Recipes & Lore • The Chowder Question

Rhode Island Clear Chowder

New England argues about chowder the way other regions argue about barbecue, and Rhode Island holds the minority position with total confidence: clear. No cream, no tomatoes — just quahog broth, potatoes, onions, a little pork fat, and a lot of clam. The theory is simple: if you can't taste the quahog through the dairy, why did you dig the quahog?

The full battlefield, for out-of-staters: white (creamy New England style — fine, ubiquitous, not ours), red (tomato-based; Manhattan gets blamed, but Rhode Island has its own beloved red lineage — the chowder served at Rocky Point was famously in the red family), and clear — the Rhode Island original, the oldest of the three styles, and the one this page is about. Families hold positions on all three. We're not here to mediate.

A bowl of Rhode Island clear broth clam chowder with potatoes and herbs.
Photo: Bowl of Delicious

You need

Method

  1. Steam whole quahogs open in 4 cups of water; strain and keep every drop of that broth — it is the chowder. Chop the meat.
  2. Render the pork in a soup pot; soften the onion and celery in the fat.
  3. Add potatoes, bay leaf, thyme, and broth; simmer ~15 minutes until the potatoes are just tender.
  4. Add the clams and simmer 5 minutes, no more — long-boiled clams turn to erasers.
  5. Black pepper, parsley, done. If your hand drifts toward the cream or the tomatoes, this was never the recipe for you. Serve with clam cakes for dunking — the correct and only accompaniment.
The lore: clear broth is the oldest chowder style in the region — closer to what shore dinners served in the 1800s than anything with cream in it. Rhode Island's version survives because the state controls the supply: Narragansett Bay quahogs have at times accounted for a quarter of the entire U.S. commercial catch. When you own the clam, you don't need to hide it.

Sources & further reading

Send the taste of the bay

Chowder doesn't ship — but the shelf-stable Rhode Island canon does, packed in the Rhode Island Survival Kit.

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