Awesome Clam Chowder
Submitted by quilterkyle
New England clam chowder with rendered salt pork, golden onions, tender potatoes, and fresh chopped clams in a milk broth. Old-school chowder, no flour thickener.
YIELD
8 servingsPREP
15 minCOOK
45 minREADY
60 minThis is the original New England clam chowder, built on four traditional pillars: rendered salt pork (kept aside as cracklings), softened onions, tender potatoes, and fresh chopped clams in a milk broth. No flour, no cream, no thickeners. The starch from the potatoes naturally lightens the milk into a chowder consistency as everything cooks.
Salt pork is the trick. Rendering it slowly until the diced fat releases its liquid and the bits turn into golden cracklings gives the chowder its smoky-savory backbone. The cracklings get added back at the end as little chewy salt-and-pork punctuation marks throughout the bowl.
Cooking the potatoes in plain water first (then reserving) is more important than it sounds. Boiling potatoes in milk turns the milk grainy and curdled. Cooking them in water lets them release their starch into the broth, which then naturally thickens the milk when added.
The clams cook in the same potato water for 25 minutes after the potatoes come out. That’s the foundation broth: starchy potato water enriched with clam liquor and clam flavor. When you add the milk, that water-meets-milk combination gives the chowder its delicate, balanced body.
Serve in deep bowls with traditional oyster crackers on the side or floating on top.
Pro Tips
- Use fresh chopped clams if you can. Canned work in a pinch but the flavor is one-dimensional compared to fresh.
- Don’t let the chowder boil after the milk goes in. Boiling milk curdles and ruins the texture.
- Render the salt pork low and slow. Aggressive heat burns the fat and turns the cracklings bitter.
- Make a day ahead. Chowder always tastes better on day two as the flavors integrate fully.
Variations
- Use bacon instead of salt pork (with the fat rendered the same way) for a smokier, sweeter version.
- Add a half cup of heavy cream at the end for a richer, more luxurious chowder.
- Stir in a tablespoon of fresh thyme leaves with the potatoes for a herbal note that lifts the dairy.
Ingredients
Directions
Cut salt pork into small dices and render in a sauce pan. Reserve the cracklings. Cook the onion in the fat until golden.
Bring the water to a boil and cook potatoes, for 10 minutes. Remove potatoes. Add chopped clams and cook for 25 minutes.
Then add milk, cracklings, potatoes, onion, butter, salt and pepper to taste. Serve in soup bowls with dot crackers.
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