Fish and Potato Chowder – One Pot Meal!

6 Reviews / 5 Average
This easy one-pot Fish and Potato Chowder is quick enough for a weeknight dinner but tastes like it came from a fancy restaurant. Real food doesn't have to be complicated! You'll love this creamy soup that also includes bacon!
↓ Jump to Recipe
One Pot Fish and Potato Chowder on 100 Days of Real Food

Want to Save this Recipe?

Enter your email below & we’ll send it straight to your inbox. Plus you’ll get great new recipes from us every week!

Save Recipe

Also, just like most soups and stews, this dish is fabulous leftover so feel free to double the recipe while you’re at it. You’ll thank yourself later. :)

I had a chance to demo this recipe on the Charlotte Today show … you can check out the clip below!

 

Posts may contain affiliate links. If you purchase a product through an affiliate link, your cost will be the same but 100 Days of Real Food will automatically receive a small commission. Your support is greatly appreciated and helps us spread our message!

About The Author

24 thoughts on “Fish and Potato Chowder – One Pot Meal!”

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating




  1. Sooooo tasty! I’m not huge fish eater so this is a great way for me to get more fish in my diet. I wish the kids had liked it more.

  2. I made this tonight using pollock and milk instead of cream. I also added a bay leaf for flavor. It was delicious with toasted bread and a side salad. Going into the recipe carousel. Thank you!

  3. 5 stars
    Love this chowder. I don’t feel it is necessary to use bacon. I have made this twice now, and we really love the flavor combination. For two people, I use an eight ounce piece of halibut.

  4. This looks awesome! Can this be lightened up for heart healthy patients? Can the bacon be replaced with olive oil? Can the heavy cream be a light cream?

  5. 5 stars
    My 6 year old had 2 helpings of this last night and then asked to have it for breakfast! Thank you for another awesome recipe! You have no clue how many of your recipes I use all of the time! Probably at least 5 a week! : )

  6. Stephanie Walden Brachman

    5 stars
    I made this tonight and it is delicious! I followed the recipe but used wild salmon, added a cup of frozen organic corn and doubled the thyme. The thyme is key. I saved about half of the potatoes and used my inversion blender to thicken. I only used a dash of half and half– soup is rich without it! I highly recommend serving the spinach with hot bacon dressing salad from Lisa’s first cookbook along with the chowder. This meal was a big hit with my family.

  7. What would a mainly vegetarian version of this be? We don’t eat meat but we do eat fish. I’ve made something similar before – a potato-cod chowder – but it was quite bland so any suggestions on how to make it flavorful for non-meat eaters appreciated!

  8. 5 stars
    My son was sick and I couldn’t leave the house so I made it with what I had. (If I had that laughing/crying emoticon, I’d put it here because I changed the recipe so much!) It was still incredibly delicious. Beef stock, a combination of tilapia and frozen salmon, leeks instead of celery, and because of the leeks, I switched the thyme to nutmeg. :0D It was fantastic and I ate three bowls of it.

    My dear, sick, feverish three year old? Not so much. He ate three spoons of it. All he could stomach was goldfish cracker, Gatorade, and colby jack cheese. Usually, there’s no way in heck that would be his dinner, but ya gotta do what ya gotta do, I guess. ;0)

    1. 5 stars
      Maybe cauliflower? Cauliflower is a good potato sub elsewhere, so it might work here.

      This looks absolutely delicious. Definitely going on my must-try list!

  9. I make a similar chowder in my instant pot! I sautée bacon and set it aside, then sautée onions and add potatoes and carrots (and sometimes corn). I put in enough broth to barely cover the veggies, then place 2-3 frozen salmon filets on top. I cook on manual for 3 minutes, remove the salmon, flake it and return it to the pot, and add just enough milk or cream to make it creamy. I use the bacon as a garnish.