The only thing Manhattan and New England clam chowder have in common are clams-and maybe a few onions.
Cream-based clam chowder, a descendant of the seventeenth and eighteenth-century chaudières (meaning “cauldrons”) cooked up by French and Nova Scotian sailors, was embraced by New England cooks. Ir contains cream, potatoes, onions, clams and their juice, salt, and pepper.
















