“Queequeg,” said I, “do you think that we can make out a supper for us both on one clam?”
However, a warm savory steam from the kitchen served to belie the apparently cheerless prospect before us. But when that smoking chowder came in, the mystery was delightfully explained. Oh, sweet friends! hearken to me. It was made of small juicy clams, scarcely bigger than hazel nuts, mixed with pounded ship biscuit, and salted pork cut up into little flakes; the whole enriched with butter, and plentifully seasoned with pepper and salt.”
-Moby Dick, by Herman Melville
Thoughts:
Fabulous, if a little unconventional. The liquid reduces down, and the stewed potatoes begin to fall apart, such that the whole chowder becomes this dense concoction, much thicker than most chowders available at restaurants. Redolent with the goodness of spuds and onions, and just a hint of herbs, the chowder on the whole is flavorful and filling. Every so often a clam comes up in a spoonful, and is an extra treat.
All in all, this seems to me an ideal chowder for taking the chill off after a long spell at sea.
Try Pots Clam Chowder Recipe
Total prep time: 1 hour
Makes about 2-3 servings
Cook’s Notes: I didn’t need to add salt, as the salt pork provided exactly the right amount on its own, but a dash of pepper won’t go amiss. This recipe is adapted from one from Mrs. Rorer’s Philadelphia Cookbook, from the 1880s. This puts it just a few decades after the publication of Moby Dick, and on the right coast.
Ingredients:
- 25 clams, whole, in shells
- 1/4 lb salt pork, diced
- 2 cups water
- 2 medium sized potatoes, peeled and diced large
- 1 onion, chopped fine
- 1/2 tsp. thyme
- 1/2 tsp. sweet marjoram
- 1/2 Tbs. parsley
- salt & pepper to taste
- 1 cup milk
- 3 water crackers or 2 sea biscuits, crumbled
- 2 Tbs butter
- 2 Tbs flour
Wash clams thoroughly. Into a largeish saucepan, pour 1 1/2 cups water, then add the whole clams. Put a lid on and simmer until the shells open. Take the opened clams out of the pot, reserving the liquid in a separate container. Any clams that do not open should be discarded.
Line the bottom of the saucepan with the diced salt pork. Now put a layer of potatoes on the salt pork, then a sprinkling of onion, thyme, sweet marjoram, parsley, salt & pepper, then a layer of clams, and continue until all the ingredients are used.
Add the water, which should be boiling and barely cover the whole. Cover and simmer for half an hour without stirring. Then add the milk and crackers, stir and cook ten minutes longer. Make a roux by melting the butter over medium heat, then stirring in the flour. Stir in a ladle or two of broth, then add the whole mix back into the chowder.
Serve hot, with extra biscuits on the side.
Sounds great. Where’s the veal coming from, or did I miss something?
Whoops! I was editing this post while camping, and the veal was a vestige of the original recipe I started with. I’ve tweaked the recipe and ingredients to make things clearer. :)
At the end, when you say stir in some broth, where is that broth coming from? Is that broth from the chowder pot?
Yep! I’ll clarify the wording a bit, but just use a ladleful of the liquid from the chowder.
Oh my god I just made this with my boyfriend and it is beyond delicious. We’re sitting on the couch full of chowder and happy as, yes, clams. Thanks for the recipe!
Yay! Glad you loved it! :D
Melville said “little flakes” and what exactly is a “sea biscuit”? This is a hard study for a chef, as is the book for life… do you have any thoughts on this?
I mention this as a curiousity: A few pages before the clam chowder recipe there’s a recipe for “Clam Soup no. 2” which, other than the absence of salt pork, seems a lot like the stuff Melville describes.
50 clams
1 pint of milk
1 pint of water
2 tablespoons of butter
1 dozen water crackers
Pepper to taste
“Drain the clams and put the liquor on to boil; chop the clams fine. Skim the liquor, as it boils, free from all scum, then add the water, clams and pepper, and simmer for five minutes; add the butter and then the milk; let it head (but not boil). Take from the fire, add the crackers, broken into small pieces, and serve at once.”
Had to refer to the previous recipe (“Clam Soup no. 1”) to figure out that “liquor” refers to claim juice!
https://archive.org/details/mrsrorersphilade00rorerich/page/30/mode/2up