BY JESS
KAPADIA
A truly
authentic Rhode Island stuffie tastes like clam and breadcrumbs, and nothing
more.
I
absolutely love discovering regional specialties involving ultra-fresh seafood!
I was recently enlightened by the Baltimore crab pretzel, I even made my own
semi-legit version in Test Kitchen. Last week I reconnected with a friend from
high school who spent a few years on and off in Rhode Island, and was turned on
to the stuffie. It involves the quahog, king of chowder. And quite frankly, I
just plain like saying it.
So you
take your giant clam, shuck it, retain the juice, chop and mix with bread or
cracker crumbs and a little extra clam juice to moisten, then return to shell.
Bake, add a squeeze of lemon and consume. That's a stuffie and that sounds
awesome. I usually suggest a little trio or so of variations, but I don't want
anything else in or on that. Maybe a little hot sauce, the mild stuff. Red
Devil, at most.
That
said, there are many variations still very much worth eating. Some mix sautéed
onions and celery, cherry peppers and/or sausage with the clams before
returning them to whenst they came to get crispy. Portuguese stuffies, courtesy
of the large Portuguese population in Rhode Island, involve chouriço (relative
of chorizo) and green peppers.
Any sort
of battered or breaded and fried seafood is truly sacred to those who have
spent time in New England, and this is no exception. While it's no clam belly
on the beach, I can definitely see creating a variation on this for our next
Test Kitchen. There's nothing like a great stuffed clam-related schooling.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.