My father worked on the water most of his life and would sometimes dig hard shell clams called quahogs in Narragansett Bay at low tide.
@monizdmКүн бұрын
Did he stuff them? I am also originally form RI and have very fond memories of stuffed quahogs.
@monizdmКүн бұрын
Corn meal in cold water also works. Don't overdue it - it is not polenta.
@OleensEmbroidery13 сағат бұрын
My dad also used black pepper to "sneeze" them.
@GEOHHADDAD7 ай бұрын
Small cracks at the edge don't mean they are dead. Large cracks or fissures...yes.
@sareykim5 ай бұрын
nah he's right. i have a small crack in my heart and i feel dead inside everday😭😭
@Charly-in-the-808Ай бұрын
@@sareykimjust don’t stay salty too long. Try something new. Remember, clams are bi…. *(bi-valves.)* Ya never know. A new syphon might come along…..a tasty squirt of mignonette, just don’t clam up completely. “Shuck” off the old shell around you. “Purge” those gritty feelings. You’re not destined to swim with the fishes, no. The world can be your “oyster” once again, so to speak. Best of luck, ya old mollusk, you!
@sareykimАй бұрын
@@Charly-in-the-808 - the surprising motivational speech i needed for this Monday Morning. thanks, Charly!
@grahammcfadyenhill95553 ай бұрын
His explanation is incorrect. Clams siphon in the seawater...they do NOT open and shut on "clamshells" full of sea water.
@Charly-in-the-808Ай бұрын
He probably burps his baby by patting the kid’s tummy.
@blackpine66933 күн бұрын
Take it from a fish monger clams do open their shells…….
@jimmcgeehan73933 ай бұрын
Little gabby
@DK-pr9ny27 күн бұрын
Had to get the Fulton plug in.
@DukeofHesse-he7buАй бұрын
Four minutes to say 'soak in salt water for half an hour.'
@Charly-in-the-808Ай бұрын
Thank goodness he never explained how to burp his baby.
@ayasoufi63675 ай бұрын
😅😅
@IronMike-f8i2 ай бұрын
The guy here is MR.,, CLUELESS😮
@Lazybones522 ай бұрын
I eat a hundred or more raw a week😊
@Charly-in-the-808Ай бұрын
That’s only because you’re a lazybones. Try chowda or cornmeal fried po’ boys, or linguine with butta and white wine.
@Charly-in-the-808Ай бұрын
That’s a ton of horse sh……radish.
@Lazybones52Ай бұрын
@ no silly tobasco
@jimmyvee80244 ай бұрын
been eating clams for decades never heard of anyone doing this.
@brianhealey52864 ай бұрын
My father would mix up a gallon of cold mildly salty water and cornmeal and let the clams sit for about an hour. Then rinse the clams then into the boil. The clam bellies will have ingested the corn meal and purged some of the muck. Boston, MA.
@bryanmarshall68784 ай бұрын
@@brianhealey5286 That was the trick back in the day, but it was softshell or steamer clams. Not little necks. Not that it wouldn't work, but little necks are already way cleaner than softshell clams. At least that is what I've found. If you are fortunate enough to dig your own, just bring a drywall bucket of seawater back from the flats and let them sit overnight. Clean as a whistle after that.
@jimmyvee80244 ай бұрын
@@brianhealey5286 after much thought I decided all fish market I visit hold their clams in tanks, so there is no need to do this at home. Also I clam every week from Apr to Nov while getting the clams they sit in a floating basket, clamming take about 2 hrs. Odds are pretty good that while in the basket it gets done. who knew. The idea that hey our clams are so fresh you need to do this is nonsense.
@justsmitty17093 ай бұрын
Well, if you don't mind eating sand..... you do you. I'm "burping"
@grahammcfadyenhill95553 ай бұрын
We always purged "dug" clams to remove the sand.
@IronMike-f8i2 ай бұрын
Make sure it's a natural,, SEA,, SALT,, NOT REG. CHEM. TABLE. SALT.
@Charly-in-the-808Ай бұрын
Yes, not chemically added iodine. Natural sea salt is always best.