Manhattan clam chowder

wheeitsme

New member
Is it possible to make a good Manhattan clam chowder from canned
clams? I can do all the other ingredients fresh, but where I live,
canned clams are my only option. Open to suggestions, brands, and
recipes.

nb
 
notbob wrote:


Isn't 'good Manhattan chowder an oxymoron? I prefer New
England-- but confess to having used canned clams without ruining
anything.

SeaWatch is the brand I've used recently. Bought them at Sams Club-
don't know if it is a store brand.

Jim
 
On 12 Feb 2011 22:11:20 GMT, notbob wrote:


Of course, as good as New England clam chowder with canned.


There are frozen clams, none better:
http://www.bobdoxsee.com/LONG ISLAND SEA CLAM COMPANY/doxsee_sea_clam_co.htm

Usually available only locally but I know they are shipped to distant
markets too... mostly high end restaurants and hotels... I've spotted
the containers in Las Vegas.

I've always much preferred Manhattan clam chowder, I really don't
consider New England clam chowder a legitimate chowder, it's always
too thin and its flavor too wussy, really a waste of clams... New
England clam chowder is for those who like to boast that they eat
clams but are too ascared to eat clams on the half shell.
 
On Feb 12, 5:11?pm, notbob wrote:

Yes.

I use canned clams for chowders and clam linguine. I've had them
fresh - really fresh since I dug them out of the ocean. So much sand
though. e.
 
On 2/12/2011 4:11 PM, notbob wrote:

Doxie? brand baby clams are, IMHO the best of the canned clams. They
also make diced clams and chopped clams. I used to get those when I
lived in the northeast. Here in Texas, I find the Neptune? brand to be
pretty good.

--
Janet Wilder
Way-the-heck-south Texas
Spelling doesn't count. Cooking does.
 
On 2011-02-13, Brooklyn1 wrote:



What is it about "canned clams are my only option" you don't
understand?

You gonna pay the shipping costs of frozen clams to my abode or pay my
gasoline bill to drive 200 miles to the nearest store that may carry
non-canned clams? Has there been some sorta world-wide mass epidemic
of stupidity? I no longer get tv news, so may have missed that
particular bulletin.

nb
 
On 13 Feb 2011 03:14:15 GMT, notbob wrote:


I haven't cooked with clams in a few years... but one brand
(Gorton's?) chops theirs large and I liked that. I've bought the tall
cans of whole clams many times and tried several brands, but they're
pretty much flavorless so I needed lots of bottled clam juice when I
used them.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
Sqwertz wrote:


I'm not sure I've seen a suggested procedure for using fresh
clams in chowder. I'd be tempted to make up the chowder and
sort of steam the clams in the pot of chowder until they open,
fish them out with tongs, discard the shells and return the
clams to the chowder after chopping.

Is that approximately how it's done?


S.
 
On Sun, 13 Feb 2011 06:07:50 +0000 (UTC), Steve Pope wrote:


They would be purged and cooked separately, filtering the juice to
remove sand and grit before cooking in the chowder. That least that's
how I would do it.

Even the bowls of steamed clams you get in restaurants usually have
grit in the bottom of the bowl (depending on the pre-prep, source and
variety).

-sw
 
On Sun, 13 Feb 2011 07:11:23 +0000 (UTC), [email protected]
(Steve Pope) wrote:


We ate at Scoma's just last weekend and I noticed a little sand in the
chowder. Not enough to matter, but it was there.

--

Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
 
On Sun, 13 Feb 2011 06:07:50 +0000 (UTC), [email protected]
(Steve Pope) wrote:


Not even close. Live clams are shucked, then added to the pot raw.

Canned clams suck far worse than canned 'shrooms, they are cooked to
death in those cans. It's best to find a fish monger that sells live
clams, or buy fresh frozen... most wholesale restuarant supply
emporiums sell fresh frozen clams. When I lived on long island I
always bought fresh frozen clams for cooking, fresh shucked were eaten
on the half shell. Unless you live close to the sea you want find
fresh frozen at your stupidmarket but still they are available from
where your major restaurants/hotels shop... some sell only wholesale
but many sell retail too. Check your Yellow Pages.
 
On Sun, 13 Feb 2011 00:41:56 -0600, Sqwertz
wrote:


All nonsense. I've slurped clams at too many clam bars to think such
stupidity.
 
notbob wrote:

You can certainly make clam chowder from quality canned clams, however
there are only two types of clam chowder, New England (milk) and Rhode
Island (clear). Manhattan clam soup is not chowder by the wildest
stretch of the imagination, more like watered down red clam sauce for
pasta.
 
In article ,
Sqwertz wrote:


Agreed!! I was going to mention them but figured I'd be laughed off
The Cabal (TINC). I used them in clam sauce -- had no idea how big they
were; I sliced them into strips, I think, for my clam sauce (for pasta).
I've since found them locally (minced, too, I think, in a smaller can)
and every time I open the cupboard I think about all the best stuff I've
ever gotten in a food gift exchange -- all from you, too! Those Linday
green ripe olives are great, too. :-) And the salad dressing in the
triangular bottle. I've bought them all myself, based on my experience
with what you sent. Never would have chosen them myself before that.
You give good gift.

--
Barb, Mother Superior, HOSSSPoJ
Holy Order of the Sacred Sisters of St. Pectina of Jella
"Always in a jam, never in a stew; sometimes in a pickle."
Pepparkakor particulars posted 11-29-2010;
http://web.me.com/barbschaller
 
Brooklyn1 wrote:





That kind of rules it out for me... so much work shuckin' those clams.


I understand they are chopped up from gigantic clams that are anywhere
from 30 to 100 years old, then pressure-canned.

Steve
 
Back
Top