Clams With Celery and Toasted Garlic

- Total Time
- 40 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
Advertisement
Ingredients
- 3½pounds relatively small littleneck clams (about 24 to 30 clams), very well scrubbed
- 2tablespoons olive oil, plus more for drizzling
- 2tablespoons unsalted butter
- 4ounces dried chorizo, bacon, pancetta or guanciale, chopped (optional)
- 4garlic cloves, thinly sliced, plus another clove for serving
- ½cup dry white wine (avoid anything overly oaky, sweet or “creamy”)
- 2large stalks celery, trimmed and thinly sliced on the bias, plus leaves for serving
- Kosher salt and ground black pepper
- ½cup parsley, tender leaves and stems
- ½cup chopped chives
- 1tablespoon finely grated lemon or lime zest, plus 1 tablespoon fresh lemon or lime juice
- Crusty bread or thick toast, for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Preferably using a natural bristle kitchen scrubber (a brand new kitchen sponge will work as well), scrub the clams well under running water. After the clams have been scrubbed and scrubbed again, let them hang out in a large bowl of cold water. This will allow any residual sediment or grit to free itself from the shells and settle at the bottom of the bowl while you do everything else.
- Step 2
Heat oil, butter and chorizo or other pork product, if using, in a large pot (make sure it has a lid) over medium heat. Cook, swirling the pot occasionally until the butter has started to brown a little and the fat has begun to render from the pork, 3 to 4 minutes. (The pork won’t be crispy, but that’s O.K.; you’re not looking for that.)
- Step 3
Add the garlic and cook, stirring a minute or two until it begins to take on a toasty, light golden-brown color. Add wine and cook, letting it simmer until it’s a little more than halfway reduced, 2 to 3 minutes. Add celery and season with salt and pepper. Cook, stirring occasionally until the celery is bright green and just tender, 2 to 3 minutes.
- Step 4
Add clams and shake the pot so they settle nicely. Place the lid on the pot and give it the occasional shake, letting them steam open and release their juices, 3 to 5 minutes. (Larger clams will take longer.) The shaking of the pot is not only fun to do, but it gives all the clams quality time with the hottest part of the pot, which will encourage them to open around the same time, although there’s always one or two clams late to the party. If there’s one that just never makes it to the party (as in, it never opens), it’s dead and should be thrown away.
- Step 5
Toss the parsley, chives and celery leaves in a small bowl, then add lemon or lime zest and juice, and season with salt and pepper. Serve the clams with a hunk of crusty fresh bread or thick slices of toast that have been drizzled with lots of olive oil and rubbed with a cut clove of garlic, scattering the parsley mixture over everything.
Private Notes
Comments
You have to be very careful about adding salt to this dish. I would say leave it out. The clams themselves can be very salty, and with bacon, chorizo or whatever meat you add, it can get saltier still and you can essily end up with a dish where the broth is so salty it is inedible. That said, I have been making versions of this dish for decades. Often with clams I dug myself. It is an excellent summer dish but just as fantastic when you’re in front of a roaring fire and snow is coming down.
Aug 21.2018 the author's recipe was published in the Times with the admonition that clams were "less fishy than a mussel." I disagree. Mussels only taste "fishy" if they are not fresh. Clams and mussels taste, well, just a bit different as one would expect. If mussels are cooked within a week of harvest date, having been stored and shipped properly (on ice) and quickly rinsed in ice cold water just prior to putting in the pot, they are sweet and immensely satisfying.
In my experience, the wine should be enough to steam them. The clams (and other mollusks) are hold some water in their shells that will be released as the cooking goes on.
Used clams left over from clam/oyster roast previous day. Added cauliflower to celery. Delicious! Thanks for heads up on salt.
Delicious and simple. Don’t skip the herb salad. One other note: I might next time use pancetta or bacon because the flavorful oil that rendered out of the chorizo just about overtook the other delicious, more subtle flavors. Nevertheless, we loved it.
At least 15 clams per person. Bacon adds enough salt. Don’t add more to broth.
Advertisement