Seeing as we’re in a Boston frame of mind at the moment, after I FINALLY got round to posting about my visit, it would be probably be a good idea to strike while the iron is hot and to post this dish which is closely related to Boston and which I made about a year ago.
Remember Moira? She of the classic American recipes, the giant American-style cookies and the great blog Who Wants Seconds? OK, so maybe some of you weren’t lucky enough to meet her in person but let me assure you that you can’t help but love her once you’ve met her. She and I hit it off almost immediately and spent many hours laughing raucously on the phone before finally meeting in person last year at the London blogger salt and butter tasting. When I picked her up from the station, she presented me with a huge package of American foods, direct from the shop on the nearby American military base. Among them were my guilty sweet secret (Reeses Peanut Butter Kisses), some peanut butter chips for cookies… and all the ingredients to make proper New England clam chowder.
The word chowder has its etymological roots in the Latin word caldaria, meaning a place to warm things and later a cooking pot. This was also the root of the English word “cauldron” and the French word chaudiere – and it is obviously a short hop from there to chowder. The early US settlers made chowder with what they brought on their ships, so their chowders often featured salt pork and ship’s biscuits – a tradition preserved today in the use of bacon in clam chowder and crackers on top. Chowders (or something similar) seem to have developed spontaneously in fishing communities around the world, probably as families stood around the cooking cauldron and waited for their ships to return from the sea. A portion of each man’s catch would be dumped in the chaudiere or cauldron to form part of the chowder for the collective celebrations later.
Apparently the first and oldest known printed chowder recipe appeared in the Boston Evening Post on September 23, 1751 and read as follows:
First lay some Onions to keep the Pork from burning
Because in Chouder there can be not turning;
Then lay some Pork in slices very thing,
Thus you in Chouder always must begin.
Next lay some Fish cut crossways very nice
Then season well with Pepper, Salt, and Spice;
Parsley, Sweet-Marjoram, Savory, and Thyme,
Then Biscuit next which must be soak’d some Time.
Thus your Foundation laid, you will be able
To raise a Chouder, high as Tower of Babel;
For by repeating o’er the Same again,
You may make a Chouder for a thousand men.
Last a Bottle of Claret, with Water eno; to smother ’em,
You’ll have a Mess which some call Omnium gather ’em.
What fascinated me about this, is its similarity to the South African tradition of potjiekos in which food is layered in a 3-legged cast iron pot and the above recipe: in both cases, food is layered, covered in liquid and cooked slowly until done. Who would have known – a South Africa-New England cultural link.
Maybe that’s why Moira and I instantly hit it off – some sort of atavistic recognition on a subconscious level. Aaaah, the unifying power of food 😉 Her recipe below makes the most delicious, rich, creamy chowder – who needs seafood restaurants when you can make this at home?
MOIRA’S NEW ENGLAND CLAM CHOWDER (serves 4)
Ingredients
4 small cans of minced clams
liquid from the tinned clams + 1 cup water + 2 bottles of clam juice (can substitute fish stock in a pinch)
4 slices thick-cut bacon cut in 1cm pieces
1 large onion, diced
2 Tbsp flour
3 medium boiling potatoes, diced
1 large bay leaf
1 tsp fresh thyme (or 1/4 tsp dried)
1 cup double cream
2 Tbsp minced fresh parsley leaves
salt and pepper
Method
Fry the bacon in a large stock pot over medium heat until crisp (5-7 min). Add the onion and saute for another 5 minutes. Add flour and stir until lightly coloured.
Whisk in the reserved clam broth/water mixture. Add potatoes, bay leaf amd thyme and simmer until potatoes are tender (about 10 minutes)
Add the clams, cream, parsley and salt & pepper to taste. Bring back to a simmer and serve topped with crackers and accompanied by crusty bread for mopping up the last drop.