I don't measure. As a heads up.
Charleston Clam Chowder:
Onion *
Celery *
Bacon
Butter
Flour
Milk
Chicken Stock
Several Cans Chopped Clams (no juice, I don't like things too clammy)
Potatoes
Cracked pepper
Chives
Bay leaf
Parsely
Marjoram
Bristol Creme Sherry
Bay shrimp to top
* I half mince and half chop my onions and celery... so half of them disappear into the chowder, and the other half are chunky
Sautee the bacon, onion, celery until the onions and bacon are both transluscent. Add some butter (this is not a weight conscience dish), and start sifting in flour until it's one big gloppy golden roux. Add chicken stock and bring to fast simmer/boil to thicken, turn down to med. low and add milk, clams, potatoes, herbs.
Cook for at LEAST 1-2 hours on medium low.
Garnish with bay shrimp just as you're serving.
OPTION: The creme sherry is vital to this dish, but can either be added now (early) to cook off the alcohol OR each bowl served with a half shot of sherry to be stirred in just before eating. Depends on your diners. With kids, I usually just add a splash of sherry early on, and then for drinkers serve with a half shot, and for non-drinkers, no shot. Start LOW with the sherry, as too much COOKED sherry starts tasting acidic. You can float however much uncooked sherry in the bowls as you like, and it's still buttery deliciousness, but when you're cooking the alcohol, go light to start, then taste after the first hour. If it's a little 'citrusy', don't add more, but you might want to add some more milk to make it buttery again (as in there was too much sherry). If you can't taste it at all, add another splash. If it's just buttery and round in your mouth, then you splashed perfectly.
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If there is a no-pork-need (halal-ish or not-quite-kosher or 'no faces' pescatarian... then I make mussels moulniere to use as the soup base for the complexity that bacon give (mussels steamed open in white wine, garlic, parsely)... then shell the mussels, put the mussels back in... and then keep following the above recipe but go VERY light on the creme sherry.