Freshly dug clams are blended into a creamy chowder of potatoes, onions, shallots, meat and spices. (Photo by Tressa Dale/Peninsula Clarion)

Freshly dug clams are blended into a creamy chowder of potatoes, onions, shallots, meat and spices. (Photo by Tressa Dale/Peninsula Clarion)

On the strawberry patch: Very special clam chowder

Passing down hard-earned knowledge of the land

My mother-in-law flew alone across the sea to a grizzly-patrolled beach in search of wild clams, and she shared her prize with us.

For me, even the prospect of such a dangerous undertaking alone is terrifying, but it’s just a lovely afternoon for her, and I am amazed at her bravery. She treasures the wild foods of this land, and she will put forth immense effort to find, catch and grow them.

From her I have learned about mushrooms and flora, how to dig out rows in the earth to plant our staples, and how to care for the soil and the crop so it may better nourish us. She teaches me armed with the hard-earned knowledge passed down to her by her family — people who traveled here on dirt roads with their children to make a life out of the wilderness — and with knowledge she has earned herself through years of persistence, study and trial.

A few summers ago, we flew together across the sea, and my in-laws taught me how to find clams. We knelt in wet sand and dug with our hands in search of sharp shells to grasp, and we filled our buckets with sandy gems. We sat together on a large piece of driftwood and shared a picnic dinner while we watched grizzlies in the distance bouncing after fish in the river.

Someday my children will be old enough to go on such an adventure and, armed with the knowledge passed down to me by my family, I will be able to teach them how to clam.

After being chilled by an afternoon out in the summer rain, I took the clams she gave us out of the freezer for chowder.

This comforting soup is even better the next day, so make plenty, and have oyster crackers and hot sauce standing by.

Very Special Clam Chowder

Ingredients:

4 tablespoons butter

3 russet potatoes

1 whole white onion

1 shallot

4 stalks celery

Either 2 small links reindeer sausage or ¼ pound bacon

About 1.5 cups clam meat or 2 cans chopped clams

4 cups fish stock, chicken stock or water

1/2 cup heavy cream

4 tablespoons all-purpose flour

¼ cup fresh minced parsley

2 tablespoons dried thyme

Salt and pepper to taste

Directions:

Chop your bacon or sausage into small pieces, cook until crispy, and set aside.

Wash and peel your vegetables. Chop your celery, shallot and onion into a small dice. Cut your potatoes into very rough 1-inch cubes, allowing some to be as big as 1.5 inches.

If you are using fresh clams, mince half of them and roughly chop the other half. Reserve as much of the liquid as you can. In a large pot, saute the onion, shallot and celery in butter until soft.

Sprinkle the flour over the vegetables and cook for 5 minutes stirring constantly.

Pour in your stock and cream and stir, being sure to scrape the bottom of the pan well.

Add the potatoes and top off with enough water to just cover the vegetables, if necessary. Season with salt and pepper.

Bring to a boil, reduce the heat and simmer for 20 minutes, or until the potatoes are cooked and softened but not completely dissolved.

Add the clams, the bacon or sausage, parsley and thyme, and cook for another 10 minutes before turning off the heat.

Taste and season with extra salt and pepper if needed just before serving.

Garnish with hot sauce, oyster crackers, and extra parsley.

More in Life

This dish, an earthy and herbaceous vegetarian reimagining of the classic beef wellington, is finished nicely with a creamy maple balsamic sauce. Photo by Tressa Dale/Peninsula Clarion
A special dish for a special request

This mushroom wellington is earthy and herbaceous, and its preparation comes with much less pressure.

File
Minister’s Message: Lifelong learning is a worthwhile goal

Lifelong learning. That’s a worthwhile goal. Schools have been in session for… Continue reading

This E.W. Merrill photograph shows Charles Christian Georgeson, special agent in charge of all agricultural experiment stations in Alaska, starting in 1898. (Photo from Alaska History Magazine, July-August 2020)
The Experiment: Kenai becomes an agricultural test site — Part 1

Individuals deciding to explore Kenai’s historic district might start their journey by… Continue reading

This virgin blueberry margarita made with blueberry flavored kombucha is perfect for sipping while playing cards.  Photo by Tressa Dale/Peninsula Clarion
Sweet fruit for sober fun

Blueberry kombucha gives this virgin margarita complexity in flavor and a lovely purple hue.

John W. Eddy was already a renowned outdoor adventurer and writer when he penned this book in 1930, 15 years after the mystery of King David Thurman’s disappearance had been solved. Eddy’s version of the story, which often featured wild speculation and deviated widely from the facts, became, for many years, the accepted recounting of events.
King Thurman: An abbreviated life — Part 6

AUTHOR’S NOTE: The fate of King David Thurman, a Cooper Landing-area resident,… Continue reading

File
Minister’s Message: Being ‘thank full?’

As a young dad, I remember teaching my toddler children to say… Continue reading

Public photo from ancestry.com
James Forrest Kalles (shown here with his daughters, Margaret and Emma) became the guardian of King David Thurman’s estate in early 1915 after Thurman went missing in 1914 and was presumed dead.
King Thurman: An abbreviated life — Part 5

AUTHOR’S NOTE: King David Thurman left his Cooper Landing-area home in late… Continue reading

These heart-shaped chocolate sandwich cookies go perfectly with a glass of milk. (Photo by Tressa Dale/Peninsula Clarion)
Chocolate cookies for a sweet treat

A healthy layer of frosting makes these sandwich cookies perfectly sweet and satisfying.

File photo.
Minister’s Message: Memento mori

In the early centuries of Christianity, the Desert Fathers — Christian monks… Continue reading

Emmett Krefting, age 6-7, at the Wible mining camping in 1907-07, about the time he first met King David Thurman. (Photo from the cover of Krefting’s memoir, Alaska’s Sourdough Kid)
King Thurman: An abbreviated life — Part 4

AUTHOR’S NOTE: In 1913, King David Thurman, a Cooper Landing-area resident who… Continue reading

Bulgogi kimbap is a favorite lunchtime staple and easy travel meal. Photo by Tressa Dale/Peninsula Clarion
Kimbap when craving Korean food

Bulgogi kimbap is a favorite lunchtime staple and easy travel meal.