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Creamy Clam Chowder

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Submitted by elainnsant

New England creamy clam chowder steams fresh littlenecks for their broth, then simmers with salt pork, potatoes, onions, and half-and-half. The classic from-scratch version, no canned shortcuts.

YIELD

8 servings

PREP

20 min

COOK

35

READY

55 min

This creamy clam chowder is the proper New England version, built from fresh littleneck clams steamed open in your own pot rather than poured from a can. The reserved clam liquor combined with fish stock forms the backbone of the broth, giving the chowder a depth that bottled clam juice can never match.

Salt pork is what separates a great chowder from a good one. Slowly rendered until the cracklings turn golden and crisp, the pork fat carries the onions and flour into a roux that’s deeply savory. Reserve those cracklings for the finish; sprinkled on top of the bowl, they add bursts of crackling salty bite.

Filtering the steamed clam broth through coffee filters or cheesecloth is non-negotiable. Sand and grit from the clam shells settle into the broth and will ruin every spoonful if not strained out. This single step is the difference between elegant and gritty.

Light cream (half-and-half) goes in at the end, after the potatoes cook through. Adding it earlier risks curdling from the long simmer, and you want the chowder warm but not boiling once the cream is in.

Serve in deep bowls with oyster crackers floating on top.

Pro Tips

  • Soak the clams in cold salted water for 20 minutes before steaming. They’ll spit out grit that would otherwise end up in the broth.
  • Cook the flour into the salt pork fat for the full three minutes. Skipping this leaves a raw flour taste in the finished chowder.
  • Cube the potatoes uniformly. Mixed sizes mean some are mush while others are still firm at the same simmer time.
  • Don’t let the chowder boil after the cream goes in. High heat curdles half-and-half into a grainy mess.

Variations

  • Substitute heavy cream for richer chowder, or whole milk for a lighter Manhattan-leaning version.
  • Add a tablespoon of fresh thyme or a bay leaf during the potato simmer for herbal depth.
  • Stir in a half cup of corn kernels with the clams for a chowder-meets-corn-chowder twist.

Ingredients

4 4
QUARTS QUARTS CLAMS, LITTLENECK
about 1-2/3 cups cooked, chopped *
1 1
CLOVES EACH GARLIC
chopped
1 237
CUP ML WATER
2 57.8
OUNCES ML/G SALT PORK
finely chopped
2 473
CUPS ML ONIONS
chopped
3 45
TABLESPOONS ML ALL-PURPOSE FLOUR
1 ½ 680.4
POUNDS G POTATOES
peeled and diced into 1/2-inch cubes
4 ½ 1.1
CUPS L CLAM BROTH *
3 710
CUPS ML FISH STOCK
2 473
1
X OYSTER CRACKERS
optional *

Directions

Clean the clams and place them in a large pot along with the garlic and water.

Steam the clams just until opened, about 6 to 10 minutes, depending on their size.

Drain and shell the clams, reserving the broth.

Mince the clam flesh, and set aside.

Filter the clam broth either through coffee filters or cheesecloth and set aside.

In a large, heavy pot slowly render the salt pork.

Remove the cracklings and set them aside.

Slowly cook the onions in the fat for about 6 minutes, stirring frequently, or until cooked through but not browned.

Stir in the flour and cook, stirring, for 3 minutes.

Add the reserved clam broth and fish stock, and whisk to remove any flour lumps.

Bring the liquid to a boil, add the potatoes, lower the heat, and simmer until the potatoes are cooked through, about 15 minutes.

Stir in the reserved clams, salt-pork cracklings, and light cream.

Heat the chowder until it is the temperature you prefer.

Serve in large soup bowls with oyster crackers on the side.

Serves 8.

* not incl. in nutrient facts Arrow up button

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Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 317g (11.2 oz)
Amount per Serving
Calories 285 57% from fat
 % Daily Value *
Total Fat 18g 28%
Saturated Fat 9g 47%
Trans Fat 0g
Cholesterol 46mg 15%
Sodium 422mg 18%
Total Carbohydrate 9g 9%
Dietary Fiber 2g 9%
Sugars g
Protein 12g
Vitamin A 8% Vitamin C 17%
Calcium 10% Iron 4%
* based on a 2,000 calorie diet How is this calculated?
Trans-fat Free
 

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