Monastir Fish Couscous
Steam-rolled semolina, golden with olive oil, set on a broth perfumed with caraway and harissa, crowned with grouper or sea bream and simmered vegetables. The Sunday dish by the sea, smelling of iodine and mild chili.
Steam-rolled semolina, golden with olive oil, set on a broth perfumed with caraway and harissa, crowned with grouper or sea bream and simmered vegetables. The Sunday dish by the sea, smelling of iodine and mild chili.
My friends, let me tell you: I was born in Monastir, feet in the sea, and no one will make me renounce that couscous. In our home, fish does not lie — we want it out of the net that very morning, placed whole on the semolina like a flag. My mother rolled the grain by hand, patiently, and as a child I watched the steam rise from the couscoussier. Taste the harissa with measure, I beg you: Tunisia loves fire, but a controlled fire, like a nation that knows where it is going.
- •Durum wheat semolina — a large bowl per person (hand-rolled base)
- •Whole grouper or sea bream — one nice fish (centerpiece of the Sahel)
- •Sahel olive oil — generous (greasing the semolina and broth)
- •Harissa — one spoonful (spicy signature)
- •Ground caraway and coriander — as needed (broth spices)
- •Soaked chickpeas — a handful (broth legume)
- •Turnips, carrots, zucchini — according to season (simmered vegetables)
Monastir Fish Couscous
Steam-rolled semolina, golden with olive oil, set on a broth perfumed with caraway and harissa, crowned with grouper or sea bream and simmered vegetables. The Sunday dish by the sea, smelling of iodine and mild chili.
Why this dish? Bourguiba was born in Monastir, a fishing town on the Tunisian Sahel. Fish couscous is THE festive specialty of the coast, served on Fridays and holidays: a return to the roots for a man who wanted to be both a man of the people and the builder of a maritime nation.
My friends, let me tell you: I was born in Monastir, feet in the sea, and no one will make me renounce that couscous. In our home, fish does not lie — we want it out of the net that very morning, placed whole on the semolina like a flag. My mother rolled the grain by hand, patiently, and as a child I watched the steam rise from the couscoussier. Taste the harissa with measure, I beg you: Tunisia loves fire, but a controlled fire, like a nation that knows where it is going.
Ingredients (period version)
- Durum wheat semolina — a large bowl per person (hand-rolled base)
- Whole grouper or sea bream — one nice fish (centerpiece of the Sahel)
- Sahel olive oil — generous (greasing the semolina and broth)
- Harissa — one spoonful (spicy signature)
- Ground caraway and coriander — as needed (broth spices)
- Soaked chickpeas — a handful (broth legume)
- Turnips, carrots, zucchini — according to season (simmered vegetables)
Ingredients
- Medium couscous semolina — 400 g (base)
- Grouper or sea bream fillets/steaks — 800 g (protein)
- Extra virgin olive oil — 8 tbsp (greasing + broth)
- Harissa — 1 to 2 tsp (signature heat)
- Tomato paste — 2 tbsp (broth binder)
- Ground caraway + ground coriander — 1 tsp each (spices)
- Cooked chickpeas — 1 can (legume)
- Turnips, carrots, zucchini — 500 g total (vegetables)
- Garlic + onion — 3 cloves + 1 (aromatics)
Method
- Sauté onion and garlic in olive oil, add tomato paste, harissa, caraway, and coriander, then add hot water for the broth.
- Add chickpeas, then vegetables from firmest to tenderest (turnips, carrots, then zucchini) and let simmer.
- Hydrate the semolina, oil it, and steam it in three passes in a couscoussier (or 2 hydrations in a bowl if in a hurry).
- Gently poach the fish in the broth for the last 10 minutes so it stays tender.
- Mound the semolina in a dome, make a well, ladle broth over, arrange vegetables and fish on top. Serve harissa on the side.
How it was made : In the Sahel, women rolled the semolina by hand and steamed it over the broth in an earthenware couscoussier. Fish, abundant and cheap on the coast, replaced the expensive meat of the interior.
The contemporary twist : Serve in individual plates with a wedge of preserved lemon and a drizzle of raw olive oil to awaken the aromas — a nod to the Monastir coastline.
Habib Bourguiba · Charactorium