North Wood Clam Chowder
Submitted by birsim
Minnesota-style clam chowder loaded with wild rice, potatoes, mushrooms, and cream. A Northwoods twist on New England chowder, finished with a splash of sherry before serving.
YIELD
6 servingsPREP
10 minCOOK
45 minREADY
1 hrsThis is clam chowder the way they do it in cabin country, where wild rice shows up in almost everything. The nutty, slightly chewy grain is swapped in where traditional chowders might add extra potatoes, and it gives the soup a backbone that makes it feel substantial enough for a main course on a cold night.
The flavor build follows classic chowder logic. A mushroom and onion roux thickens the base, then potatoes simmer right in the combined chicken broth and clam liquid so the starch integrates. Minced clams go in late, at the same time as the cream, so they stay tender instead of rubbery. A hit of sherry at the end is what a diner in Duluth would call the finishing flourish.
Kitchen Tips
- Add the clams after the soup is off the hard simmer. Continued boiling toughens them within minutes.
- Cook the wild rice separately and add at the end. Starchy grains muddy the broth if simmered in.
- Use dry sherry, not cooking sherry. The salt and additives in cooking sherry overwhelm the delicate clam flavor.
- Let the soup sit 10 minutes off heat before serving. Potatoes and clams season the broth as they rest.
Variations
- Swap half the chicken broth for fish stock for deeper seafood flavor.
- Add diced bacon or salt pork at the start of the saute for a smoky base.
- Finish with chopped fresh parsley or dill for a greener, brighter bowl.
Ingredients
Directions
Sauté onions and mushrooms in butter until onions are clear.
Put potatoes, broth, clam liquid and lemon juice in a 6 qt. soup pot.
Boil 20 minutes.
Add flour to onions and mushrooms, stir until smooth.
Add onion mixture to soup pot.
Toss in bay leaves and pepper, add salt to taste, cook for 10 minutes.
Stir often. Add clams, cream and wild rice.
Heat, stirring constantly. Just before serving add sherry to taste.
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