Continuing the tradition of using this space to be the online backup of my recipes, I reveal the secrets of my home-made New England clam chowder.
Works well with pantry goods.
Ingredients:
- 4 strips of bacon (as plain as bacon as you can find. Avoid maple.)
- 12 oz. of chopped clams from a can. Fresh is good, but I'm not a clam snob.
- 12 oz of evaporated milk
- 4 oz of regular milk
- 1 white onion, diced
- 2 cloves garlic, smashed
- 1 bay leaf
- 4 potatoes cubed (1/2"). I prefer red spuds, but use what you have.
- 2 tbsp of butter
- A pinch or two of salt. The spuds need the salt more than the clams.
- Black pepper.
Process:
- Render bacon over med heat until meat is reduced to salad bar bacon bit
beauty. Remove bits, save the fat.
- Over low heat, sweat onion and garlic until translucent (about 7 minutes)
- Add clam juice from can, milk and half the spuds
- With a stick blender, puree to thicken the broth. Don't go nuts.
1 minute of blending is fine.
- Add the rest of the spuds, clams, bay leaf, bacon fat and butter.
- Simmer for an hour over low heat. If you have a double boiler, use
that. If not, stir ever few minutes. A skin is likely to develop on you
chowder. Don't panic. Just stir it back into the broth.
- Pepper to taste
You might also add a little paprika. Also, shallots and green onions would
go will in this dish. Normally I eat this with bread not crackers, but do
what you have to to get it down your gullet. This chowder stows nicely in the
fridge for a week and I swear the older it gets, the better.
Enjoy. And as the crusty New Englanders say around my neck of the woods:
get the hell of my cah, you stupid bastahds!
maple bacon!?
jdavidboyd on 2004-12-11T16:25:12
Excellent recipe, but anyone that would even
eat maple bacon, let alone use it in a recipe, deserves
exactly what they get!