Fried belly clam rolls are not a dish that tolerates ambiguity. Either the bellies are shucked to order and fried within thirty minutes or they are wet, and a wet fried clam belly is a problem no sauce or slaw can fix. Nick Williams, cooking out of Brooklyn, understood the moisture problem as the central challenge before the challenge was even announced.
He dredged his clams in a milk-and-egg wash followed by a seasoned cornmeal-and-flour mixture, which creates a rougher, more porous exterior than fine breadcrumbs. That porosity allows steam to escape during frying rather than building under a sealed crust and turning the interior gummy. He fried at 380°F in small batches — no more than six clams — to maintain oil temperature.
Small-batch discipline is the thing that separates a fried clam roll worth eating from the kind you forget on the drive home. Williams did not forget.