Rhode Island Clam Chowder
Updated Nov. 11, 2024

- Total Time
- 1 hour
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 24medium-size quahog clams, usually rated ‘‘top neck’’or ‘‘cherrystone,’’ rinsed
- 1tablespoon unsalted butter
- ¼pound slab bacon or salt pork, diced
- 1large Spanish onion, diced
- 2large ribs celery, cleaned and diced
- 12red bliss potatoes, cubed
- ½cup dry white wine
- 3sprigs thyme
- 1bay leaf
- Freshly ground black pepper to taste
- ¼cup chopped parsley
Preparation
- Step 1
Put the clams in a large, heavy Dutch oven, add about 4 cups water, then set over medium-high heat. Cover, and cook until clams have opened, approximately 10 to 15 minutes. (Clams that fail to open after 15 to 20 minutes should be discarded.) Strain clam broth through a sieve lined with cheesecloth or doubled-up paper towels, and set aside. Remove clams from shells, and set those aside as well.
- Step 2
Rinse out the pot, and return it to the stove. Add butter, and turn heat to medium-low. Add the bacon or salt pork, and cook, stirring occasionally, until the fat has rendered and the pork has started to brown, approximately 5 to 7 minutes. Use a slotted spoon to remove pork from fat, and set aside.
- Step 3
Add onions and celery to the fat, and cook, stirring frequently, until they are soft but not brown, about 10 minutes. Stir in potatoes and wine, and continue cooking until the wine has evaporated and the potatoes have just started to soften, approximately 5 minutes. Add 4 cups of clam broth, reserving the rest for another use. Add the thyme and the bay leaf.
- Step 4
Partly cover the pot, and simmer gently until potatoes are tender, approximately 10 to 15 minutes.
- Step 5
Meanwhile, chop the clams into bits that are about the size of the bacon dice.
- Step 6
When the potatoes are tender, stir in the chopped clams and reserved bacon. Add black pepper to taste. Let the chowder come just to a simmer, and remove from heat. Fish out the thyme and bay leaf, and discard.
- Step 7
The chowder should be allowed to sit for a while to cure. Reheat it before serving, then garnish with chopped parsley. Serve with oyster crackers.
Private Notes
Comments
I love this recipe and have made it several times. It may be sacrilege, but I use canned clams (3-4 of those small cans) and the juice and then enough bottled clam juice to make 4 cups broth and it comes out delicious. One of these days I'll get ambitious a story it with real clams!
I have reconciled the chowder wars with new nomenclature. We have City, Farmer, and Fisherman chowder. The City folks emptied their ice boxes of leftovers when they made chowder. The farmers had milk in abundance. The fisherman had neither ice boxes or cows on their vessel, but they had potatoes and onions and butter and preferred their chowder pure and clear.
Nice recipe. Instead of cheesecloth, use a coffee filter in a medium sized strainer over a bowl.
The broth was spectacular. Just needed a bit of added salt. I’ve always been a fan of the Cape Cod creamy style, but the Ocean Staters are really on to something.
Definitely let this rest for a bit. I only had an hour, but even in that time the flavors melded agreeably.
I was stationed in Virginia in the early 80s and we frequently went to Virginia Beach. I had the best clam chowder of my life at a restaurant called Abbey Road. It was a clear chowder, named Tidewater clam chowder. I’ve been searching for a clear chowder ever since. I’m sorry that it took me forty years to discover it was a Rhode Island chowder, but sure happy I finally found it. Yay, Rhode Island!!
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