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Clam Chowders
Chowder is a thick soup -- thicker than most soups, but not as thick as
most stews.  The most common chowders are clam chowder, seafood
chowder, fish chowder, and corn chowder.

There are three main varieties of clam chowder: Manhattan, New England
and Rhode Island. The only places I've been to that offer more than one
are Dino's in North Haven CT, Milford Seafood in Milford CT, (converted
to a pizza place in late 2006), a restaurant in the rear of the food court on
the Ocean One pier/mall in Atlantic City (probably long gone), and some
Red Lobsters.
Strangely, although clams are known worldwide, the center of chowdering seems to be the
northeast US. I've never heard of "Pacific Coast Chowder;" and "California Clam Chowder" is a
music CD, not a food.

Some San Francisco restaurants and hotels tout "San Francisco clam chowder," but it's just
like chowder in Connecticut, Massachusetts or Maine.

Many restaurants on San Francisco's famous Fisherman's Wharf serve New England or
"Boston" chowder -- as if they don't have confidence in their own cuisine. It's frequently served
in a bowl made out of a hollowed out mini-loaf of Sour Dough bread (at least that part is
authentic San Francisco).

The Old Fisherman's Grotto on Fisherman's Wharf in Monterey CA, serves "Monterey
Chowder."  It's creamy, just like New England.

Farther north, you can find "Seattle Clam Chowder" and Puget Sound Clam Chowder. They,
too, are just like New England.

I've seen a few recipes for Maryland Clam Chowder, with ingredients including chicken and
peas. I have no intentions of trying it.

Restaurants & Institutions magazine reported that the Shore House Restaurant & Tavern in
Stamford, CT offers "Connecticut chowder"  with clear clam broth, in addition to traditional New
England chowder, and a spicy red Rhode Island variation.
Manhattan -- the red stuff, tomato-based, and my favorite. Prepared well in lots of
Greek-owned diners all over the US.

Campbell's canned versions are OK, if you add a can of clams and a can of tomato paste. Stew
Leonard's store-brand chowder is better than Campbell's, but also benefits from some extra
clams and tomato paste.
Progresso clam chowder, like most Progresso canned soups, has too
many pieces of carrots.
Yuck.

Red Lobster serves Manhattan at some of their restaurants. It's just a little bit better than
Campbell's, with tiny bits of clams and too much pepper. The branch in the north end of
Bridgeport CT is better than most.

Despite its name, I understand that Manhattan chowder was invented in New England. There are
not many clams in the water around Manhattan.

Up in the Bronx, you can get great Manhattan chowder at the
Sea Shore restaurant on City
Island. Their menu also shows steamers, but you can get steamed littlenecks if you ask. The
waiters will also sing "Happy Birthday" if you ask. A little bit farther north, you can get thick, rich
Manhattan (and other superb seafood) at the
Mont Olympos diner on Fort Hill Road in
Yonkers. Dinners come with cups of soup, and you can upgrade to a bowl for 25 cents, but can
probably get a free upgrade by just asking for it.
New England -- the white stuff, made with milk or cream. I eat it when I can't get
Manhattan, but I don't get excited over it.

Available in zillions of restaurants, and in cans. Some companies make low-fat versions. Clams
don't have fat, but milk and cream do. There are lots of good sources near and on Cape Cod,
including McMenamy's in Falmouth, the Pilot House (formerly Shaw's) in Bourne, Cooke's and
Bobby Byrne's in Hyannis, and the Seafood Sam's chain.

UPDATE, 28 JUNE 05 -- The UCLA tasting staff just returned from a working vacation in Maine,
where we made an important discovery. Northern New England clam chowder is quite different
from Southern New England clam chowder (just as northern New England lobster rolls are
quite different from southern New England lobster rolls).

The chowders served in Connecticut and on Cape Cod are thick, gooey and gloppy. You
could lick it off a stick. Up north (also known as "down east"), chowders are based on a thin
milk-like broth that could be slurped  through a straw.

We found great examples at Bob's Clam Hut in Kittery, Cindy's in Portland, and Lunt's Lobster
Pound in Trenton, just north of Bar Harbor. These chowders have a pool of golden melted
butter on top of the milk. Lunt's adds some paprika and parsley. They have great boiled
lobsters, too.
Rhode Island -- the light gray stuff, made with clam broth. Very good when made
right, but hard-to-find.

My absolute favorite is served at
Dino's in North Haven CT. Second place ranking was
Milford Seafood in Milford, CT -- but they were replaced by a pizza place. Until I do some
more testing, former number three,
Jimmie's in Savin Rock (West Haven) CT, is now number
two
.
The
absolute worst I've ever tried was in North Haven, a few miles south of Dino's, at Nick's
Char-Pit
. It was really celery soup, with no discernable presence of our favorite bivalve. My
visit was the first time in my life I couldn't (wouldn't, actually) finish clams and chowder. YUCK!
St. Augustine Florida has a distinctive Minorcan variation of
Manhattan chowder, that uses hot datil peppers, grown only in the St.
Augustine area.

The Minorcan clam chowder story began when eight ships were launched from
the island of Minorca, near Spain in 1768. The 1,403 passengers on board
were bound for an indigo plantation in New Smyrna, south of St. Augustine.
Though the Minorcans believed themselves to be contracted as indentured
servants to Dr. Andrew Turnbull, the plantation's owner, they were enslaved
for nine years.
Settlers who managed to survive, escaped in 1777 from the plantation and made their way to St. Augustine,
where they came under the protection of Governor Patrick Tonyn. They brought their own spices and cooking
traditions with them, and the key ingredient was the datil pepper.

Just as in New England, chowder was an easy food to make, it could be cooked in one pot, and it would feed
many hungry people. It was a meal made from necessity using fish that was plentiful in their new surroundings
and their own familiar seasonings, not one they had brought from their homeland. The Minorcans were
extraordinary fishermen. The fish was plentiful and the soil was poor, so their creativity probably led to dishes
like chowder.

Maggi Smith Hall, author of Flavors of St. Augustine, a cookbook that traces the history of St. Augustines'
cooking, found evidence that the tomato was grown in St. Augustine at least during the second Spanish
period (1784-1821). She states:

Tomatoes were one of the crops grown by Phillip Fatio, who had a plantatiion in Switzerland, Florida. So, while
New Englanders were enjoying their cream-based chowder, those make-do Minorcans were already using the
tomato.

(Info in this St. Augustine section is from Linda Stradley, writing in What's Cooking America. Photo is from
O'Steen's Restaurant in St. Augustine.
"Chowder" has its roots in the Latin word "calderia," which originally meant "a
place for warming things," and later came to mean "cooking pot." "Calderia"
also gave us "cauldron," and in French became "chaudiere."

Our modern seafood chowder was invented by French fishermen, who
traditionally threw whatever bits of fish or vegetables were on hand into a
communal pot. (From www.word-detective.com  and other sources.)

The pot and the northeast locale give a double connection between chaudiere
and chowder. In Connecticut there are several restaurants named "chowder
pot," a nicely redundant phrase, like "chaise lounge." (Pot pot and lounge
lounge.)

According to by Dale Carson of "Indian Country Today," New England clam
chowder is based on a dish prepared by Rhode Island's Narragansett Indians.
The word quahog comes from the Narragansett Indian name: poquauhock. The
quahog's scientific name, Mercenaria mercenaria, is derived from a Latin word
meaning "wages." The Native Americans used quahog shells to make beads
that they used as money. (From www.statehousegirls.net/ri/symbols/shell/ )
CLICK  for chowder history.


WeLoveClams.com                   Michael N. Marcus, Clam Master