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clambake
/ ˈæˌɪ /
noun
a picnic, often by the sea, at which clams, etc, are baked
an informal party
Word History and Origins
Example Sentences
Hundreds of years before Europeans arrived on New England shores, Native Americans created the clambake by digging pits in the sand to steam them with lobster.
These clambakes are a family and tribal tradition, said Mills, the Suquamish elder.
I live in a city apartment with no outdoor space, but that doesn’t stop me from regularly making a full-on New England-style clambake for dinner.
One group will play in the PGA Tour’s Pebble Beach Pro-Am, a tournament that started as a clambake hosted by the crooner Bing Crosby.
If clambakes and lobster dinners are your typical cookout fare, be sure to give this dish a try.
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