Recipes & Lore • Shore Dinner Canon

Clam Cakes, the Rocky Point Way

A clam cake is not a crab-cake-style patty — out-of-staters get this wrong constantly. It's a fritter: a crisp, golden, doughnut-adjacent ball of batter studded with chopped quahog, eaten hot by the bagful, ideally within sight of salt water, and dunked in chowder. It is the taste of a Rhode Island summer, and of one lost, beloved place in particular.

Golden Rhode Island clam cakes piled in a bowl.
Photo: Hunter Angler Gardener Cook

You need

Method

  1. Heat 2–3 inches of oil to 350°F in a heavy pot.
  2. Whisk the dry ingredients; beat the eggs with milk and clam juice.
  3. Combine until just mixed — thick and sticky, not smooth. Overworked batter makes dense cakes. Fold in the clams.
  4. Drop rounded tablespoons into the oil in batches — golf-ball size, no bigger. Fry 3–4 minutes, turning, until deep golden all over. Pale clam cakes are undercooked clam cakes; the crag and crunch is the point.
  5. Drain, salt hot, serve by the dozen in a paper bag. Dunking is encouraged.
The lore: Rocky Point in Warwick started as Sunday-school steamboat outings in 1840; by 1847 Captain William Winslow had bought the land and was serving shore dinners to boatloads of visitors. It grew into an amusement park with the World's Largest Shore Dinner Hall, where clam cake batter was famously shot from guns into the fryers, and a single average day could move roughly 1,700 orders — something like 23,000 clam cakes. The park closed in 1995 and Rhode Island has not emotionally recovered. Every clam shack argument about who makes the best clam cakes today is really an argument about who tastes most like being eight years old at Rocky Point.

Sources & further reading

Send the taste of the shore

Fresh quahogs don't ship in a gift box — but the Rhode Island flavors that do are packed in the Rhode Island Survival Kit, field guide included.

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