Whelk Chowder

- Total Time
- 1 hour 30 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 10ounces fingerling potatoes
- Salt
- 1pound whelks (about 12), the smaller the better, scrubbed; if there are fewer than 8 in the pound, use 1½ pounds
- 1tablespoon unsalted butter
- 1½tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
- 1cup chopped onion
- 1clove garlic, sliced
- Bouquet garni (2 sprigs flat-leaf parsley, 3 sprigs fresh thyme, 1 bay leaf tied together)
- ½teaspoon yellow mustard seeds
- 1pound large Yukon Gold potatoes (about 2), peeled, quartered lengthwise and sliced thin
- 3½cups fish or chicken stock
- 3cups whole milk
- Juice of ½ lemon
- Cayenne to taste
- 1½tablespoons minced chives
- 1½tablespoons finely slivered flat-leaf parsley leaves
Preparation
- Step 1
Place fingerling potatoes in a saucepan with water to cover, bring to boil and simmer until tender, 15 to 20 minutes. Drain and reserve.
- Step 2
Meanwhile, bring 4 quarts water to a boil, add 1 tablespoon salt and whelks. Boil 4 minutes. Drain and shock in cold water. Use a small fork to pull meat out of shells. Discard flat hard piece covering one end and ½ inch or so of the very dark part at the other end, the intestine. Set aside.
- Step 3
Place a 4-quart saucepan on medium heat; add butter and oil. When butter has melted, add onion, garlic, bouquet garni and mustard seeds. Cook until onion is soft but not brown. Stir in Yukon Gold potatoes, cook 1 minute, then add stock. Add whelk meat. Bring to simmer and cook on low, partly covered, 20 minutes. Remove whelk meat. Add milk to pot and simmer 10 minutes, until potatoes are very soft. Chop meat in ¼-inch dice. Peel fingerling potatoes and slice ¼-inch thick.
- Step 4
Discard bouquet garni. Purée soup in a blender, in 4 batches about 2 cups each. Wash and dry saucepan and return soup to it. Bring soup to gentle simmer. Season with lemon juice, salt and cayenne. Stir in chives, parsley, whelk meat and fingerlings. Reheat and serve.
Private Notes
Comments
Take the whelks out of their shells before you shock them. Otherwise they are impossible to get out.
Made according to recipe with the exception of substitution of creme fraiche for milk. Delicious. However, the cover photo on this site is a gross misrepresentation of the final product which should look more like a creamy chowder with whelk chunks... not whole whelk in front of a green sauce.
Excellent recipe. I prefer a more seafood-forward flavor so I used dashi (fish and kelp broth ) and I cut back the whole milk by a third to 2 cups. The welk truly does need to be diced- larger pieces are too hard to chew. I used the lemon zest as well as the juice that was called for.
Take the whelks out of their shells before you shock them. Otherwise they are impossible to get out.
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