Recipes & Lore • Field Guide
What Is a Quahog?
First, the housekeeping: yes, it's the town from Family Guy, which is set in a fictional Rhode Island for a reason. But before it was a cartoon, the quahog (say it "KO-hog" — locals will also accept "KWAW-hog," and will judge you either way) was dinner, currency, and identity. It is the hard-shell clam, Mercenaria mercenaria, the official state shell of Rhode Island, and the single most load-bearing ingredient in the state's food culture.
The name is older than the state
"Quahog" comes from the Narragansett word for the animal — the people who were harvesting these clams from the Bay long before there was a Rhode Island, and who also gave the state the jonnycake. The shell's purple interior was worked into wampum, the shell beads used ceremonially and as currency across the region — which is also how the scientific name got its wonderfully blunt Latin: Mercenaria, from the word for wages. The money clam. Twice.
One clam, many names: the size ladder
- Littlenecks — the smallest sold, roughly 1½–2 inches. Tender; raw bar territory, or steamed with linguine.
- Cherrystones — the middleweights, about 2–3 inches. Grill them, casino them.
- Chowder hogs (just "quahogs" to most Rhode Islanders) — 3 inches and up, tough as commitment. Never eaten raw; always chopped into chowder, clam cakes, and stuffies.
Same species top to bottom — the ladder is just age. A big chowder hog can be older than the person shucking it; they can live for decades.
Why Rhode Island specifically
Narragansett Bay is quahog heaven, and the state has at times supplied about a quarter of the entire U.S. commercial catch. Quahoggers working the Bay with bullrakes are one of the state's oldest continuous professions. When Rhode Island picked an official shell, there was no debate to be had — a rarity, given that this is the state that needed a legislative act and a fistfight to discuss cornmeal.
How Rhode Island eats it
Stuffies — the chowder hog's highest calling: chopped quahog baked into a chouriço-spiked bread stuffing served in its own shell. Then clear chowder, clam cakes, and snail-salad-adjacent raw bar culture down every shoreline road in summer.
Sources & further reading
Can't dig? Ship the rest of Rhode Island
The quahog stays in the Bay, but the shelf-stable canon travels: coffee syrup, jonnycake meal, wiener seasoning, and more, packed in our gift boxes.
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