Comforting Corn Chowdah... New England Style!
- 5 (8 ounce) cans creamed corn
- 4 (8 ounce) cansof regular whole kernel corn
- 1 large yellow onion
- 1 (5 lb) bag white potatoes
- 2 lbs bacon
- 1 quart heavy cream
- 1 quart milk (I use whole)
- 1 12 tablespoons paprika
- 1 12 tablespoons pepper
- 1 tablespoon salt
- 4 tablespoons flour
- Start by peeling, cubing and boiling the potatoes in a large (preferably a lobster-sized) pot.
- While your potatoes are cooking, cut your bacon into small pieces and fry them crispy in a separate pan.
- Set the cooked bacon aside and keep the leftover oil on a medium heat.
- Chop your onions to your desired size and toss them into the bacon drippings, making sure to cook them long enough to look brown, but not crispy.
- Once your potatoes are done, dump them into a strainer.
- Rinse the excess starch from the pot and return it to the stove.
- Dump your drippings and onions into the pot and whisk in the flour over a medium heat.
- Once the flour is blended and is starting to take on a nutty color, take it off the heat and add a few tablespoons of water -- this will ensure that you don't scorch the milk that you're about to add inches.
- Let the pot sit off the heat for a minute or two after adding the water.
- Whisk in your milk slowly.
- If it starts to scorch, let it sit for another minute -- this is an easy way to burn it.
- Once you're able to pour in all the milk, add the cream.
- Dump all of the creamed and whole corn with the liquid into the pot.
- Turn the heat down to medium-low.
- Whisk in the all of the paprika, salt, and pepper -- You may wish to add more salt and pepper like I do, but I'm told I over-salt and pepper everything -- It's your call.
- Add the bacon.
- Go back to your potatoes and add half of them into the pot (careful, you don't want hot cream to splash back at you!)
- Using the whisk, mash the potatoes to thicken the cream.
- Add the rest of the potatoes and switch to a large wooden spoon, making sure to stir carefully along the bottom.
- Remember, if you start to feel any resistance building up at the very bottom of the pot, stir just above it -- this is a very easily scorched meal, but it's easy to avoid the scorched taste as long as you don't scrape it up!
- Let it simmer for at least a half an hour on low after all of your ingredients have been added.
- Make sure you check it often.
- Serve with cornbread to an army of friends and family for a comforting, delicious meal.
corn, kernel corn, yellow onion, white potatoes, bacon, heavy cream, milk, paprika, pepper, salt, flour
Taken from www.food.com/recipe/comforting-corn-chowdah-new-england-style-270437 (may not work)