. In coastal areas of the New England states, Long Island, and New Jersey, restaurants known as
raw bars or clam bars specialize in serving littlenecks and topnecks raw on an opened half-shell, usually with a
cocktail sauce with
horseradish, and often with
lemon. Sometimes littlenecks are steamed and dipped in butter, though not as commonly as their
soft-shelled clam cousin the "steamer". Littlenecks are often found in-the-shell in sauces, soups, stews, and
clams casino, or substituted for European varieties such as the
cockle in southern European seafood dishes. The largest clams are quahogs or chowders and cherrystones; they have the toughest meat and are used in such dishes as
clam chowder,
clam cakes, and
stuffed clams, or are minced and mixed into dishes that use the smaller, more tender clams. Historically,
Native Americans used the quahog as a component in
wampum, the shell beads exchanged in the
North American fur trade. The
Narragansetts used the hard clam for food and ornaments. A population of hard clams exists in
Southampton Water in
Hampshire,
England. Originally bred in the warm water outflows at
Southampton Power Station for use as eel bait, the population became self-sustaining and can now be found in Southampton Water and has also spread to
Portsmouth Harbour and
Langstone Harbour. ==Clams and red tide==