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Clam Shacks

soupcan
Aug 29 2007 08:16 AM

The below article is from today's NYTimes.

My wife's family has a beach house on the North Shore of Massachusetts on Cape Ann in a town called Rockport. It's the next town over from Gloucester.

A beautiful spot that nobody really knows about. They've had the place for close to 40 years. I've been going there on weekends during the summer for the past 15 or so.

Being a NYC boy I never had or desired fried clams at all until my first summer weekend in Rockport. The town of Essex which is roughly 5 miles away is where the places described in the article are. Once I was introduced to these succulent babies, I was addicted.

I've been to all of the places in that area that they describe and they are all great. Farnham's is my shack of choice though. Maybe because its the first place I ever went to. I was there just last week. The lady in the picture took my order and I ate at that very same picnic table shown below.

Two things they don't tell you in the article:

1 - A large box of fried clams will set you back $40.00. No joke. The second picture below is how a large box looks. It will however feed two adults and one child.

2 - The tartar sauce is a must condiment and at Farnham's it is simply 2 die 4.







August 29, 2007

In a ’64 T-Bird, Chasing a Date With a Clam

By DAVID LEITE

RECAPTURING a childhood memory is nearly impossible. Chasing after it in a black 1964 Thunderbird convertible with red interior certainly helps.


NOT SO HUMBLE Fried clams, big bellies bulging, at the Clam Box in Ipswich, Mass

The memory: lightly fried clams with big, juicy bellies, like the kind I munched on nearly every summer weekend growing up in Swansea, Mass. The car, owned by my friend Bob Pidkameny: a nod to my godfather, a local celebrity and stock car driver, who would pile my two cousins and me into whatever sleek beauty he was tinkering with and take us to Macray’s in Westport, Mass. There we sat — three lard slicks — digging into red-and-white cardboard boxes, while screams from the riders on the Comet, the wooden roller coaster at a nearby amusement park, floated across the highway.

Fried clams are to New England what barbecue is to the South. Like barbecue, the best clams come from small roadside shacks run in pragmatic mom-and-pop style. Flinty Northerners, like their porcine-loving counterparts, can be fanatically loyal to their favorite spots. To eat at any place but Macray’s was considered familial treason when I was growing up — it was Macray’s or nothing, until it was shuttered and we were set adrift.


CRISP ENOUGH FOR YOU? Clams and
fries pop out of their containers at
Woodman’s in Essex, Mass.


This summer, in search of the clams of my youth, Bob and I covered more than 625 miles, visited 16 shacks and unashamedly basked in the attention the Thunderbird commanded from Branford, Conn., to Portland, Me., and back. In between rolls of antacid and scoops of ice cream, the unofficial finish to a fried-clam meal, we found that this summertime classic is even more fleeting than the season of its peak popularity.

Storms, public taste, government warnings about saturated fats, even school vacation schedules conspired to keep the clams of my memory mostly out of reach. But every once in a while, fate jiggered events and passed me a pint or two of the luscious, plump-bellied beauties I remember.


Lunch at J. T. Farnham’s, on an inlet in Essex, Mass.


To many New Englanders the humble clam, which stars in chowders, clambakes and clam cakes, reaches its quintessence when coated and fried. And ever since July 3, 1916, when Lawrence Woodman, a k a Chubby, the founder of Woodman’s in Essex, Mass., fried a clam in lard normally reserved for his famous potato chips, cooks have been trying to create the perfect fried clam.

But unlike pit masters who rabidly guard their secret sauce recipes, fry cooks are an open book. All work with the same four elements: soft-shell clams, a dipping liquid, a coating and oil. According to almost all the cooks and owners I met the liquid is usually evaporated milk, and the coating is nothing more than some combination of flours: regular, corn or pastry. Most places use canola or soybean oil, which are high in unsaturated fats. Only Woodman’s and Essex Seafood, in Essex, Mass., still fry clams in pure lard.


Woodman's in Essex, Mass.

So why are the clams I dream of so hit-or-miss?

“I’ve been doing this for 21 years,” said Dave Blaney, owner of the Sea Swirl in Mystic, Conn., “and the hardest part is training the new kids.” He explained that it takes two weeks to train summer help, usually college students, but it requires almost two months of supervision to turn them into bona fide fry cooks. He warned me about visiting shacks too early in the season (when the students are gearing up) or too late (when the exodus occurs, and deep-fryers can be left in the hands of most anyone — the owners’ sons or daughters, say, or the cleaning help).

Improperly cooked clams can range from oil-laden to burned. Indeed, the Clam Shack in Kennebunkport, Me., a favorite place I’ve been recommending to friends for years, presented Bob and me with a pint of puny dark-brown clams that tasted faintly of burned liver. Champlin’s Restaurant in Narragansett, R.I., another well-regarded spot, served clams so overcooked we dumped them after eating only a few. In both places, the kitchen crews looked like a cast from “The Real World” on MTV.

The Sea Swirl’s clams, on the other hand, were golden, with a light crunch, and the bellies, while on the smaller side, were plump and filled with ocean flavor. What caught my attention was that the siphons, or “necks,” were snipped off. That made for a soft chew, without the rubber-eraser bite common to most fried clams — even, I must admit, those from the hallowed boxes I remember at Macray’s.





Terry Cellucci is an owner of J. T. Farnham’s.


I asked if this was a customary practice of purveyors. “No, I snip them here,” Mr. Blaney said. “Otherwise I’m at the mercy of the supplier, and I can’t afford that.” Of all the places we visited, only the Sea Swirl offered completely snipped necks; the others sold clams with just the tops nicked off.

This snipping, though, shouldn’t be confused with the iconic, and tasteless, clam strips featured on every Howard Johnson menu in New England. These impostors can be as varied as de-bellied steamers — a rarity — and slices cut from the “tongue” of the larger multipurpose Atlantic surf clam. No strip has the oceanic flavor of a true steamer with its belly firmly attached.

It was later that day, after leaving two small Massachusetts shacks empty-handed, that we understood just how much weather influences what we eat, or rather do not eat. As a result of several days of heavy downpours and runoff earlier in the week, the clam flats, the most highly prized of them off the coast of the state’s North Shore, specifically Ipswich and Essex, were closed.

The water can take several days to normalize after a big storm, according to Curt Fougere, a great-grandson of Chubby Woodman and the manager of Woodman’s. That’s why those smaller spots, which don’t sell as many clams as Woodman’s, had to turn us away. Larger places with purchasing muscle can buy from Cape Cod or even as far away as Maryland and Canada, but none of those clams have the Ipswich richness, a byproduct of the nutrient-filled mud.

“Cape Cod clams tend to be gritty,” Mr. Blaney said, “because they come from sandbars rather than mud flats.” Maryland steamers, while deliciously large, are too soft, he said, and break apart while cooking. Maine clams are considered the closest to Ipswich clams, and are the most common substitute.

In between shouts from classic car enthusiasts along Route 1, Bob and I theorized about the reasons for the dearth of the big-belly clams. We batted around global warming, pollution, disease, but none seemed likely to have knocked out only the pudgy clams. No, the biggest threat, we discovered, was far more menacing: fashion.

“Clams kind of go through cycles,” said Terry Cellucci, an owner of J. T. Farnham’s, one-third of the famous Essex clam shack trifecta that includes Woodman’s and Essex Seafood. For years, she explained, smaller clams have been in vogue. “Right now that’s what our customers like, so that’s what we buy.” The same was true of most every place we visited. The clams at Farnham’s fried up dark golden and pleasantly crunchy but were missing that burst of juicy belly brininess.

Two diners at the next table in Farnham’s, Janice Shohet of Lynnfield, Mass., and her guest, Stacey Malcolm, of Wichita, Kan., were of the plump-clam camp. When asked their favorite of the three popular Essex spots, Ms. Shohet tapped the table. “I like it here — it feels like a real seaside place,” she said, referring to the deep-blue inlet outside. Then she mentioned the most important clue to my past: “But we love the Clam Box, too. They give you a choice of big or small bellies.”

As we pulled up outside the Clam Box, eight miles northwest in Ipswich, Mass., the first thing we noticed — aside from the whimsical roof that looks like (what else?) an opened clam box — was the line snaking out the door. It numbered more than 20 and according to the owner, Marina Aggelakis — known to all as Chickie — had started forming, as always, 30 minutes before opening.

Taking Ms. Shohet’s advice, I searched the huge menu above the order window and found the one line of neat, tight printing I was hoping to see: “Big belly clams available on request.” The Clam Box was the only shack on our trip to offer up this critical piece of information unbidden.

When I ordered a pint of the big bellies, the woman behind the counter winced: “Are you sure? They’re big.”

“I’m positive.”

“You’ll only get about nine,” she said.

“That’s fine.”

She tried once more to dissuade me, but I resisted. When my number was called, a tray was pushed through the pickup window: on it was a mound of golden clams with bellies so big and soft the coating was chipping off. The necks, though not trimmed like those at the Sea Swirl, had none of the elastic bite I had encountered in many pints along the way. And the bellies dripped sweet, briny clam juice down my chin.

To pull this all off, Ms. Aggelakis uses only Ipswich clams unless bad weather or high demand causes her to turn to Maine suppliers. She also double-dips her clams while cooking. Excess coating stays behind in the first deep-fryer, allowing for cleaner cooking in the second. In addition, she closes the restaurant between lunch and dinner — unheard-of — to change the oil, ensuring a clean taste all day long.

It was an offhand comment, though, that gave me the final piece of the puzzle: darker-fried clams, she said, have a nuttier taste, while the lighter version lets the clam flavor predominate. Bingo. “I like to please my customers,” she added. “Some like them big, small, lightly fried, dark — we give them what they want.” Funny, the concept of requesting anything special at a clam shack’s takeout window had eluded me for 40 years.

Putting together the experience from the trip, I decided to try my hand at customizing my meal at Lenny’s Indian Head Inn in Branford, Conn. First, I called ahead because we had had two days of steady rain. The clams were frying. When I ordered, I asked the waitress, a bubbly young woman, if the restaurant had big-bellied clams. She wasn’t sure, so went to ask the cook.

She returned deeply crestfallen. All he had, she said, was medium-size, “but he’ll try to pick out the biggest ones.” Equally crestfallen, I agreed and asked for them to be lightly fried.

What was placed in front of me 10 minutes later was a platter with clams nearly as large as those at the Clam Box. They had a light golden almost tempuralike coating. And the bellies? They were briny, sweet and so juicy a lobster bib wouldn’t have been out of the question.

I could almost hear the screams from the Comet again.

Edgy DC
Aug 29 2007 08:18 AM

I was suckled at Bigelow's.

Gwreck
Aug 29 2007 12:13 PM

Growing up, this was the local clam [url=http://www.theshack.org/index.html]Shack[/url].

Johnny Dickshot
Aug 29 2007 12:26 PM

Ah yes. Famous biker hangout as I recall it.

Willets Point
Aug 29 2007 12:44 PM

Can't NYC boys get clams on City Island?

soupcan
Aug 29 2007 12:52 PM

Willets Point wrote:
Can't NYC boys get clams on City Island?


Who knows?

I only eat 'em when I'm up your way.

Kid Carsey
Aug 29 2007 03:03 PM

Cape Ann is beautiful, I love that area of the country especially in May and
September. Hope to get some oystering in September out in South Well-
fleet on the "other" cape.

I'm a clam head, I go clamming in Rhode Island at least once a year with
a friend who lives up there. We always take way over what we should and
feast on raw, steamers in my funky secret concoction, and sometimes I
make Manhattan style chowder if the beer to clamming ratio allows me to
use a knife and stove. Not big on fried clams, if I'm gonna have fried I
much prefer fried oysters ... lightly done, course.

holychicken
Aug 29 2007 03:30 PM
Re: Clam Shacks

="soupcan"]

NOT SO HUMBLE Fried clams, big bellies bulging, at the Clam Box in Ipswich, Mass

Okay, I definitely need to get something fried for dinner tonight.

Willets Point
Aug 29 2007 03:41 PM

Can they be both raw and steamed at the same time or do you eat them both ways?

RealityChuck
Aug 30 2007 10:39 AM

I like them either raw or steamed. As far as I'm concerned, fried clams is the least interesting ways to cook clams, acceptable only if nothing else is available.

Raw clams are a treat from heaven. Cooking them loses the flavor.

Steamed are best if you use steamer (soft shell) clams. I haven't seen those in years, though.

Johnny Dickshot
Aug 30 2007 10:46 AM

I'm more of a crab guy than a clam guy.

sharpie
Aug 30 2007 12:18 PM

Crabs, clams, mussels, oysters, shrimp -- all good. Heck, I like cockles.

Willets Point
Aug 30 2007 12:25 PM

The Clam Shack is a little old place
where we can get some bivalves
Clam Shack baby!Clam Shack bay-bee!
(Clam Shack...Clam Shack...)
Clam Shack, that's where it's at!