Chaudrée is the ancestral fish chowder of the Charentes coast (La Rochelle, Île de Ré, Île d'Oléron) — a butter-rich, wine-based stew of mixed small fish and squid that predates and likely inspired New England clam chowder (via Acadian settlers). The name derives from chaudière, the iron cauldron used by fishermen. Unlike Mediterranean fish stews built on olive oil and tomato, chaudrée is Atlantic in character: its base is butter, white wine, and the natural gelatin of the fish. The method: melt 80g butter in a heavy pot, add 4 sliced onions and 6 crushed garlic cloves, sweat until soft (10 minutes). Add 500ml dry white Charentais wine (Colombard or Ugni Blanc), 500ml water, a bouquet garni with thyme and bay, and bring to a simmer. Add the firm fish first — small whole sole, pieces of cuttlefish or squid (cut in rings), and chunks of skate — as these need longer cooking (10-12 minutes). Then add the softer fish — whiting, small sea bream, pieces of eel — for the final 6-8 minutes. The stew is done when all the fish is just cooked through and the broth has thickened slightly from the natural gelatin. Remove the bouquet garni. Finish with another 40g cold butter swirled in (monter au beurre) and a generous amount of chopped flat-leaf parsley. The chaudrée is ladled into deep bowls over slices of day-old pain de campagne. No cream, no potato, no thickener — the body comes entirely from the butter and the fish gelatin. The result is lighter than you expect: aromatic, briny, buttery, and deeply satisfying.
Butter is the fat, not olive oil — this is an Atlantic preparation, not Mediterranean Two-stage fish addition: firm fish first, soft fish later — everything finishes at the same moment No thickener — body comes from fish gelatin and butter emulsion only Dry white Charentais wine — the local wine defines the broth character Serve over bread — the bread absorbs the broth and is part of the dish, not an accompaniment
Include a piece of conger eel on the bone — its extraordinarily high gelatin content thickens the broth naturally A splash of Pineau des Charentes (the local fortified wine) added at the end gives a subtle sweetness that rounds the flavour Day-old bread, not fresh, absorbs broth better without disintegrating — this is not an accident, it is the design
Adding all fish simultaneously — delicate fish disintegrates while firm fish is still raw Using cream or potato to thicken — this produces chowder, not chaudrée Skimping on butter — the butter emulsion IS the sauce; without enough, the broth is thin and watery Using only one type of fish — the charm of chaudrée is the variety of textures and flavours from mixed species Boiling vigorously, which breaks the fish and turns the broth cloudy
Larousse Gastronomique; La Cuisine Charentaise