Best Steamed Corn With Clams And Bacon Recipes

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STEAMED CORN WITH CLAMS AND BACON



Steamed Corn With Clams and Bacon image

"The dish tastes exactly of August on a plate," Sam Sifton wrote in 2013 when bringing the recipe to The Times. "the saltiness of the clams amplifying what Pablo Neruda called the sweet, 'virginal' flavor of the corn." Adapted from ''Seamus Mullen's Hero Food," this fast summer recipe pairs sweet corn with briny clams and smoky bacon for a well-rounded, light dish.

Provided by Sam Sifton

Categories     dinner, easy, lunch, quick, appetizer, main course

Time 30m

Yield 6 to 8 servings

Number Of Ingredients 9

1/2 pound slab bacon, diced
6 cloves garlic, peeled and sliced
50 littleneck clams
5 ears sweet corn, shucked, trimmedand cut in half
1 1/2 cups dry white wine
1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon pimentón
Crushed Aleppo pepper to taste, or red-pepper flakes
10 to 12 fresh basil leaves, torn roughly
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil

Steps:

  • In a large, heavy bottomed pot set over medium heat, cook the bacon until it begins to render its fat. Add the garlic, and cook until it turns translucent.
  • Add the clams, corn and white wine, then stir in the pimentón. Increase heat to high, and cook for approximately 30 seconds, to evaporate the alcohol. Lower heat to medium low, cover the pot and steam until the clams have all opened and the corn is tender, approximately 8-10 minutes. (Discard any unopened clams.)
  • Using tongs and a spoon, remove all the clams and corn and bacon from the pot, and place in large, warm bowl, with a healthy dose of broth, a scattering of Aleppo pepper and the torn basil, and drizzle with olive oil.

STEAMED CORN WITH CLAMS AND BACON RECIPE



Steamed corn with clams and bacon Recipe image

Don't ask me how it happened. I can't tell you. But certainly these elements came into play: planning too far ahead, not writing things down, friends finally getting back to us with the one possible date they could come for dinner in months, visitors in town for just one night.All of a sudden my husband and I realized we'd signed ourselves up to cook dinner parties six times in the same week. At the time, it seemed not ideal, but (almost) doable. Think of it this way, I told him, let's pretend we're private chefs for a family who likes to entertain a lot on the spur of the moment.It will be fun.But then I hadn't fully taken into account the shopping, the cleaning, the shopping. I've tried to train him, but my husband, who was doing most of the cooking (I concentrated on baking and desserts) can only plan one meal at a time. And that was constantly being revised as he thought of one more dish he was dying to try -- an hour before dinner -- and so we had to rush out for the umpteenth time to rustle up the ingredients. Did I mention he doesn't drive? And it was never as simple as eggs, milk, butter. Oh, no. It was inevitably something relatively obscure -- saffron, speck, bottarga, Chinese chives, a whole red snapper -- that meant a mad dash across town.The next morning Fred would tackle the many, many wineglasses, washing and drying them by hand. And I'd take out the dead soldiers, sure that the guy who comes by to recycle the bottles noticed the uptake in volume.First night, we performed like pros. But I started washing dishes at midnight. The second night went even better. But we went to bed at 1:30 (on a weeknight). By the third evening our energy was flagging. The shopping. The cooking. The cleaning up. And then starting all over again the next day.We stripped the garden of tomatoes, plucked the last of the sweet basil, discovered the cilantro had gone to seed and plundered the potato bed for marble-sized new potatoes. We were doing so much cooking when I went to get a lemon, only four were left on the tree. It seemed to me it was loaded five days before.An easier way to handle this dinner party marathon would have been to double up on some dishes -- cook a giant pot of Provencal daube or slow-roast an enormous piece of pork for cochinita pibil one night and have make-your-own tacos two nights later.But that would have been too easy.One night we had almond gazpacho, followed by paella embellished with shrimp and cockles. On another, a series of Moroccan salads followed by bestila in the style of Tetouan. A real bear to make because someone, I'm not saying who, had forgotten to take the filo dough out of the freezer and when I tried to unroll it, the fragile pastry shattered. I finally resorted to an ever-so-brief blast in the microwave, which worked well enough. We had Chairman Mao's red-braised pork belly on Wednesday, bucatini all' amatriciana on Thursday. Barbecued flank steak with fresh plum barbecue sauce I can't remember when.Meanwhile I deveined shrimp, filleted salted anchovies, minced garlic and pounded nuts. I whipped up pissaladiere and flatbreads, galettes, flan, Mexican shortbread cookies, lime ice, and I forget what else. Appetizers, soups. I never wrote down the menus. Who had time?Our kitchen had never had such a workout and in the midst of it all, the bottom oven decided to flake out. Great. We moved to the barbecue. And of course, while I was introducing a late-arriving guest, I managed to burn the toasts I was making for bruschetta -- the last bread we had on hand. One night Fred forgot to serve the Szechuan chicken salad and we never realized it until we found that and a cucumber dish in the refrigerator the next morning. Oh, the horror.We did get a bit frazzled, especially when some guests arrived early. After sussing out the situation they sweetly asked if they should leave and come back later. We weren't yelling at each other exactly: Let's just say tensions were high. Fred's favorite knife had disappeared and I was the last to use it. He'd stained my favorite French linen dish towel with beet juice. The beef cheeks needed so much trimming we were left with half the weight we needed. And the olive oil bottle was verging on empty.My job was to shepherd inquisitive guests, the ones who liked to stand over the cook while he's frantically trying to finish dishes, outside for an aperitif. And sometimes, I know it's bad, I would stay out there and act like I was one of them for a little while, reluctant to go back into the heat of the kitchen.And you know what? Despite everything, we had a great time every night. Every dish wasn't perfect, but we so enjoyed spending those relaxed summer evenings with good friends around the table. You can't have the same kind of conversation in restaurants where the noise level is often brutal. And where you don't have the leisure to sit for hours, or the time to witness a wine unfurl over the course of the night.Those evenings are precious and worth every bit of the work.

Provided by S. Irene Virbila

Categories     APPETIZERS, FAST, EASY, FISH & SHELLFISH, STOVETOP

Time 30m

Yield Serves 4

Number Of Ingredients 9

1/2 cup diced slab bacon
4 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
24 littleneck clams
2 ears corn, shucked and cut into 2-inch lengths
3/4 cup dry white wine
2 teaspoons pimenton
Aleppo pepper
Handful fresh basil leaves, torn
Healthy drizzle of olive oil

Steps:

  • In a large, heavy-bottomed pot, sweat the bacon over medium heat. Once it begins to render, about 2 minutes, add the garlic and sweat until translucent. Add the clams, corn and white wine, and stir in the pimenton. Increase the heat to high and cook, uncovered, for about 30 seconds, until the alcohol has evaporated. Reduce the heat to medium low, cover and steam until all the clams have opened and the corn is tender, 5 to 10 minutes. Discard any clams that don't open.
  • Serve in a large bowl with a sprinkle of Aleppo pepper, torn basil and a generous drizzle of fruity olive oil.

STEAMED CORN WITH CLAMS AND BACON



Steamed Corn with Clams and Bacon image

When I was 9, my uncle had a clam bake. He drove four hours in his banana-yellow 1965 Chevy pickup truck to the Massachusetts coast and filled the back with bushel baskets of clams packed in ice and seaweed. Then he returned to his house in Vermont where he'd invited about 100 folks and hired a local rock band to play while he baked clams and steamed huge cauldrons of corn over big fire pits. It was a hot July night and just at dusk it began to rain so hard we had to put a tent over the fire pit, which made for delicious, smoky corn. This is just another one of the great rules of the kitchen, that from mishaps you often discover wonderful things. I know that gastro-nostalgic moment influenced the way I make corn. Sweet corn with smoky pimentón always take me back to that rainy July night. See all corn recipes. Click here to see Seamus Mullen's Hero Food.

Provided by Seamus Mullen

Yield 4

Number Of Ingredients 9

1/2 cup diced slab bacon
4 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
24 littleneck clams
2 ears sweet corn, shucked and cut into 2-inch lengths
3/4 cup dry white wine
2 teaspoon pimentón
aleppo pepper
handful fresh basil leaves, torn
healthy drizzle of olive oil

Steps:

  • In a large heavy-bottomed pot, sweat the bacon over medium heat. Once it begins to render, about 2 minutes, add the garlic and sweat until translucent. Add the clams, corn, and white wine and stir in the pimentón. Increase the heat to high and cook, uncovered, for about 30 seconds, until the alcohol has evaporated. Reduce the heat to medium low, cover, and steam until all the clams have opened and the corn is tender, 5-8 minutes. Discard any clams that don't open.
  • I like to serve this dish in a large earthenware bowl, with a sprinkle of Aleppo pepper, torn basil, and a generous drizzle of fruity olive oil.

STEAMED CLAMS WITH BACON, TOMATO, AND SPINACH



Steamed Clams with Bacon, Tomato, and Spinach image

Categories     Onion     Tomato     Appetizer     Steam     Quick & Easy     Bacon     Clam     Spinach     Summer     Gourmet     Paleo     Dairy Free     Wheat/Gluten-Free     Peanut Free     Tree Nut Free     Soy Free     No Sugar Added

Yield Makes 4 to 6 first-course servings

Number Of Ingredients 8

1/2 lb sliced bacon, chopped
1 medium onion, chopped
2 garlic cloves, finely chopped
1/2 teaspoon dried hot red pepper flakes
2 1/2 lb tomatoes, chopped
3 dozen small hard-shelled clams (2 to 2 1/2 inches in diameter; 3 1/2 lb total), scrubbed well
5 oz baby spinach (4 cups packed)
Accompaniment: crusty bread

Steps:

  • Cook bacon in a 5- to 6-quart heavy pot over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, until beginning to brown, about 5 minutes. Add onion, garlic, and red pepper flakes and cook, stirring occasionally, until onion is golden, about 6 minutes. Add tomatoes and cook, stirring occasionally, until they begin to break down and sauce thickens slightly, about 8 minutes.
  • Increase heat to moderately high, then add clams and bring to a boil, covered. Cook, covered, stirring occasionally, until clams just open wide, about 6 minutes (discard clams that do not open after 10 minutes). Stir in spinach and cook until wilted, about 1 minute. Season with salt and pepper.

STEAMED CORN WITH CLAMS AND BACON



STEAMED CORN WITH CLAMS AND BACON image

Categories     Soup/Stew     Shellfish     Braise     Quick & Easy     Low Cal     Summer

Yield 6

Number Of Ingredients 9

½ pound slab bacon, diced
6 cloves garlic, peeled and sliced
50 littleneck clams
5 ears sweet corn, shucked, trimmed and cut in half
1½ cups dry white wine
1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon pimentón
Crushed Aleppo pepper to taste, or red-pepper flakes
10-12 fresh basil leaves, torn roughly
¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil

Steps:

  • In a large, heavy bottomed pot set over medium heat, cook the bacon until it begins to render its fat. Add the garlic, and cook until it turns translucent.2.Add the clams, corn and white wine, then stir in the pimentón. Increase heat to high, and cook for approximately 30 seconds, to evaporate the alcohol. Lower heat to medium low, cover the pot and steam until the clams have all opened and the corn is tender, approximately 8-10 minutes. (Discard any unopened clams.)3.Using tongs and a spoon, remove all the clams and corn and bacon from the pot, and place in large, warm bowl, with a healthy dose of broth, a scattering of Aleppo pepper and the torn basil, and drizzle with olive oil. YIELDServes 6-8.

STEAMED CLAMS WITH BACON AND BEER



Steamed Clams with Bacon and Beer image

Make and share this Steamed Clams with Bacon and Beer recipe from Food.com.

Provided by cnb948

Categories     Low Cholesterol

Time 30m

Yield 4 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 4

4 slices bacon, cut into pieces
1 small onion, chopped
3 lbs steamer clams
1 bottle beer

Steps:

  • Fry bacon over medium heat, in a medium sized pot about 4 minutes.
  • Add in onion, and continue until bacon is brown, and onion is tender, about another 4 minutes.
  • Add in clams, and beer.
  • Cover and steam clams until they pop open, about 7 minutes.
  • Throw away any clams that do not open.
  • Stir together and serve.

STEAMED CLAMS AND CORN



Steamed Clams and Corn image

Cutting plump ears of corn into "coins" and steaming them with clams and spicy green chile pepper yields a broth with a one-two punch of flavor. The liquid begs to be sopped up with crusty bread and washed down with white wine for a memorable dinner.

Provided by Martha Stewart

Categories     Food & Cooking     Ingredients     Seafood Recipes

Number Of Ingredients 7

2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 sliced shallot
1 sliced jalapeno chile
1/4 cup dry white wine
12 small littleneck clams (scrubbed well)
2 ears of corn (husked and sliced into 1/2-inch "coins")
Fresh cilantro, for garnish

Steps:

  • Heat olive oil in a large pot. Cook sliced shallot and sliced jalapeno until softened, about 2 minutes. Stir in dry white wine. Bring to a simmer. Add clams and corn. Cook, covered, until clams open, 5 to 7 minutes; discard any unopened clams. Divide mixture between 2 bowls. Garnish with fresh cilantro.

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