How to Catch Mahogany Clams
Mahogany clams (ocean quahogs) are cold-water clams of the deeper North Atlantic subtidal with rich, dark meat - chiefly a dredge fishery, slow-growing and long-lived, prized for chowder and canned clam products.
Mahogany clams are a deeper subtidal, largely commercial dredge catch, closely managed because the species is very slow-growing. Check local rules; recreational access is limited. Shellfish is a serious allergen; cook thoroughly.
The mahogany clam - the ocean quahog - is the deep, cold-water clam behind much of the canned and chowder clam supply. Living on the deeper North Atlantic sea floor, well below the flats, it wears a dark, glossy shell and carries a rich, full-flavoured meat. It is one of the longest-lived animals on earth, growing slowly over decades, which makes it a closely managed dredge fishery rather than a bucket-and-rake forage.
Why go for them
The draw is a rich, deep, savoury clam flavour that makes superb chowder and stuffed clams - the meaty backbone of much canned and prepared clam. For most people this means buying them fresh where landed rather than gathering, but the flavour is worth seeking out.
Where and when to find them
Mahogany clams live buried in cold sand and mud of the deeper North Atlantic subtidal, offshore and below the reach of a shore dig. They are taken during managed seasons by dredge; the ground and timing are set by the commercial fishery and its slow-growth-driven regulations.
How to catch them
They are harvested almost entirely by hydraulic dredge from boats working the offshore beds - not a recreational flats fishery. Because the clams are so slow-growing and long-lived, the fishery is tightly controlled by quota. Most people buy mahogany clams fresh, canned or as chowder meat rather than gathering their own.
Handling, cleaning and cooking
Purge and rinse the clams, then shuck or steam them open. The rich, dark meat is superb chopped into chowder, stuffed clams and clam sauces, and is often ground for canned clam products. Rinse away grit, cook thoroughly, and discard any clam that will not close before cooking.
Safety and the law
Mahogany clams are a managed, largely commercial dredge species, slow-growing and quota-controlled, so recreational harvest is limited and local rules apply - check before attempting any gathering, and buy from reputable sources otherwise. Cook thoroughly; shellfish is a serious allergen. See our shellfish safety guide.