Blog copyright Janet Groene 2025.
Where does your flag fly today? Headed down the ditch for the winter? Looping the Loop? Chartering in Croatia? Gunkholing in the islands off Fort Myers, Florida? Hanging on the hook in Nassau Harbour? Let's eat!
Salmon Scrunch
Serve this classy standby as a whole meal salad or plop it on crackers as an appetizer. Canned salmon remains one of the best buys in the market and is one of the most durable canned emergency foods. Use-by dates may be several years ahead.
2 cans, 15 ounces each, red or pink salmon
2 teaspoons Dijon style mustard
8-ounce tub lemon flavor yogurt
8-ounce tub mayonnaise
1 tablespoon dried chives
1 teaspoon dried dillweed
2 cups diced celery
1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts
1 cup fine diced sweet onion
Drain salmon. Discard dark skin. Mash or discard bones. In a bowl whisk mustard, dillweed, yogurt, mayonnaise and chives. Fold in salmon, celery walnuts and onion. Chill. Serve on beds of lettuce, in sandwich buns or as a snack on crackers.
Flip side: Fold in 8 ounces grated cheese such as Cheddar or American. Make sandwiches. Wrap in foil and heat in the oven or on the grill until cheese melts.
Tips for the Cruising Cook
* Keep a few cans of diced water chestnuts on hand. They add texture contrast to a salad or stir-cry when you are out of celery.
* When a recipe calls for an egg wash, use milk instead of water for faster browning.
* Out of fresh tomatoes? Drain a small jar of diced pimento and add to an omelet, potato salad or cream soup.
* Heat 1/4 cup strong coffee with ½ cup sugar. Stir in 1/4 cup Grand Marnier. Grill fresh or canned peach halves, cut side down. Fill cavities with Grand Marnier sauce. Serve as is or spritz with whipped cream.
SURVIVAL FOOD HANDBOOK is a guide to survival when you're Out There and out of fresh provisions. It's written just for sailors and campers who have limited storage space.
Whether it's fridge failure, or you're broke, or quarantined or weathered in, stuff happens. See provisioning information, lists, tips and recipes made solely with stowed foods from supermarkets (not those expensive doomsday rations) . Create a three-day standby pantry for your home, boat, cabin or camper with familiar, affordable staples.
Kindle or paperback, it's a great gift idea for yourself or a friend. https://amzn.to/3mIfryC
SKILLET MEAL OF THE WEEK
Spicy Chicken & Rice
This entire meal is assembled in the skillet, so there is no separate rice pan to wash.
2 cups boiling water
1 teaspoon ground ginger
1 tablespoon powdered chicken bouillon
I pound boneless, skinless chicken cut in bite size
1 tablespoon vegetable oil
1 cup raw long-grain rice
2 cups broccoli florets
Suggested garnish: minced scallions or parsley, avocado and tomato wedges, salt cashews or whole cranberry sauce.
Stir ginger and bouillon into boiling water. If you are short of burners, do this ahead of time and keep it in a thermos.
Brown chicken in hot oil. Keep stir frying while adding rice to coat with brown bits. Spread evenly in skillet with broccoli and pour boiling liquid over. Cover skillet, lower heat and cook 25 minutes without peeking.
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VEGETARIAN DISH Of THE WEEK
Sprouts and Grits
2 cups Brussels sprouts
1 cup salted, roasted pecan halves
1/4 stick butter
1 tablespoon balsamic vinegar
1 1/3 cups boiling water
4 packets instant grits
1 cup grated cheese
Trim and halve sprouts and cook cut side down in melted butter. Cover and cook over reduce heat until crisp-tender. Stir in balsamic vinegar.
In four rimmed plates, stir 1/3 cup very hot water into instant grits. Spread grits to make a bed for the sprouts. Top grits with a tuft of grated cheese.
Top each portion with sprouts and pecans. Serves 4.
Cook’s note: For heartier appetites, use two packets grits and double the boiling water, Instant, quick and regular gits are also available in bulk but instant grits packets are a quick and convenient choice to prepare underway.
Pantry Recipe of the Week
Each week we present a recipe that requires no fresh foods. Packaged dry bread crumbs keep well on the shelf. For many more recipes made entirely with stowed foods see Survival Food Handbook above.
Caribbean Creole Omelet
1 tomato flavor bouillon cube
2 tablespoons dried onion bits
1 teaspoon garlic granules
½ cup dry bread crumbs
Small can chunk ham, broken up
4 to 6 eggs or equivalent in reconstituted eggs
Vegetable oil for the pan
Ketchup
In a bowl dissolve the bouillon in hot water and stir in onion, garlic and bread crumbs. Set aside to soak. Open the ham and twist a fork in it to break it up. Stir eggs and ham into bread crumb mixture with a fork until eggs are well broken up. Fry in a nonstick skillet until set.Pas the ketchup bottle. Serves 4.
Make your own Creole seasoning. Combine one part each paprika, garlic powder, oregano and ground black pepper. Stir in cayenne pepper according to your yen for heat but don't over-do. You can always add more to the finished dish. Keep in a cool, dry place. More tips for the galley chef? Email janetgroene@gmail.com and I'll send you a dozen or more tips randomly chosen from my growing list.
Homemade trail mix and pocket snacks are healthier, save money and can be packaged in re-usable bags to save money, save the environment, control portions. See recipes at Create A Gorp.
Caribbean Square Meal Stew
When you have leftover fish or a skimpy catch, turn it into a square meal this way,
1 pound fine-diced pork jowls, salt pork or fatback
2 large onions, diced
2 ribs celery, sliced
1 bay leaf
1 teaspoon each hot sauce, dried thyme
14.5-ounce can diced tomatoes
2 cups water
3 tablespoons cornmeal
2 cups bite-size bits of boneless, skinless fish
Hot grits, polenta or rice
Fry out the diced pork until it’s nicely browned, gradually stirring in onion and celery until limp. Spoon off any excess fat. Add seasonings, water and tomatoes. Cover and cook over low heat while flavors blend. Remove bay leaf.
Keep stirring as you slowly sprinkle in the cornmeal until the mixture thickens. Continue stirring over low heat while adding fish. Heat through until fish is firm.
Sprinkle with pork bits. Serve as is, or over hot grits, polenta or rice. Makes 4-6 portions. .
Flips side: No salt pork in the village market? Go to your pantry and grab a can of Spam. Cut in small dice and brown in a little hot oil, bacon grease or lard.
CATCH O’ THE DAY RECIPE
| Fish poaches in Rotel |
4 redskin potatoes, scrubbed and boiled until tender
1 can mild Rotel tomatoes with pepper and onions
4 portions fresh snapper or other fish
½ cup each sour cream and mayonnaise
1 tablespoon Dijon style mustard
1 teaspoon dried tarragon
1 cup (or more to taste) packaged French fried onions
1. Grease a baking pan and spread the Rotel in the bottom. Set the oven to 30 degrees.
2. Arrange snapper in the Rotel and add potatoes around the fish.
3. Whisk sour cream, mayonnaise and tarragon and spread on fish. Bake 25-35 minutes until sauce is bubbly fish firm and potatoes heated through.
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| Finias with a cream sauce |
4. Put a piece of fish and some potatoes on each rimmed plate or shallow bowl. Divide sauce Sprinkle with onions. Serves 4.
Galley tips, hints, shortcuts: I'll send you a random list from my growing archives. Email janetgroene@gmail.com and put Cook Tips in the topic line.
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