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Home Collections Winter Warmers

Seafood Chowder

By Nagi Maehashi
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Published3 Sep '25 Updated3 Sep '25
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Recipe

Here’s a beautiful Seafood Chowder brimming with mixed seafood, tender potato, carrot, and sweet corn. The creamy soup broth is infused with seafood flavour, and the recipe is designed to be easy on your time and your wallet. It’s just gorgeous!

Seafood chowder

Seafood chowder

I feel like seafood soups often get dismissed as one of those foods that are not any good unless made with a homemade fish stock and fresh seafood. But who has time for that on a Wednesday night??

Turns out you can make a terrific Seafood Chowder without all the fuss – truthfully, I wasn’t sure until we tasked ourselves to invent this! Using fresh seafood will of course give you the best results, but seafood marinara mixes are a convenient, good-value alternative that you can get from grocery stores (deli counter or freezer section).

I also use chicken stock instead of fish stock – mass produced carton fish stock is, frankly, just awful, in my opinion. Chicken stock is neutral, and the seafood juices adds lovely flavour as the soup simmers away.

And my final touch is a cheeky dash of fish sauce to gently boost the fishy taste and umami!

Seafood chowder

Ingredients in Seafood Chowder

The baseline for this Seafood Chowder was to make it great even using frozen marinara mix which is around $16/kg at grocery stores. Even fresh marinara mixes from fishmongers typically don’t run more than $25/kg, and you can of course pick your own seafood mix!

At $16/kg, it works out at just $10 worth of seafood to feed 4 or 5. Who said you can’t enjoy seafood during a cost of living crisis? 🙂

1. The seafood and vegetables

  • Seafood – I used a fresh seafood marinara mix for the recipe video and photos. Fresh is preferred over frozen because you lose tasty seafood juices when the seafood thaws, but, as noted above, my baseline was to make this great even with frozen!

    Seafood marinara mix – Find it at deli counters and the freezer section of grocery stores, or at the fish markets and fish mongers (they use leftover fish that didn’t sell so it’s usually fresh). Marinara mixes can be a little fish-heavy however, so you can always buy some extra prawns etc to balance it out. There is no shame in asking for just 8 raw prawns!! 🙂

    Choose your own fresh seafood – Get a mix of fish, squid, small prawns/shrimp, and a handful of mussels. Peel the prawns. Have the fishmonger clean your squid. Slice head into rings and divide tentacles into 3 or 4. Soak and scrub the mussels per this recipe, then put the raw mussels in the shell into the broth, then you can either pick the meat out and discard the mussels, or serve the soup with the mussels shells (great visual impact!)

  • Bacon – A chowder favourite! This goes a long way to add flavour into the broth especially if you make this with frozen marinara. I love a good smoky bacon for my chowder, but any bacon is fine.

  • Potatoes – Another chowder classic! Any variety works fine here, starchy or waxy.

  • Corn and carrots – Great for colour, and vegetable sweetness and freshness, also commonly used in chowders.

No onion or celery? These are often used in chowders but I decided to skip them because they don’t improve broth flavour (so nothing lost by excluding them), and I wanted this chowder to be seafood rather than vegetable forward. If you add them, the chowder is very,,,,cluttered. 🙂 Stew-like! Still delicious though, so feel free to increase the vegetables in this, I’ll pop some ideas and guidance in the FAQs.

2. broth

Here’s what you need for the seafood soup broth. Secret ingredient – fish sauce! 🙂 (See rantings above about store-bought fish stock)

  • Chicken stock or homemade fish stock – If you are lucky enough to have some homemade fish stock on hand, this is definitely the best option! But store bought chicken stock does a great job here and this recipe was designed to taste great using that. Chicken stock is way preferred over store bought fish stock which is Awful with a capital A (the mass produced stuff, that is, if your fish monger sells homemade fish stock I am sure that is terrific!).

    The chowder broth does not taste chicken-y, it has lovely seafood flavour from the seafood we poach in the broth. (Note: I am referring to liquid chicken stock here, not powder reconstituted with water which is more artificial tasting).

  • Fish sauce (secret trick!) – My little trick to pack in a bit of extra umami and seafoody-ness (is that even a word?!), taking the place of flavourless salt. You cannot taste it at all, and the fish sauce functions as a background seasoning. More subtle than using anchovies which I also considered. Totally optional, just use salt if you don’t have it or don’t want to use it.

  • Cream – I like cream for this recipe because it adds the creaminess without diluting the broth, unlike milk. If you are calorie-conscious, feel free to use milk instead, or reduce the cream though I would not go any lower than half a cup (125ml).

  • Butter – Feel free to substitute with a neutral vegetable oil, but butter has more flavour.

  • White wine – This adds a touch of extra depth of flavour into the broth. Preferably use chardonnay, or another dry white. Don’t use anything too sweet or too woody. If you cannot drink alcohol, leave it out, it’s not a deal breaker in this recipe.

  • Flour – This thickens the broth. Some chowders don’t use flour so the broth is very watery. I do not think I can get my head around that!

  • White rather than black pepper – To keep the soup a beautiful unblemished white colour and avoid little black spots. But I promise you won’t destroy your chowder if you use black pepper instead!

  • Chives or parsley – Optional garnish. It is nice to have something fresh and green on an otherwise very white soup. 🙂


How to make Seafood Chowder

There is a handful of “turn stove up” “turn stove down!” directions, but I know you can handle it – turn the knob one way, then the other. You got this! 🥰 Other than stove strength changes, this is very straight forward. 🙂

  1. Prepare marinara mix – Separate the raw and cooked seafood (usually mussels, sometimes prawns/shrimp). They will go into the soup at different times. Then cut large fish pieces into ~2.5cm/1″ pieces.

    💡Note: Unlike some seafood dishes, I feel like chowder is more forgiving so you don’t need to be overly meticulous about the size of the seafood pieces and cooking them for the exact time required so they are perfectly cooked. Relax. 🙂 This recipe is intended to be easy!

  2. Bacon first – Cook the bacon in the butter until light golden, then remove with a slotted spoon so you leave the butter and bacon fat in the pot. We are not wasting a scrap of flavour!

  1. Deglaze – Give the garlic a quick sauté in the butter, then simmer the wine rapidly on high heat until mostly evaporated which will cook out the alcohol and just leave behind the tasty flavour that will add depth to your broth. As it simmers, scrape the base of the pot to loosen any bacon golden bits so it dissolves into the wine (it’s called fond and it’s free flavour!).

  2. Roux – Next, cook the flour for 1 minute. It will be a pastry sludge. This is called a roux, and this flour mixture is what thickens the soup broth.

  1. Broth – Then, while stirring, slowly pour about 1 cup of the stock in. Keep stirring vigorously until the roux dissolves into the stock – it will become quite thick. Add the rest of the stock and mix until it’s lump free – use a whisk if needed (I do, quick swish is all that’s needed).

  2. Simmer – Put the potatoes and carrots in, and simmer for 10 to 12 minutes, stirring every now and then so the base doesn’t catch, until the carrots and potatoes are just about done. They will only cook a little more in the next steps, so check them.

  1. Raw seafood 3 minutes only! – Put the raw seafood in along with the cream, fish sauce, pepper and corn. Let it simmer for just 3 minutes – seafood cooks fast, and nobody wants rubbery bits of calamari in their chowder!

  2. Cooked seafood – Then stir in the cooked seafood. No need to cook it, it will warm up in the time it gets you to take the pot off the stove and serve.

  1. Serving – Ladle into bowls and top with a sprinkle of something green. (Chives is very classic which is what I opted for. Parsley is common, dill would also be lovely, even green onion is great).

Seafood chowder

Soup dunkers!

I feel like serving chowder with something crusty for dunking is a mandatory chowder eating rule! I am pretty sure I’ve ranted about this in the past, along with anti-carton-fish-stock rants and other matters. 🙂

Here are some options – choose the one that works best for you!

  • Quick and Dirty Focaccia – The SOS version of focaccia I describe as 93% as good for 30% of the effort of traditional focaccia. Very well received by readers!

  • The infamous Easy Artisan, NO KNEAD crusty bread – or the Cheese version (gasp!)

  • Herb and garlic quick bread loaf – the muffin batter sort, so it’s much faster to make than yeast-based breads. The buttery herby garlic flavour in this is everything! The Cheese muffin version is also excellent, and faster to make. 🙂

  • GARLIC BREAD – I’m putting this in caps in the secret hope that it catches your attention that this is the one you choose!

Love to know what you think if you try this! And if you use your own seafood mix, tell me what you use! – Nagi x

FAQ – Seafood Chowder

You sure can. In the ingredients section, I made comment that I deliberately dialled it back to make an elegant white seafood-forward chowder rather than making it a colourful stew-like chowder.

To add more vegetables, my first option would be to add onion or leeks and celery which I would sauté in the butter before adding the flour. These are both quite common in chowders.

Here are some other ideas:

  • Frozen peas – add with the seafood

  • Broccoli, cauliflower – chop into small spoon sizes, add with seafood

  • Zucchini, green beans – sauté in the butter before adding flour

  • Baby or regular spinach, kale, other cookable leafy greens – stir in towards end to wilt

  • Cherry tomatoes (small ones) – Pop them in whole towards the end.

  • Fennel – This would be lovely to sauté in the butter before adding the flour, but be mindful that it will change the broth flavour (not in a bad way though!).

I personally would avoid capsicum (bell peppers) as they will change the flavour of the soup, and eggplant because they are a sponge for soup and may hog too much of the tasty broth.

The potatoes can be switched for other root vegetables – parsnip, swedes, sweet potatoes.

Yes. Make recipe as written, skipping the flour step. Mix 2 1/2 tablespoons of cornflour/cornstarch with the 2 1/2 tablespoons of water, mix that into the cream then pour it in with the cream.

Leftovers will keep for 3 days in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer. Thaw overnight in the fridge then heat gently on the stove (don’t microwave, it’s too harsh for delicate seafood).

This is my brother Goh’s recipe. He’s on fire at the moment! I shared his Filipino Pork Adobo a couple of weeks ago (wow, it was well received!) and I have another one of his creations coming on Friday (it’s an extra special one).

He’s our resident world-foods-expert as well as taking care of all things IT here at RecipeTin. Read more about him in the Pork Adobo FAQ section (I really need to create a bio page for him!).

This seafood chowder was one of the more simple recipes he’s made. He made a great seafood chowder for VIP a few weekends ago with homemade fish stock and fresh seafood. It was, unsurprisingly, absolutely beautiful.

I challenged him to invent a midweek version using store-bought stock and a grocery store marinara mix. Being a food snob (him) and also having a Michelin trained chef in the team who had to give it his tick of approval as well, I was not convinced it was possible. Truthfully, I secretly believed he would fail. We bench a lot of recipes as “not good enough”, it just comes with the territory of what we do!

But I was proved wrong. The chowder is excellent. It’s so good, it’s hard to believe it’s made with cheap ‘n cheerful frozen marinara mix and store bought stock.

He did deploy some flavour tricks – dash of fish sauce instead of salt, start with bacon, a decent amount of butter. And absolutely nailed it!

I’ve been having a lot of “not good enough” cooking stints lately so it was actually really nice to have a simple straightforward recipe to film and photograph. The recipe coming on Friday is a big one – it took me almost 8 hours of shooting time, so I needed a simple one for today!


Watch how to make it

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Seafood chowder

Seafood Chowder

Author: Nagi
Prep: 20 minutes mins
Cook: 20 minutes mins
Total: 40 minutes mins
Mains
Western
5 from 9 votes
Servings4 – 5 people
Tap or hover to scale
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Recipe video above. This is a seafood soup so good, it's hard to believe it's made with cheap 'n cheerful marinara mix and store-bought stock. Using chicken rather than store-bought fish stock (awful stuff!), a cheeky dash of fish sauce rather than salt and bacon are some of the flavour enhancers we deploy here!
Of course, if you use homemade fish stock and a hand-picked mix of fresh seafood, it will be upmarket-restaurant-worthy. 🙂 Also see FAQ for more vegetable options.

Ingredients

  • 650g/ 1.3lb seafood marinara mix or mixed fresh seafood – fish , squid, prawns, cooked mussel meat (Note 1)
  • 50g (3 tbsp) unsalted butter
  • 100g/ 4oz streaky bacon , chopped into 1.5cm / 1/2″ squares
  • 2 cloves garlic , finely minced
  • 1/2 cup chardonnay or other dry white wine (can skip)
  • 1/3 cup flour , plain/all-purpose (Note 3 for gluten-free)
  • 1 litre (4 cups) chicken stock/broth, low sodium OR homemade fish stock (avoid store-bought fish stock) (Note 2)
  • 2 medium carrots , peeled, cut into 7mm / 1/3" pieces (~1 1/2 cups)
  • 2 large potatoes (any type fine), peeled, cut into 1cm / 0.2" cubes (~2 1/2 cups)
  • 1 cup thickened cream / heavy cream (sub milk for lighter option)
  • 1 cup corn (frozen or canned, drained)
  • 2 tsp fish sauce
  • Pinch white pepper (substitute black pepper)

SERVING

  • 3 tbsp chives or parsley , finely chopped, for garnish
  • Crusty bread or better yet, garlic bread!
Prevent screen from sleeping

Instructions

ABBREVIATED RECIPE:

  • Cook bacon in butter, remove. Sauté garlic, deglaze with white wine, make roux. Add stock, simmer potato, carrots and bacon 10 min. Add cream, corn, fish sauce, pepper, raw seafood – simmer 3 min. Stir in cooked seafood, taste for salt. Serve!

FULL RECIPE:

  • Marinara mix – Separate cooked seafood (usually mussels, sometimes prawns/shrimp) from raw seafood. We put them in at different times.
  • Cut any large pieces of fish into 2.5cm / 1" cubes.

CHOWDER:

  • Bacon – In a heavy-based pot, melt the butter over medium heat. Add bacon and cook for 3 – 4 minutes until the edges are light golden. Use a slotted spoon to remove into bowl, leaving fat in the pot.
  • Deglaze – Add the garlic and cook for 10 seconds (don't let it brown). Add the wine, simmer rapidly on high for 3 minutes, scraping the base to loosen any golden bacon bits, until the wine is mostly evaporated.
  • Roux – Reduce heat down to medium, add the flour and mix for 1 minute ("roux").
  • Broth – While stirring, pour in about 1 cup of the stock and mix to dissolve the roux – it will thicken into a paste. Add the remaining stock and stir well until lump free (use a whisk if needed).
  • Simmer 10 minutes – Increase heat to high, bring to the boil, add the carrots, potatoes and bacon. Lower heat to medium and simmer for 10 – 12 minutes, or until the carrots are just about done.
  • Simmer raw seafood 3 minutes – Add the cream, fish sauce, pepper, corn and raw seafood. Simmer for 3 minutes until the fish is just cooked (test – flesh should flake).
  • Cooked seafood – Stir in cooked seafood, taste and add more salt if needed (I don't).
  • Serve – Ladle into bowls, sprinkle with chives. Serve with warm crusty bread for dunking!

Recipe Notes:

1. Seafood mix – This recipe is designed to be easy to make using a store-bought seafood marinara mix, sold at the deli of most large grocery stores and in the freezer section. Usually contains a white fish, salmon, squid rings (calamari), prawns (sometimes cooked, sometimes raw), cooked mussels. If frozen, thaw thoroughly in a strainer set over a bowl, overnight in the fridge.
Fresh seafood mix – choose your own! Anything goes here. 🙂
2. Chicken stock?? Yes, chicken stock! I have very, very strong views about store bought fish stock – it’s just awful. (The mass produced stuff, that is, if your fish monger sells homemade fish stock I am sure that is terrific!). Chicken stock (liquid form, not powder) makes a much nicer broth and yes, you will have lovely seafood flavour and no, it will not taste chicken-y!
3. Gluten-free option – Follow recipe but skip the flour step. Mix 2.5 tbsp each cornflour/cornstarch and water, then mix into cream, proceed with recipe as written.
Leftovers – 3 days in the fridge, 3 months in the freezer (thaw overnight in the fridge then gently reheat on the stove). Also a really good one to make ahead and gently reheat to serve later in the day (just be careful not to overcook the seafood when reheating, so use low heat and minimum reheating time!)
Nutrition per serving assuming 5 servings.

Nutrition Information:

Calories: 623cal (31%)Carbohydrates: 41g (14%)Protein: 32g (64%)Fat: 37g (57%)Saturated Fat: 20g (125%)Polyunsaturated Fat: 3gMonounsaturated Fat: 11gTrans Fat: 0.4gCholesterol: 88mg (29%)Sodium: 1596mg (69%)Potassium: 842mg (24%)Fiber: 5g (21%)Sugar: 6g (7%)Vitamin A: 7723IU (154%)Vitamin C: 21mg (25%)Calcium: 74mg (7%)Iron: 2mg (11%)
Keywords: corn chowder, creamy seafood soup, marinara seafood soup, seafood chowder, seafood marinara recipe, seafood soup
Did you make this recipe?I love hearing how you went with my recipes! Tag me on Instagram at @recipe_tin.

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Life of Dozer

I spotted a print on the wall of a waiting room called Pack of Dogs, snapped a photo, and after a quick Google image search, discovered it was by Bill Hope – an artist who not only lives in Sydney, but also illustrates for Andy Griffiths, the famous children’s book author I coincidentally share a publisher with (Pan Macmillan).

It just seemed to be a sign!

So I commissioned my very first Dozer artwork, and illustrated piece called Life of Dozer. 44 Dozers drawn from photos in the Life of Dozer section of this website. I love it so much!

My first custom original artwork – Life of Dozer by Bill Hope!

Previous Post
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Hi, I'm Nagi!

I believe you can make great food with everyday ingredients even if you’re short on time and cost conscious. You just need to cook clever and get creative!

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59 Comments

  1. Claudia says

    September 4, 2025 at 11:23 pm

    Yum! Another home run. Love seafood and love the life of Dozer. Bill has captured Dozer’s essence in his drawings.

    Reply
  2. Jen says

    September 4, 2025 at 7:40 pm

    5 stars
    Absolutely delicious!

    Reply
  3. VA says

    September 4, 2025 at 1:06 pm

    THIS LOOKS SO GOOD! IN OUR PART OF THE U.S .(CENTRAL AND MORE RURAL) THE STORES DON’T SELL M MIXED SEAFOOD PRODUCT AND THE FISH SAUCE SEEMS TO BE DIFFICULT TO FIND, TOO.
    I ALWAYS ENJOY SEEING THE RECIPES YOU POST AND EVERYTHING DOZER.

    Reply
  4. Sofia says

    September 4, 2025 at 12:06 pm

    Any substitute for bacon? I can’t eat pork. Thanks and love, love your recipes.

    Reply
  5. Wendy says

    September 4, 2025 at 11:55 am

    Omigoodness I simply cannot stop smiling! What a gorgeous piece of art to honor the love of your life!!!
    I must also mention the chowder looks over the top and I will be so popular when I make this for hubby! Nicely done as per usual, dahlin’!

    Reply
  6. Sandra says

    September 4, 2025 at 10:08 am

    Thank you, thank you, thank you. Just in time for our extended trip to Tassie where the seafood is fabulous!

    Reply
  7. Sandy says

    September 4, 2025 at 9:07 am

    Dozer will definitely be on the podium at the next Logie’s. He is a legend. Thanks for posting Nagi, love your work 🥰

    Reply
  8. Carrie says

    September 4, 2025 at 8:10 am

    Could I use this exact recipe but only make it with clams?

    Reply
  9. Anne says

    September 4, 2025 at 8:06 am

    Very similar to the recipe I use, which is from a cordon bleu course my friend did years ago in Europe. I suggest you try adding some smoked fish too.

    Reply
  10. Michelle C says

    September 4, 2025 at 7:35 am

    Absolutely love the artwork. What an amazing concept.

    Reply
  11. Geni P Hawkins says

    September 4, 2025 at 7:00 am

    Oh, this is going in the Definitely To Cook file for this autumn! (minus the mussels, I don’t care for them) I love chowders, but so many are so onion-y that I can’t eat them. This one sounds perfect. And that Dozer artwork is something you will treasure forever, what a great idea.

    Reply
    • Sandra says

      September 4, 2025 at 10:09 am

      Mostly mussels are overcooked & then they’re horrible & rubbery.

      Reply
  12. Jamie says

    September 4, 2025 at 7:00 am

    What a cool piece of art, live this! Might the artist and you be interested in doing limited edition of prints (100 or so), that your and dozer’s fans can order, maybe net proceeds go to your meals program? Each print could be signed by the artist, you, and Dozer (paw print)?? You’d need a signed release by the artist. You could also do a series of cards or mini prints featuring individual drawings from the art work or a section of drawings? Just a few thoughts!
    Either way, lovely piece of heart warming art that you will treasure for a very long time Nagi!!

    Reply
    • David says

      September 4, 2025 at 8:04 pm

      I was going to suggest this! +1 I’d love some Dozer artwork

      Reply
  13. Vicki Ford says

    September 4, 2025 at 6:54 am

    I absolutely love the Life of Dozer art. What a brilliant idea. Oh…and the soup looks good, too. LOL

    Reply
  14. Susan says

    September 4, 2025 at 4:23 am

    Oh yum! Well done Goh – next shop this will be first on the list. I’ve just finished making beef enchiladas, lasagne, tuscan chicken pasta bake, thai fish cakes and thai fried rice, and creamy chicken and mushroom fettucine, and today I’ll be making the new lemon chicken recipe, calabrian fish ragu, the new Moroccan meatball and zucchini spiral thingy and mini cinnamon muffins (again). Got to chew through that lot before diving into the chowder. I’m such a Nagi tragic, and cook ONLY recipetin eats – an endless supply of foolproof deliciousness!! Now to Mr Dozer – how adorable the artwork is! I’ve long thought that a wonderful legacy for Dozer would be a children’s cookbook: Dozer the taste-testing Goldie!! As a child I had an illustrated cookbook: My learn to cook book. It had dog and cat illustrations which I’d draw for years, and I treasured that book, and cooked everything in it. You’ve got the illustrator, the publisher and the furry inspiration – imagine being taught to cook by Dozer (and now you know he SELLS!!! He’s already famous.) Much love to you Nagi, your amazing team, and of course to the hairy one … may there be many more good times to come xxx

    Reply
    • Vanessa says

      September 4, 2025 at 6:03 am

      I second this — a children’s cookbook featuring Dozer would be amazing!

      Reply
  15. Marca says

    September 4, 2025 at 2:32 am

    I LOVE the Dozer artwork that you commissioned!! So many memories illustrated forever!!!

    Reply
  16. Lisa King says

    September 4, 2025 at 1:55 am

    5 stars
    Nagi, you have the best recipes!!! I will be going to my local fish market this Friday to get fresh fish/seafood to make this chowder…so excited! Dozer is adorbs!!

    Reply
  17. KrisB says

    September 4, 2025 at 1:20 am

    5 stars
    Oh, Nagi! You are RUINING my food budget! Just when I think I have my week’s meals planned out, you come up with something I simply MUST make. So off to the grocers I go. Having this gorgeous seafood chowder (and garlic Texas toast) for dinner tonight.
    BTW, absolutely LOVE Dozer’s artwork. So glad he is feeling better. Prayers continuing (for both of you).
    Later Gator, gotta go get the stuff for dinner. Yum!

    Reply
    • KrisB says

      September 4, 2025 at 10:09 am

      5 stars
      Had the chowder for an early dinner. (Couldn’t wait.) Was absolutely delicious. Went into a food come immediately after. Took some to a neighbor so I wouldn’t TOTALLY pig out. Only change: added the onions and celery because…..I love onions and celery.
      Have been following you for several years. Keep those wonderful recipes coming.

      Reply
  18. Vicki Hvidston says

    September 4, 2025 at 12:10 am

    Super artwork of Dozer ~ captures the essence of The Kid!
    The seafood chowder looks amazing!

    Reply
  19. Lee says

    September 3, 2025 at 11:06 pm

    I love the Dozer artwork. Is he turning up his nose at kale included? Swimming? Love you Dozer!

    Reply
  20. Cheryl Chin says

    September 3, 2025 at 10:40 pm

    Absolutely adorable!
    I love Dozer 🥰

    Reply
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