Miami Herald (Sunday)

This clam shack in Key West was named one of the best seafood restaurant­s in Florida

- BY CONNIE OGLE cogle@miamiheral­d.com

When Doug Bell and Jeff Gagnon opened DJ’s Clam Shack in Key West in 2009, they wanted to represent the best of all possible seafood worlds.

They wanted to serve bowls of New England clam chowder and Maine lobster rolls and fried or steamed Ipswich clams (the “crème de la crème of clams,” Bell says). But they also didn’t want to neglect the favorites of the Florida Keys: cracked conch, mahi mahi tacos, fried shrimp.

So they heaped them all on the menu, and the concept has paid off. The laid-back restaurant, which has twice been featured on

Guy Fieri’s “Diners, DriveIns and Dives,” has just been named one of the best seafood restaurant­s in Florida by travel website Trips to Discover.

The list of 15 restaurant­s, a blend of upscale dining establishm­ents and hole-in-the-wall spots, doesn’t include any other South Florida seafood restaurant­s (the nearest restaurant­s are Walt’s Fish Market and Owen’s Fish Camp in Sarasota and Dixie Crossroads in Titusville).

Bell has lived in the Keys for more than 40 years, but as a native of Ipswich, Massachuse­tts, he comes by his love of northern seafood honestly (partner Gagnon is from Long Island).

“I grew up clamming and digging and shucking clams,” Bell says.

His reasoning for bringing northern seafood south is sound: “A lot of New Englanders live in or visit the Keys.”

Funny thing, though: Bell finds that tourists are often more interested in eating the local seafood, cracked conch not being particular­ly easy to find on New England menus. Locals, meanwhile, are gorging themselves on lobster rolls, which account for half of all sales. The restaurant also does a robust take-out business, which, along with the mostly outdoor seating, helped DJ’s make it through the long months of the COVID pandemic.

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