This New England Clam Chowder is the absolute best! This easy chowder recipe is perfect comfort food for a cold night.
Made with bacon, plenty of potatoes, and with just the right amount of cream, you will be a chowder master with my instructions for how to make clam chowder.
THE BEST NEW ENGLAND CLAM CHOWDER
This recipe has been a favorite in our house for ages! It is far and away Nathan’s favorite dinner recipe.
What makes this the best clam chowder recipe you ask? Simple. The roux starts out with bacon! A roux is the mixture of fat and flour to create a thickening agent.
That fat is often butter, like in my Chicken Noodle Casserole, but in this amazing clam chowder, it is bacon fat. The bacon fat works perfectly to make a nice creamy base for this soup while adding tons of flavor.
HOW TO MAKE NEW ENGLAND CLAM CHOWDER
It was actually my husband who first started making this soup. I had never been a big fan because the broth was so liquidy and thin. New England Clam Chowder should have a nice and thick creamy broth.
And then one day I watched Nathan make it. After combining the bacon fat and the flour, he just poured in the clam juice in one big fell swoop. (Cue the horror face emoji.)
The key to this recipe working well is to add the clam juice really slowly. I’m talking like two tablespoons at a time when you first start adding it. You want it to be a nice gummy mess with the little bit of clam juice being absorbed each time before you add in more.
Do you see how creamy it is in the photos? That’s what you are going for.
MAKING THE BEST NEW ENGLAND CLAM CHOWDER
- Add the diced thick cut bacon to the preheated stock pot.
- Cook until crisp. Add in the onions and celery, cooking until they are tender. Add in the garlic, cooking for 30 seconds making sure not to burn it.
- Mix in the flour.
- Very slowly stir in the clam juice. Start with about two tablespoons at a time, whisking it in until the liquid is absorbed and then adding more. At the end you can add more at a time and more quickly.
- Add the thyme, potatoes, and two bay leaves. Bring to a boil, and then reduce to a simmer for 20 minutes.
- Stir in the clams and heavy cream and enjoy!
Once you have made it a few times, you’ll be able to make it in your sleep!
NEW ENGLAND CLAM CHOWDER SUBSTITUTIONS
- My husband hates onions and isn’t a huge fan of celery or parsley, so when I’m making it for just him, I leave all of that out.
- He loves potatoes, so I add a few more of those than this recipe calls for.
- You can substitute chicken stock for the clam juice. It lessens the clam taste a little, but saves a bundle as clam juice can be expensive. On the other hand, I’ve had people tell me I’m a heathen for this. It’s your call.
DO I HAVE TO USE BACON?
I guess that you can do this without bacon. (But WHY?!?)
Start your recipe by melting 3 tablespoons of butter, and then start sautéing your vegetables. Carry on from there as normal. It is very likely that you will need to season your final soup with a bit of salt.
CAN I USE REGULAR MILK INSTEAD OF HEAVY CREAM?
Please don’t. Without heavy cream, you just aren’t going to get that final creamy soup that I know you want.
WHAT TO SERVE WITH CLAM CHOWDER
This recipe is great with bread for dipping. These one hour dinner rolls or my homemade beer bread would both be perfect.
I also love having a salad with my soup. Either this spinach salad or my winter salad would be delicious on the side.
If you make this soup or any of my other recipes, I’d love to hear from you!
New England Clam Chowder
Ingredients
- 4 slices of thick cut bacon diced into small pieces
- 3 cups clam juice or chicken stock see note
- 4 6.5 oz cans of chopped clams, liquid reserved (see step 2)
- 1 small onion diced
- 3 stalks celery diced
- 2 cloves of garlic minced
- 1/3 cup all purpose flour
- 1 1/2 pounds red potatoes about five medium diced into 1/2 inch pieces
- 8 oz heavy cream
- 1/4 tsp dried thyme
- 2 bay leaves
- 2 TBSPs well minced parsley
- salt and pepper
Instructions
- In a large stew pot, cook the bacon over medium heat until crisp, stirring often.
- While the bacon is cooking, drain the clam juice from the canned clams into a measuring cup. You will need approximately 3 cups more of clam juice or chicken stock to get a total of 4 1/2 cups of liquid.
- Add the diced celery and onions, cooking until they are translucent and very soft.
- Add the minced garlic and cook, stirring, until fragrant, about 30 seconds, being careful that the garlic doesn't burn.
- Stir in the flour, coating all of the veggies and the bacon. Continue cooking about a minute until the flour begins to brown.
- EXTREMELY gradually, pour in the clam juice (or clam juice/chicken stock mixture). Pour about two tablespoons at a time (no need to measure, this is just an estimate), whisking it into the flour veggie mixture. There should be no visible liquid between each pour. The veggies should look like a gummy mess. Continue this way until you use all the liquid, pouring more quickly at the end.
- Add the potatoes, thyme, and bay leaves and increase the heat to high and bring to a boil (you are looking for big bubbles at the surface). Then reduce to a simmer (the lowest you can go heat wise and still see bubbles) and continue cooking for 20 minutes or until the potatoes are soft.
- Stir in the cream and chopped clams, and let heat through for a minute. Remove from the heat stir in the fresh parsley. Season with salt and pepper to taste.
Nancy Donahue says
New England Clam Chowdwe……How much cream? Not listed in the ingredients!
Lisa Longley says
Hi Nancy, it’s 8 ounces of heavy cream.
eMi says
it says 8 ounces…
Holly N @ Spend With Pennies says
My husband is going to LOVE this! Clam Chowder is one thing I’ve never made at home so I’m looking forward to giving this a try!
Amie says
So what do I do with the bacon? Should I remove it and crumble it and put it back in or do I serve on the side?
Lisa Longley says
It gets added to the soup!
Lizmarie says
Wondering how you get 4 1/2 cups of liquid into a 4 cup measuring cup????
Lisa Longley says
You eye ball it and hope for the best or grab another measuring cup :)
Karen DalPezzo says
I made this clam chowder today and it was delicious. I also added 1/3 head of cauliflower, which just desolved into the soup. Yummy!!!!!
Lisa Longley says
I’m so glad you liked it Karen!
Tammy says
I made your recipe tonight and my husband said it was delicious. I used frozen clams and boiled them to get some of the juice for the broth. My mom taught be a trick for making roue. You put the flour and a few spoonfuls of broth in a container with a lid, add an ice cube and shake until it is mixed. Strain the lumps out and add directly to the warm broth. It works perfectly everytime. I added more flour because I like thicker chowder. I did everything else as instructed and only needed half the cream. Thanks for your recipe.
Sandy says
You can mix corn starch in the the heavy cream before added it to the soup mixes well with a whisk. That’s what I do and there’s no clumps
Kristeen says
Excellent! I really loved not adding the extra butter. The quantity of clams was perfect, no one complained about there not being enough. Thank you so much for the recipe!
Heather H says
How much soup does this make?
Lisa Longley says
I would say four dinner servings and 6 to 8 smaller side servings.
Janee says
Would this freeze well?
Lisa Longley says
It definitely wouldn’t be my go to for freezing soups. If you do freeze it, I guess I would suggested doing so before you add the clams and heavy cream and just bringing the soup up to a simmer upon thawing and then adding those.
Deb says
Our local shrimp house makes their chowder daily and what is left over at closing gets frozen, it made with more cream then this is and its just as good thawed and reheated, however it is placed in one of this bags you use with a seal machine then when ready to use throw that bag in a pan of water and heat that way.
Mindy says
Freakin delicious! I have made clam chowder before (my daughter loves it) but it turned out disgusting. So I was a bit reluctant to try again. I followed the recipe to the letter AND used good quality canned clams. It’s going on my regular soup list. Thanks for a great recipe!
Lisa Longley says
So glad you liked it Mindy!!
Joanne says
When I made this tonight it tasted good but was not very white. It was a yellow color. Where did I go wrong?
Lisa Longley says
Joanne, did you use clam juice or chicken broth? And if chicken broth, what kind?
Susan says
Excellent! My family loved this soup, it is now my go to chowder recipe. Next time I will be doubling the recipe.
Lisa Longley says
So glad you liked it Susan!