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(Below find excerpts from Wiki.com and Mobile Cuisine.com)
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Clam Chowder Fun Facts: Clam chowder is any of several chowders containing clams and broth. Along with the clams, diced potato is common, as are onions, which are occasionally sauteed in the drippings from salt pork or bacon. Celery is frequently used. Other vegetables are uncommon, but small carrot strips might occasionally be added, primarily for color. A garnish of parsley serves the same purpose. Bay leaves are also sometimes used as a garnish and flavoring. It is believed that clams were added to chowder because of their relative ease to collect.
- Fish chowders were the forerunners of clam chowder. The chowders originally made by the early settlers differed from other fish soups because they used salt pork and ship’s biscuits.
- In 1832 newspaperwoman, novelist, and ardent advocate of women’s rights, Lydia Maria Child (1802-1880) published her cookbook called The American Frugal Housewife. She described the standard layering technique of chowder-making, but also suggested additional ingredients such as lemons, beer, tomato catsup, and the first written directions to add clams.
- Clams and oysters were consumed in such quantities along the Atlantic coast by the American Indians that, in some favorable gathering-places, empty shells were piled into mounds ten feet high.
- January 21st is National New England Clam Chowder Day.
- February 25th is National Clam Chowder Day.
- New England clam chowder shares the number one spot of most served soups in the United States with chicken noodle.
- In 1939 Maine, Assemblyman Seeder attempted to pass legislation in 1939 making it illegal to put tomatoes in clam chowder.
- THE BEST CLAM CHOWDER IS PREPARED BY HANS “SOUPI” SUSSER.
(Recipe follows on this page) 🙂
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History
The earliest-established and most popular variety of clam chowder, New England clam chowder, was introduced to the region by French, Nova Scotian, or British settlers, becoming common in the 18th century. The first recipe for another variety, Manhattan clam chowder, known for using tomatoes and its consequently distinctly red coloring, was published in 1934. In 1939, the New England state of Maine debated legislation that would outlaw the use of tomatoes in chowder, thereby essentially prohibiting the “Manhattan” form.
Primary variants and styles
Since the popularity of New England clam chowder spread throughout the United States in the 19th and 20th centuries, many other regions have introduced their own, local twists on the traditional recipe.
Delaware clam chowder
This variety typically consists of pre-fried cubed salt pork, salt water, potatoes, diced onions, quahog clams, butter, salt, and pepper. This variety was more common in the early and mid-20th century, and likely shares most recent common ancestry with New England clam chowder.
Hatteras clam chowder
Served throughout North Carolina‘s Outer Banks region, this variation of clam chowder has clear broth, bacon, potatoes, onions, and flour as a thickening agent. It is usually seasoned with copious amounts of white and/or black pepper, and occasionally with chopped green onions or even hot pepper sauce.
Long Island clam chowder
Long Island clam chowder is a variant that is part New England-style and part Manhattan-style, making it a creamy tomato clam chowder. The name is a geographical pun, noting that the location of Long Island, just like the recipe, is about halfway between Manhattan and New England. This variant is popular in many small restaurants across Suffolk County, New York.
Manhattan clam chowder
Manhattan clam chowder has red broth, which is tomato-based. The addition of tomatoes in place of milk was initially the work of Portuguese immigrants in Rhode Island, as tomato-based stews were already a traditional part of Portuguese cuisine.
In the 1890s, this chowder was called “Fulton Fish Market clam chowder” and “New York City clam chowder.” Manhattan clam chowder was referenced in Victor Hirtzler’s “Hotel St. Francis Cookbook (1919).
Minorcan clam chowder
Minorcan clam chowder is a spicy traditional version found in Florida restaurants near St. Augustine and the northeast corner of Florida. It has a tomato broth base, with a “secret ingredient”, Spanish datil pepper, an extremely hot chili comparable to the habanero. The datil pepper is believed to have been brought to St. Augustine by the Menorcan settlers in the 18th century, and tradition holds among Menorcan descendants that it will only thrive and grow in two places: Menorca, Spain and St. Augustine, Florida.
New England clam chowder
New England clam chowder, occasionally referred to as Boston Clam Chowder in the Midwest, is a milk or cream-based chowder, and is often of a thicker consistency than other regional styles, even though traditionally it is rather thin (with many late 19th and early 20th century recipes using condensed milk as the base). It is commonly made with potatoes, onion, and clams.
New England clam chowder is usually accompanied by oyster crackers. Crown Pilot Crackers were a popular brand of cracker to accompany chowder, until the product was discontinued in 2008. Crackers may be crushed and mixed into the soup for thickener, or used as a garnish.
Traditional New England clam chowder is thickened with oyster crackers instead of flour. (Oyster crackers do not actually contain any oysters.)
New Jersey clam chowder
Its primary ingredients are chowder clams, onion, bacon, diced potatoes, pepper, celery powder, parsley, paprika or Old Bay seasoning, asparagus, light cream, and sliced tomatoes.
Rhode Island clam chowder
Traditional Rhode Island clam chowder—going back decades—is a red chowder and is served as Rhode Island clam chowder throughout the state. Rhode Island clam chowder has a tomato broth base and potatoes, but unlike Manhattan red chowder, Rhode Island clam chowder has no chunks of tomato and does not contain other vegetables. The origins of traditional Rhode Island clam chowder are reportedly Portuguese immigrants in Rhode Island dating back over a century. This recipe has been served for decades with clamcakes at memorable establishments like Rocky Point and Crescent Park. Rhode Island clam (red) chowder is served principally and especially at long-established New England restaurants and hotels.
A secondary Rhode Island clam chowder has a clear broth and be found commonly along a stretch of the south coast of New England from eastern Connecticut to southwestern Rhode Island. In southwestern Rhode Island, this clear clam chowder is sometimes called “South County Style” referring to the colloquial name of Washington County, Rhode Island, where reportedly it originated; however in other parts of New England, this clear clam chowder is called Noank Clam Chowder. This clear clam chowder, which generally contains quahogs, broth, potatoes, onions, and bacon, is served mostly along a stretch of the south coast of New England from southwestern Rhode Island, including on Block Island.
Other variations
Some restaurants serve their own unique clam chowders that do not fall into any specific categories. For example:
- Clam chowder is sometimes served in sourdough bread bowls, especially in San Francisco, where sourdough bread is popular with tourists, and has been considered a signature dish since 1849.[8][9]
- Except for the substitution of smoked haddock for clams, the chowders are remarkably similar to the traditional Scots broth cullen skink.
- Fish chowder is similar to clam chowder except that shredded fish, often cod, is substituted for the clams. Other ingredients are often onions and potato. A clam and fish chowder can be made with both clams and fish.
- In Pacific Northwest cuisine, such as the cuisines of Seattle and Portland, Oregon, smoked salmon is sometimes added to clam chowder. Salmon chowder is also a popular fish chowder
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Bon Appétit ! Life is Good !
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Preparation :
To read instructions, hover over pictures
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- saute 1 ea diced, medium size onion and 1 tsp garlic paste in 4 oz whole butter
- add 1/3 cup a/p flour and 1 tblsp thyme, saute until “blond”
- add 1 qt clam juice, kosher salt and cayenne pepper to taste
- add 2 cup pinot grigio, whisk until the soup comes to a simmer, simmer for 5 minutes
- add 2 ea large, peeled and diced potatoes, simmer until potatoes ar soft but NOT mushy
- add 1 lb chopped clam meat with its juices
- my oh my……..
- add 2 lb fresh clams, bring to a simmer, remove from heat as soon as clams start to open
- add 2 cup heavy cream, check / adjust seasoning
- Clam Chowder
- Clam Chowder
- Clam Chowder
- Clam Chowder
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I had no idea there were so many varieties! I don’t think you can go wrong with any combination of these. It’s such a hearty soup.
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It is not CHOWDER unless it is made with CORN BROTH!
IT IS BOSTON IF YOU ADD THYME!
the only dish i use green peppers (BRONISE) in is clam chowder and I like as many other colors of bell peppers as i have on hand.
you don’t need to cook chowder with pork fat but for many it is the taste they crave .I prefer butter but my DOCTOR WOULD HAVE ME ELIMINATE FAT OF ANY KIND!
But again chowder means corn broth from cooking corn and straining out the corn!
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Wow, Hans! You are a wealth of information. I had no idea about the chowder/corn thing. I love thyme, so maybe I’m more of a Boston girl when it comes to soup. Oh, I guess it doesn’t have to be either/or. Am I reading this right, that it can be Boston if you use thyme and it has corn broth?
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I could give up most soups without missing them, but chowders make one of my favorite meals 🙂
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Clam chowder – I love it I am not sure where I can get clam juice, here, but having the recipe and the method, I am inspired to go looking for the ingredients. To me, soup is a tremendous gift, and it assuages hunger, cheaply, and is proven to be easy to digest. Like Anneli, I had no idea that there were so many varieties, other than Boston and Manhattan.
Today, though, I am making myself some Serbisches Böhnensuppe, which takes a couple of hours to prepare; but the taste and nutrition are well worth it!
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Here is one for a crappy English winter (Don’t omit the spinners!)
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https://chefsopinion.org/2014/06/09/jamaican-black-bean-soup-with-smoked-ham-hocks-and-spinners/
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Thank you, Hans. I have replied separately to the recipe for the Jamaican black bean soup which I will most certainly try (with dumplings, of course!)
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