Speedy Fish Chowder

Speedy Fish Chowder
David Malosh for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Simon Andrews. Prop Stylist: Paige Hicks.
Rating
4(5,458)
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This is a no-recipe recipe, a recipe without an ingredients list or steps. It invites you to improvise in the kitchen.

This one calls for something in the neighborhood of a quarter- to half-pound of fish fillets per person and works as well in the heat of South Florida as it does on the frozen Northern Plains. Dice a strip or two of bacon if you’re a meat eater, or grab some butter if you are not (or use both if you are reckless). Add it to a Dutch oven set over medium-high heat and sauté with a few handfuls of diced onions, carrots and potatoes until the onions have gone translucent. Hit the mixture with some salt and pepper and a flash of smoked paprika if you have it. If you can find good corn on the cob, that would be a fine addition. So would a cup of frozen corn.

Do you have any fish stock? No? White wine? Surely you have water. Add enough liquid (of any combination of the above) so that the potatoes are almost swimming, then add a bay leaf and reduce the heat to a simmer. Allow the chowder to bubble along until the liquid has reduced by a third and the potatoes are tender. Add a splash or two of milk or cream and allow it to heat and thicken slightly. Now cut the fillets into chunks and stir them in gently. Five minutes later: chowder. Serve with crusty bread.

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Comments

Really out of my comfort zone to just “make it up” LOL, but this was delicious. Made enough for two hungry people on a really cold night. 2 slices bacon Medium onion 10 baby red potatoes 2 carrots Kosher salt and black pepper Smoked paprika (which I think made a HUGE difference) 1 C frozen corn 4 C fish stock .5 C white wine .25 C heavy cream 8 oz cod

Don't cut the raw fish into chunks. Immerse the entire fillets in the liquid; they'll break up naturally as soon as they're cooked through.

try with coconut milk (full fat) really, really amazing...with some crushed lemongrass...

A perfect light dinner. Found frozen halibut; used onion, carrots, anchovies, bay leaf, generous smoked paprika, several glugs of dry white vermouth, a can of chicken broth and a dash of milk. Really tasty and very quick to cook.

A great fridge clear out recipe (particularly useful before leaving for a trip). Freeze what’s left over and reheat upon your return when you’re too tired to cook but want homemade. You really can’t go wrong with this.

Great non-recipe. I used pancetta,butter, leeks, potatoes, carrots, celery, fennel, garlic. Had no fish stock or white wine, so only water. A pinch of saffron, chipotle powder, splash of fish sauce. Finished with cream then chunks of red snapper. Delicious!

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