Print Options

New England Fish Chowder

New England Fish Chowder

My first job out of college was in Boston, in the financial district downtown. My local friends did their best to inculcate this wide-eyed Californian to New England traditions of every sort, especially food. We feasted on indian pudding at Durgin Park, as many menu items as we could afford at the Union Oyster House and the No Name Restaurant, and $5/lb lobsters I would buy from the Italian fish monger across the street from where I lived in the North End. One dish I could never get enough of was "chowdah". Clam chowder, fish chowder, seafood chowder, whatever, I loved it. New England style chowder is white, with cream and potatoes. No tomatoes. It's thick, rich, and creamy. You can bury it in little oyster crackers.

For some odd reason I had a hankering for fish chowder this week. Maybe it's the change in the weather, with the cool nights coming in. In my research on chowder recipes I learned that there are lots of ways to make New England chowder. Some recipes call for starting out rendering fat from salt pork and then making a roux with flour. Some recipes skip the salt pork, but use a lot of butter. Most recipes called for a highly flavorful fish stock. For this particular dish, which we all agreed turned out exceptionally well, we are using olive oil and butter, no flour, and we use clam juice for the stock and heavy cream.

Print Options

New England Fish Chowder Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 Tbsp olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon butter
  • 2 medium yellow onions, chopped (about 2 cups)
  • 1/2 cup dry white wine (optional)
  • 3 large Yukon Gold potatoes (about 1 1/4 pounds), peeled, cut into 3/4-inch cubes
  • 2 cups clam juice
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 1 Tbsp fresh thyme, or 1 teaspoon dried thyme
  • 1 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 teaspoon Old Bay (optional, can use a little paprika and a dash of cayenne)
  • 1 1/2 to 2 lbs cod*, or other firm white fish, pin bones removed, fillets cut into 2-inch pieces
  • 1 1/2 cups heavy cream
  • 2 Tbsp chopped fresh parsley

* Here in the west we get Pacific Cod, considered a sustainable fish by Seafood Watch. Pick the best, most sustainable option available to you.

Method

1 Heat oil and butter in the bottom of a large pot (6-qt) on medium heat. Add the onions and cook until softened, about 5 minutes. Add the wine, if using, and turn up the heat, cook, uncovered until the wine reduces by half. (If not using wine, add 1/4 cup of water with the clam juice.)

2 Add the potatoes, clam juice, bay leaf, thyme, salt and pepper, and Old Bay spice. (The potatoes should be just barely covered with the liquid in the pot. If not, add water so that they are.) Lower the heat to medium and cook, covered, until the potatoes are almost done, about 10-15 minutes.

3 In a separate pot, heat the cream until steamy (not boiling).

4 Add the fish to the pot of potatoes and add the heated cream. Return to the stove. Cook on low heat, uncovered, until the fish is just cooked through, about 10 minutes. Keep your eye on the heat! If you are using straight heavy cream you should be more easily able to avoid curdling, even if the soup starts to boil. But if you are substituting light cream, half and half, or milk, the mixture will likely curdle if it gets near boiling point (one of the reasons I like using straight heavy cream). Keep the temperature so that it barely gets steamy, but not simmering. When the fish is just cooked through, remove from heat.

Mix in the parsley. The flavors will improve if the soup rests 30 minutes before serving.

Serve with crusty bread or oyster crackers (not for gluten-free version).

Serves 6.

You might also like...

37 Comments

Hi Elise,

It's getting to be a soup/chowder weather over here in Tokyo, too - and I want chowder like this, right now!! I always associate the dish with New England-style clam chowder, but enjoy ones with other kind of seafood, as well. I've once tried chowder with smoked haddock and that was lovely, too.

Posted by: chika on October 3, 2009 1:02 AM

Hello Elise,
Thank you for this recipe, it looks beautiful.
Just one question: because it is impossible to get clam juice in my corner of the Mediterranean, with what can I substitute it? Is it anything like oyster sauce?
Thanks again
Avi

I would substitute fish stock, or make your own shellfish stock. ~Elise

Posted by: Avi on October 3, 2009 4:57 AM

"...(one of the reasons I like using straight heavy cream)..."

Besides the obvious, of course ;^)
Looks great, E!

Posted by: jonathan on October 3, 2009 6:59 AM

Looks wonderful Elise. It really is chowda' weather isn't it. I invented a new clam chowder (Yachats Blush Chowder) this summer while on the Oregon Coast by adding some hot salsa to a creamy chowder base. Hey - we live in Aridzona and we use salsa in the strangest things.

That would work. We add tabasco to most of our soups. Definitely brightens things up. ~Elise

Posted by: June on October 3, 2009 7:22 AM

Oh, Elise! What a funny coincidence that you posted this recipe. A few days ago, I walked out of my gym here in Southern CA - it was a brisk, cool late afternoon. I don't know what brought it on, but I smelled fried clams and was instantly transported to autumn in New England and the Clam Shack in Ipswich. I could practically taste them.

I stopped at the market on the way home, then had an overwhelming urge to call my sister, Jenny, who lives in Indiana. We hadn't spoken in a month. When she answered, she told me she was in New Hampshire, eating clam chowder as we spoke!! I asked her to please order some fried clams for me to go with the chowder.

I, too, have super-fond memories of the Union Oyster House, the No Name, the Barking Crab, Legal Seafood...I could go on and on.

Thanks for sharing this recipe to bring a little bit of New England to your table, no matter where you live!

Posted by: SAS on October 3, 2009 9:23 AM

The best soup in the world...

This looks very good. We (I'm a native Rhode Islander) like a little non-sweet smoked ham with just a bit of fat on it at the base, along with some butter or oil, for the ping of smoke flavor under the cream. Makes the fragrance of the black pepper sing.

"Whenever I find myself growing grim about the mouth; whenever it is a damp, drizzly November in my soul; whenever I find myself involuntarily pausing before coffin warehouses, and bringing up the rear of every funeral I meet . . . " then I know along with Ishmael it's time to get down to the harbor and seek out a chowder shack.

Posted by: mantha on October 3, 2009 10:44 AM

Up here in The County (Northeastern Maine) we like it unthickened, use a little water to cook everything with (no fish stock), butter (although Mom often used salt pork), and always use haddock for the fish. Fish chowder made with haddock was what my daughter missed most while living in Texas.

Posted by: Brenda on October 3, 2009 11:17 AM

Well, it's definitely "chowdah" weather here in the Bay State. I'm freezing and had to put the heat on. Your recipe did us proud! Yum! ; )

Posted by: Anali on October 3, 2009 11:52 AM

I have a question....how many would this serve and do think it would make good left overs? I am never sure if reheating fish is a good idea....what do you think? thanks, again, for the recipe!

It serves about 6, and I think makes for excellent leftovers. Just don't let it boil upon reheating. ~Elise

Posted by: Susan on October 3, 2009 12:28 PM

Boy, is this the right recipe for today in Maine! It's raining and the leaves are falling - time for something warm and cozy. Your recipe is a little more upscale than my method, but I love the sound of the wine in there.

Many years ago my boyfriend's grandmother taught me her chowdah secrets in Portsmouth, NH, and I've carried them from here to San Francisco to Gloucester, MA (Wingaersheek Beach, right across from Annisquam, Elise) and now back to Maine, where I still make it regularly!

Just rules of thumb, but I cut up either pepper bacon or salt pork and brown it, then cook the onions in that rendered fat. Cook the diced potatoes in another pot until they're really done (nothing ruins chowdah worse than crunchy potatoes!) in no more water than the minimum necessary to cover them. Then cook the fish - your choice - in that same starchy water - it thickens the soup nicely when you combine everything. The final secret is canned milk - evaporated milk, even low-fat evaporated milk, thickens very well without any flour needed.

Okay, I'm heading for the fish market right about now...

Sigh. Annisquam. This summer I paddled over to Wingaersheek Beach. Managed to dodge the green heads. Thanks for sharing your variation of chowder, yum! ~Elise

Posted by: Marion Olson on October 3, 2009 1:31 PM

I love this recipe because: (a) it doesn't call for bacon or salt pork, which are traditional for adding a bit of a smoky flavor base; and (b) it doesn't call for tomatoes, which might be a peculiarly Rhode Island addition to chowdah -- but I am not from Rhode Island, so for me, chowdah is always white. Although chowder is a year-round dish, it's especially welcome as the Fall weather settles in here.

Posted by: Lydia (The Perfect Pantry) on October 3, 2009 2:29 PM

Elise, your recipe evokes memories of my father's "dowry" -- his mother's recipe for fish chowder. Daddy grew up in Calais, ME, and like Brenda who commented above, he used water, butter and haddock to make the sublime chowder of my childhood. Thanks for the memories!

Posted by: Meg on October 3, 2009 2:52 PM

SO, I checked the freezer, all I have is tilapia. Will that work?

Sure. Should work fine. ~Elise

Posted by: Wendi on October 3, 2009 3:47 PM

Yum. Now I know what I'm having for dinner tomorrow.

Was reading all the ingredients to see if I had everything (I do).

When I got to dam juice I was puzzled. Was it a pet name for water? Or some strange cooking term I didn't know? Wouldn't dam juice be electricity? Glace de poisson, and other cooking terms I haven't used for years were bouncing around in my head as I tried to figure it out. I was severely puzzled.

Then I put on my reading glasses..... Oh it's clam juice......


Posted by: David on October 3, 2009 7:02 PM

The Tilapia was great. And so was the recipe!! Perfect on this cooler October day! Thanks for the inspiration, as always.

Posted by: Wendi on October 3, 2009 7:26 PM

I have a couple quick questions on this recipe. It looks delicious and I would love some good ol chowder. Would it be possible to substitute fish stock and milk for the heavy cream. We are limited in Algeria on certain items..ty

Hi Lynda, you might want to make a roux with some butter and flour (after cooking the potatoes) and then slowly add the milk to that, mixing well to make it smooth, and then add that to the soup. Heavy cream will thicken a soup naturally. Milk will not. So one alternative is to thicken it with flour. ~Elise

Posted by: Lynda on October 4, 2009 6:34 AM

Wow, looks phenomenal, especially with the weather getting chilly. Question though: You specifically mentioned white fish, but is there a particular reason why salmon, for instance, wouldn't work? Being in the SeaTac area, that beautiful, pink food-of-the-gods is relatively easy to find (and it supports the local economy too!).

Salmon has a distinctive, and quite strong, flavor. You could make a stew with it (I recommend the Brazilian style salmon stew on this site). I wouldn't recommend using it for this New England style fish chowder, the taste would be too different. ~Elise

Posted by: Jim on October 4, 2009 11:42 AM

Did you ever eat at Todd English's Fish Club down in that area? I LOVED his clam chowder - thin and delicately flavored with one large homemade cracker floating on top. Yum!

No, didn't know about that one. I lived in Boston a good 25 years ago, so maybe it wasn't around then. ~Elise

Posted by: Shelley (Pink House) on October 4, 2009 11:30 PM

I've got a few pounds of striped bass in the freezer. Do we think that will work? I looooove fish chowers, and this sounds great!

Yes, I think that striped bass would work fine. ~Elise

Posted by: Jennifer on October 5, 2009 8:25 AM

I like your style, Elise. I had been a head chef in a few Boston area seafood restaurants.I've made chowder according to many different recipes including a few of my own. I had decided to give your's a shot.

The Yukon gold potatoes are my favorite to use The use of olive oil and butter gives a different feel to it, but the heavy cream instead of using flour with h/h, light cream or milk made up for the fat content. I am a fan of going with no flour as well. The difference is a lighter more velvety feel.

I definitely recommend a simmer with heavy cream and not a boil. It is not a bad idea to simmer the cream to about a 70% reduction before adding it. Never boil as not only can it break but it will get a burnt taste very easily.

Good recipe. Thanks for sharing.

Posted by: JohnL on October 5, 2009 9:32 PM

Thanks for this great recipe!
Never thought I'd make clam chowder myself, but it turned out great!

Posted by: Anja (Savorychicks) on October 6, 2009 6:26 AM

well I am from New bedford area in MA.....5 miles from the ocean, 53 miles south of Boston....bout half hr to cape cod. We LOVE our chowda & stuffed quahogs ! Cant be beat ! Ever have a stuffed quahog??? LOVE them....I make them ocasionally ! Every one knows us new englanders have the BEST seafoood around! Just had to put my 2 cents in!! Apple pie ...baked beans with Linguica oh yea !! Its a fooodies season!

Posted by: Michele on October 6, 2009 2:21 PM

I was born, raised and will retire in the midwest. However I have experienced much travel in my career. Wherever I went my coworkers from the area did their best to help me experience the local customs and flavor. I seem to have a memory from every business trip. The No Name Restaurant in Boston is a favorite. When I read it in the article it brought back memories (early to mid 1980's) of friendship and good food. One thing I remember, besides delicious chowder, was the atmosphere/ambience. There is/was none, and the lack of it was reflected in the price of a meal. Just my style. I loved it. Be prepared a total stranger may sit right down at your table, eat their lunch and walk away, never making eye contact or muttering a word.
Thanks for the recipe. Starting to get cold here and I can't wait to try it.

Posted by: Bennie Howe on October 7, 2009 7:42 AM

Believe it or not, I live in New England and this is my first seafood (or claim) chowder I've ever made. Absolutely delicious and so easy! This will diffidently go on my monthly rotation! Thx! Peter

Posted by: Upphins on October 7, 2009 9:59 AM

Thank you so much for this recipe! I made it a couple of nights ago...and it was scrumptious! I cut the amount of cod in half and subbed the rest with baby shrimp. SO GOOD! Thank you! :)

Posted by: Kirsten on October 7, 2009 10:43 AM

This recipe looks wonderful and I want to try it. I am not very experienced with cooking fish and I have a question about your note. You say to get fish with pin bones removed...is this something you ask the fishmonger to do or do you remove them yourself? If I get frozen fish will the pin bones be removed?

Hi Wendy, great question. Often when you are buying fresh fillets, there will be a row of fish bones that need to be pulled out. The best way to do this is with some pliers that you keep on hand just for this purpose. In my experience the fish monger typically does not do this for you. As for frozen, it depends on the fish. Fillets often have pin bones in them. Steaks usually do not. ~Elise

Posted by: Wendy on October 7, 2009 10:47 AM

I made this, and it seemed a bit bland at first, but when I added a little salt and lemon, I could really enjoy it and savor the fish flavor. Mmmm.... It seemed a bit watery, though. I wonder why it's so thick in restaurants? Do they add starch or something?

Often they add flour to thicken it. ~Elise

Posted by: purvis on October 7, 2009 9:28 PM

Hi Elise... I am such a fan (so are my friends and family by extension!). If I made this soup ahead (say in the morning) could I reheat it late afternoon without ruining the cream? Thanks so much.

The soup reheats great, just watch it so it doesn't boil. ~Elise

Posted by: Barbara Ann on October 9, 2009 7:15 AM

Elise, thank you for the inspiration. I made a variation of this soup last night with swai fish. The thyme, bay leaf and old bay seasoning gave this a wonderful flavor. Love your recipes.

Posted by: Sandra on October 9, 2009 7:55 AM

So, my husband didn't like this much. He felt there were too many potatoes (I probably added more than was required, but I like them). He wanted to see how it would taste if it was run through a food processor with all those potatoes and fish. So we tried it and... it was quite good! Again, adding salt and lemon. It was thick and yummy. I actually like it either way.

Posted by: purvis on October 9, 2009 8:17 AM

Hello Elise, just tried out your chowder recipe and it was really, really good! By far the best and the easiest chowder recipe. Thanks for sharing!

So glad you liked it. ~Elise

Posted by: Anna on October 11, 2009 12:40 PM

I made this recipe last week and my husband and I were sooo impressed! we had it for left overs too! I followed the recipe to a t and it came out perfect! Thanks Elise!

Posted by: nadya on October 11, 2009 5:35 PM

I'm in New England/Massachusetts/Cape Ann area/in Ipswich (to narrow it down). Every week we get about 6 pounds of fish off the docks in Gloucester for our CSF (community supported fishery) and we do get lots of cod and pollock this time of year. I've been using up a lot of it as the weather gets chilly in chowders, stews and soups. My neighbor also digs clams, and always is dumping an extra few pounds on my doorstep, so I tend to mix the white fish and clams, clam liquor and fish stock, all in together. In typical New England fashion, I try not to waste a bit, and use whatever I have on hand.

This recipe is great- one thing chowder is NOT supposed to be is thick and pasty! This is perfectly rich yet thin in consistency. Incredibly simple, too. I only get salt pork in November when my pig goes to market, and don't have any on hand now (we dont eat meat from the grocery store) and it's hard to find a chowder recipe that does not require pork fat. One tip- if you add clams, don't let the chowder sit in an aluminum pot! KABLAMO! Thanks, Elise- there's nothing like good yankee cooking at this time of year. I would love to see a nice spicy Portuguese fish chowder recipe here sometime, too!

Hi Amanda, thanks for your comment! I spent some time in the Cape Ann area this summer (photos), so lovely there. And the fish is amazingly fresh. I do have a bacalhoada Portuguese fish stew on the site, as well as a more spicy Brazilian fish stew which we've made with salmon, though it is more typically done with a white fish, so you could easily substitute. ~Elise

Posted by: amanda donovan on October 12, 2009 4:02 PM

I came from downeast Maine and when I was a child my relatives used to make a fish stew that they seemed to cook for hours on the wood stove. It included potatoes and they used the dried pieces of cod fish that were sold in barrels in the local general store. They also had hard boiled eggs in it. I never ate it, but the grownups seemed to love it. I wonder if anyone ever heard of it made like that.

Hi Jane, that sounds like a Portuguese fish stew called bacalhoada. We have a recipe for it here on the site. It's delicious. ~Elise

Posted by: Jane on October 13, 2009 1:01 PM

Wow, No Name Restaurant brings back memories of standing in line with our six pack of beer waiting for a table and ordering the clam chowder and the fried clam platter. Thanks for the memory!!

Got to try this recipe out, I've always been afraid to make a chowder, was a little outside my comfort zone.

Posted by: Harry on October 16, 2009 10:17 AM

This chowder really got me inspired. I made it this weekend and it was delicious! I usually make clam chowder but this fish chowder looked so good I had to try it. It is being filed under my favorites to make again!

Posted by: Kellie on October 18, 2009 1:11 PM

Thanks for this recipe. I just made it from fresh Cod and it's delicious. I'm a Californian living in Norway (in Scandinavia, not Maine)and I don't miss California as much as I miss the 4 years spent in Boston with its good chowders. The fishing boats here reminded me of New England and this recipe inspired me to try it. My first time and it was perfect. Thank you and next time, I'll try it with clams.

Posted by: Catherine on November 3, 2009 9:50 AM

Post a comment

(Your comment may need to be approved before it will appear on the site. Thanks for waiting. First time commenting? Please review the Comment Policy.)

Link to this recipe

Bookmark this page using the following link: http://simplyrecipes.com/recipes/new_england_fish_chowder/

Do you have a website? You can place a link to this page by copying and pasting the code below.

<a href="http://simplyrecipes.com/recipes/new_england_fish_chowder/">New England Fish Chowder</a>