a 74-room hotel next year in New Orleans — Saint Vincent’s Guest House, inside a former orphanage — and to finish work on “The Last Days of the San José,” a documentary she began shooting in the 1990s. Back then, the hotel (which now rents suites for more than $400 a night), was a $30-a-night flophouse home to a community of down-and-out lodgers. “One of the characters is watching a western on TV,” Lambert says, recalling a particular scene, “and I’m asking ‘What’s going on? What’s it about?’ And he’s like, ‘Well, a big cattleman is trying to run a little cattleman out. So I’m going with the little cattleman.’” Reflecting on this moment today, she can’t help but feel things have come full circle: “I have become the little cattleman again.”

Serves 6

For the chile purée

For the stew

1. To make the chile purée, heat a sauté pan over medium-high heat and add the chiles to the dry pan. Allow the peppers to blister on each side, about 1 to 2 minutes per side, until aromatic. Transfer chiles to a small sauce pan and add the tomato and wine. Bring to a low simmer and cook for 2 minutes. Stir the chiles, then cover the pot with a lid. Turn off the heat and allow the chiles to steep for 15 minutes. Transfer to a blender cup and purée until smooth. Reserve chile purée.

2. Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Heat the olive oil in a large clay pot over medium-high heat. Add the onion, celery, shallots and serrano pepper. Sauté until the onion is soft, about 5 minutes. Add the garlic, salt, pepper and bay leaf and sauté for 2 minutes, stirring to keep garlic from sticking.

3. Add the tomato paste to the pot and cook for 2 minutes while stirring. Stir in the chile purée, cooking for another minute. Add the diced tomatoes with their juice, the fish stock, half the basil, oregano and green onions. Bring the pot to a simmer, then cover and transfer the pot to the preheated 350-degree oven on the middle shelf. Allow the broth to cook until all the flavors come together, about 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Adjust seasoning, adding salt if necessary.

4. Stir the remaining basil, oregano, green onion, parsley, cilantro, orange zest and juice into the broth. Add the clams and mussels to the simmering liquid. Cover and cook in the oven until they begin to open, about 5 minutes. Remove from the oven and add the shrimp and fish, covering with the liquid and gently simmering until they’re just cooked through, about 5 minutes.

5. Ladle the soup into six bowls. Garnish with basil and parsley. Serve with crusty bread or jasmine rice.

source: nytimes.com