Potato Chowder
Submitted by redaugherty
Potato chowder with diced potatoes, grated carrot, and onion simmered in chicken broth, then finished with a creamy skim milk base thickened by a flour slurry. A lighter chowder with all the comfort and none of the heaviness.
YIELD
10 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
30 minREADY
40 minThis is the kind of chowder that fills you up without weighing you down. Skim milk replaces the cream most chowder recipes call for, and a flour-and-milk slurry thickens the base into something rich enough to coat the back of a spoon without any added fat. The flavor comes from chicken bouillon, a heap of grated carrot, finely chopped onion, and the natural starch from the potatoes themselves, which releases as they soften in the pot.
The slurry technique is worth getting right. You whisk a portion of the cold milk with the flour completely smooth, before adding to the pot, which keeps the soup from clumping into pasty lumps when the flour hits the heat. Once thickened, a sprinkle of paprika on each bowl adds warmth, color, and a faint smoky note that contrasts beautifully with the pale soup underneath.
Pro Tips
- Cube the potatoes evenly. Different sizes mean some pieces dissolve while others stay raw and crunchy in the bowl.
- Do not drain the cooking water. The starch already in it is what helps thicken the chowder naturally.
- Whisk the flour into the cold milk until completely smooth before adding to the pot. Pouring flour directly into hot liquid guarantees lumps.
- Simmer, do not boil, after adding the milk. A hard boil can curdle even skim milk and break the soup’s smooth texture.
- Garnish each bowl with smoked paprika in place of sweet for a deeper, smokier finish.
Variations
- Stir in shredded sharp cheddar for a cheddar potato chowder.
- Add diced cooked ham or crisp bacon for a heartier non-vegetarian option.
- Toss in frozen corn near the end of cooking for a classic corn-potato chowder.
Ingredients
Directions
Dutch oven or kettle, combine potatoes, onion, carrot, salt, pepper, parsley flakes and bouillon.
Add enough water to just cover veggies; cook until veggies are tender, about 15 to 20 min.
Do not drain.
Measure 1½ cup milk and add flour to milk, stirring with wire whisk. Add to the pot, stir then add the remaining milk.
Stir until blended.
Simmer for 15 min on low heat and it has thickened.
Garnish with paprika.
Comments




When do you add the other 4 1/2 cups of milk?