New England Double Clam Chowder
Submitted by lorrieb
Authentic New England double clam chowder built from fresh-steamed clams and bottled clam juice for layered seafood depth. Salt pork, potatoes, milk, and cream simmer slowly into a thick, traditional chowder.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
80 minREADY
1½ hrsThe double in this chowder comes from using both fresh-steamed clams and reserved clam juice. The bottled juice reinforces the briny clam flavor the fresh meat alone might not deliver in a long simmer. It’s the difference between a good chowder and a memorable one.
Salt pork is the traditional New England fat. As it fries, it renders deeply flavored pork fat that becomes the foundation for the entire pot. Skip and substitute bacon and you’ll get a smokier soup, which works but tastes American Midwestern rather than properly Atlantic.
Two cooks of low and slow simmering after the milk and cream go in is the patience that makes New England chowder so distinctively rich. The flavors marry, the potatoes break down slightly to thicken the broth naturally, and the dairy reduces just enough to coat a spoon.
The most important rule: never let chowder boil after the dairy joins the pot. A rolling boil curdles milk and cream, leaving you with a grainy, broken soup that can’t be saved. Keep the heat at a bare shimmer.
The final flour-butter thickening (called a beurre manie in French technique) gets whisked in only at the end. Adding it earlier risks lumps.
Serve with oyster crackers and a healthy grind of black pepper.
Pro Tips
- Use yellow Yukon Gold potatoes for the best flavor and texture. They hold their shape better than russets.
- Strain the clam steaming broth through a coffee filter to remove sand and grit before adding.
- Chop the clams fine. Whole clams in chowder turn rubbery during the long simmer.
- Make this chowder a day ahead. The flavor genuinely improves overnight as the broth thickens and deepens.
Variations
- Add 1 cup of fresh corn kernels with the potatoes for a New England corn-clam chowder.
- Stir in 2 tablespoons of dry sherry just before serving for a brighter, more complex finish.
- Substitute heavy cream for half the milk for an even richer version.
Ingredients
Directions
Cook clams until just opened.
Strain and reserve 1 cup of broth.
Finely chop clams.
Fry salt pork in large Dutch oven.
Remove salt pork and add onion; brown, being careful not to let it scorch.
Add potatoes and enough hot water to cover.
When potatoes are done, add clams, cook for 3 minutes over low heat.
Slowly add milk and cream.
Simmer for at about an hour being careful not to let it curdle.
Add thickening made of flour and butter, season and simmer slowly for another hour.
DO NOT LET IT BOIL.
Serve hot.
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