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Fried clams are mentioned as early as 1840, [8] and are listed on an 1865 menu from the Parker House hotel. How exactly they were prepared is unclear; the 1865 menu offers both "oysters—fried" and "oysters—fried in batter", but only "fried clams". [9] Nineteenth-century American cookbooks describe several different dishes of fried clams ...
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Thomas N. Soffron (December 10, 1907 – February 21, 2004) was the clam digger and restaurateur who created the fried clam strip. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] He was also a singer and guitarist, member of the Talambekos Mandolinata band.
The a-la-carte menu from 1865 included a range of local seafood offerings like oysters, fried clams, mackerel, shad, salmon in anchovy sauce, cod in oyster sauce, and soft-shell crab. Other meat dishes included chicken fricassee , potted pigeons , corned beef and baked beans with pork.
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Fabes con almejas – a clam and bean stew that originated in the principality of Asturias in the 19th century as peasant fare. [4] It is a lighter variation of Asturian fabada whose primary ingredients are sausage, beans and pork. Fried clams – New England seafood dish; New England clam bake – also simply called a "clam bake"
Lawrence "Chubby" Woodman was an entrepreneur and restaurant owner who legend has it invented the fried clam. [1] He opened Woodman's of Essex, first as a clam shack, with his wife Bessie on Main Street in Essex, Massachusetts and sold freshly dug steamer clams as well as ice cream and homemade potato chips.