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Famous Clam Chowder

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Submitted by dimplex

New England-style clam chowder built on a butter-flour roux with milk, potatoes, celery, and a finishing splash of red wine vinegar for brightness. Hearty, creamy, eight-bowl batch.

YIELD

8 servings

PREP

15 min

COOK

40 min

READY

55 min

This clam chowder is the New England-style classic, the creamy white-broth version (no tomatoes, please) that defines the genre. The technique relies on building a proper white sauce (béchamel) with butter, flour, and milk, then folding it into the cooked vegetables and clams at the end. This approach gives you complete control over the final consistency, unlike chowders that thicken through reduction alone.

The red wine vinegar at the end is the surprise ingredient. Two tablespoons in a chowder this size sounds odd, but it brightens everything and cuts through the richness of the cream sauce. Without it, the chowder tastes one-note. With it, every spoonful has a faint zip that keeps you reaching for another.

Reserve the clam juice. It’s full of briny ocean flavor that water alone can’t replicate. Pour it over the vegetables for the initial cook, then add water only as needed to barely cover.

Dice the potatoes finely so they cook quickly and contribute starch to the broth. Large potato chunks stay mealy in the middle while the rest of the chowder cooks; small dice melts slightly into the broth and adds body.

Pro Tips

  • Use whole milk, not skim or low-fat. The fat is what gives the chowder its silky texture.
  • Add the clams at the very end, just heating through. Clams cooked too long turn rubbery.
  • A bay leaf or sprig of fresh thyme tossed in with the vegetables adds an unobtrusive herbal depth.
  • Top with crispy bacon bits and a sprinkle of fresh parsley for the full New England diner experience.

Variations

  • Add a cup of crumbled cooked bacon at the end for a smokier, richer chowder.
  • Stir in 2 tablespoons of dry sherry along with the vinegar for added complexity.
  • Use fresh shucked clams if available; reduce salt accordingly since fresh juice is less salty than canned. Pair with oyster crackers for the classic chowder presentation.

Ingredients

1 237
CUP ML ONIONS
finely chopped
1 237
CUP ML CELERY
finely chopped
2 473
CUPS ML POTATOES
finely diced
13 375.7
OUNCES ML/G CLAM
canned, with juice
¾ 177
CUP ML BUTTER
¾ 177
1 0.9
QUART L MILK
1 ½ 7.5
TEASPOONS ML SALT
½ 2.5
TEASPOON ML BLACK PEPPER
2 30
TABLESPOONS ML RED WINE VINEGAR

Directions

Drain juice from clams and pour over onions, celery, and potatoes.

Add enough water to barely cover.

Cook vegetables.

Meanwhile, melt butter, add flour and blend until smooth.

Stirring constantly, add milk and cook until smooth and thick.

Add salt and pepper.

Add white sauce, clams, and vinegar to vegetable mixture and heat through until thick.

Serve hot.

* not incl. in nutrient facts Arrow up button

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Nutrition Facts

Serving Size 244g (8.6 oz)
Amount per Serving
Calories 331 56% from fat
 % Daily Value *
Total Fat 20g 32%
Saturated Fat 13g 63%
Trans Fat 0g
Cholesterol 77mg 26%
Sodium 664mg 28%
Total Carbohydrate 8g 8%
Dietary Fiber 1g 5%
Sugars g
Protein 29g
Vitamin A 20% Vitamin C 18%
Calcium 19% Iron 55%
* based on a 2,000 calorie diet How is this calculated?
Trans-fat Free
 

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