Saturday, March 21, 2026

Easy Meals Float Your Boat

Copyright Janet Groene 2026. To ask about rates to reprint this content email janetgroene@yahoo.com/ Groene books include How to Live Aboard a Boat (Hearst), The Galley Book (McKay) and Cooking on the Go (Sail Books.) 


Do you feed your crew with a galley the size of a telephone booth?  Here's help: 


GALLEY RECIPE OF THE WEEK

Salmon and Black Bean Chili

The hot chili warms a nest of salmon
2 cans salmon, drained

Medium onion, diced

Small green pepper, diced

½ cup diced celery if you have some

1 teaspoon vegetable oil

2 cans black beans, drained and rinsed

1 can diced tomatoes

1/3 cup salsa (hot, medium or mild)

1 cup water

1 teaspoon powdered chicken bouillon

½ teaspoon each ground cumin and dried thyme

Cooked rice (optional)

Sizzle onion, celery and green pepper in hot oil. Add black beans, tomatoes, salsa, water, bouillon and seasonings. Bring to a boil and stir. Reduce heat, cover and simmer 3-5 minutes until vegetables are soft. 

Remove skin and bones from salmon and carefully create six portions o 1/3 to 1/2 cup each. Place each in a soup plate. To proceed, ladle piping hot chili over the salmon and top with a scoop of hot rice if you wish. Or, just provide a basket of bread chunks. Pass the pepper mill and hot sauce. 


HAPPY HOUR

Creamy Beer Dip

8-ounce package grated cheddar cheese

2 bricks, 8 ounces each, cream cheese, softened

1 envelope ranch dressing mix

Beer ad lib


Work cheeses and ranch dressing mix together with enough beer to make a creamy dip for pretzels


    See tips on getting the most nutrition into your standby food locker. (That's  a supply of ordinary canned and packaged supplies you can rely on for a few days before you have to dig for those dreaded doomsday dehydrates.)

My Survival Food Handbook is a guide to provisioning a small boat with the most nutrition per inch, per ounce and per dollar using familiar, affordable supermarket staples.   http://amzn.to/1WdYqbe


 

PANTRY RECIPE OF THE WEEK

When you’re out of time or money or fresh  food, dip into your standby pantry for canned and packaged goods. Survival Food Handbook (above) contains more recipes made entirely with shelf stable foods Gourmet? No, but you may thank me later.

Spam and Tortellini

Spam can be grated on the large holes of a box grater. Chill first if possible. 


14-ounce can low sodium Spam, grated or diced fine

12-ounce package dried cheese and spinach tortellini 

14-ounce can or jar Alfredo sauce

Small jar diced pimentos, drained

Prepare Spam. Dice or grate it and sizzle in butter or oil until it's browned and flavorful. Cook tortellini according to package directions. Drain. Fold in Alfredo sauce, pimentos and Spam. Heat through.  Serves 6. 


ONE BURNER MEAL OF THE WEEK

Chicken & Artichokes


6 boneless, skinless chicken thighs

1/3 cup flour

1/2 teaspoon each salt, pepper, paprika

2 tablespoons each butter and vegetable oil

1 can mushrooms slices, drained

1 can whole artichoke hearts, drained and cut in half

1 cup water +more as needed

1 teaspoon powdered chicken bouillon

1 tablespoon cornstarch

1/4 cup sweet sherry

Optional: hot  rice, noodles or mashed potatoes

Pat chicken dry. Mix flour and seasonings, Dredge chicken to coat. Brown chicken in hot oil and butter. Add mushrooms and artichokes and nestle them into pan drippings.  Turn several times to distribute flavors.  Cover pan and braise over reduced heat until chicken tests done at 170F. Whisk 1 cup water with powdered bouillon,, cornstarch and sherry. Stir into skillet, adding more water if needed. Serve as is or with a starch such as rice.  

Discover the Yacht Yenta Cozy Mystery Series....


People are dying in Okecoochie County Florida,  but nobody can guess how the deaths are related. Meet Farley Halladay, a salt-cured sailboat widow who has an online charterboat booking business.. She, dodges a wayward sister, cares for an old Navy SEAL veteran who was her husband’s mentor and wrangles  a large circle of wacky friends. She cooks, copes and solves crimes in this unusual cozy mystery series.  Go to  https://amzn.to/3bB5XPh   



BONUS Throughout the books, Farley shares shortcut recipes from the days when she was a charterboat cook. 


STOVE-TOP DESSERT OF THE WEEK

Fruit and Dumplings

1 pint fresh blackberries, cut up strawberries, blueberries or raspberries

1 cup water

½ cup sugar

Juice of half a lemon

Dumplings:

1 cup flour

2 teaspoons baking powder

Pinch salt

1 tablespoon sugar

Milk or water

Bring fruit, water, ½ cup sugar and lemon juice to an active simmer for a few minutes to soften fruit and release juices. Mix dumpling dry ingredients with enough milk or water to form a thick dough. Using two teaspoons, drop dough into simmering fruit. Cover pan and continue simmering gently for 15 minutes until dumplings are plump. 

Place dumplings in 4-5 dessert dishes. Stir a shot or two of  two of rum or a fruity  liqueur  into the hot fruit sauce and spoon over dumplings. Serve as is or with cream, ice cream or whipped topping. 




LIFESAVER SAUCE OF THE WEEK

A minor mishap in the galley? Save it with a sauce. This is my shameless shortcut version of  classic Marchand de Vin Sauce, which is sieved and served smooth. I want to retain every crumb of those previous shallots, so I skip the sieve.  


Mince shallots very fine

Shallot Wine Sauce

½ cup minced shallots

1 ½ cups dry red wine

2 teaspoons Better Than Beef bouillon

1 tablespoon dry parsley flakes

1 stick butter

1 ½ teaspoons cornstarch

1 teaspoon lemon juice 

1 tablespoon water

Salt, freshly ground pepper to taste


Bring shallots and wine to a hard boil for 3-5 minutes.  Reduce heat and stir in bouillon, parsley flakes and butter. Stir cornstarch into a mixture of lemon juice and water. Stir into simmering sauce until it thickens. If it's too thick, add a teaspoon of water. Adjust seasonings. 

Spoon sparingly over mashed potatoes, poached eggs, meat, fish, rice, vegetables or anywhere an assertive,  savory sauce is called for.


The latest in the Yacht Yenta cozy mystery e-books brings sailboat widow Farley Halladay closer to the answer of her husband's death. 

Read the six cozies in any order as Farley copes, cooks and solves crimes with the help of her zany cast of characters. You'll laugh at her frailties; cry with her as she grieves. https://amzn.to/3wcf6ao



If you could have only one electric appliance in your galley, what would it be? Many boats now come with a built-in microwave. 

MICROWAVE RECIPE OF THE WEEK

Seafood Stew

Here’s a way to use today’s catch, whatever it may be. 


1 pound raw,  bite-size seafood (shrimp, scallops, clams or any cut up boneless, skinless fish)

1/4 stick butter

½ teaspoon garlic powder

14.5-ounce can diced tomatoes

1 tablespoon ketchup

1/4 cup white wine

1 tablespoon mixed Italian seasoning

Prepare seafood and set aside. Put remaining ingredients in a covered microware dish and cook on High 5 to 6 minutes until very hot. Add seafood, cover and cook another 5 to 7 minutes until seafood is firm. Spoon over rice, noodles, ramen, pasta or broken pilot crackers. Serves 4- 6. 

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Monday, October 27, 2025

Meals Ahoy for Boating & Liveboards

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!




Galley Recipe of the Week

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. 


Discover the Yacht Yenta Cozy Mystery Series....


People are dying in Okecoochie County FL, but nobody can guess how the deaths are related. Meet Farley Halladay, a salt-cured sailboat widow who has an online charterboat booking business, dodges a wayward sister, cares for an old Navy SEAL veteran who was her husband’s mentor and wrangles  a large circle of wacky friends. She cooks, copes and solves crimes in this unusual cozy mystery series.  Check your favorite e-book seller for all formats or go to https://amzn.to/3bB5XPh   

Bonus points: Throughout the books, Farley shares shortcut recipes from the days when she was a charterboat cook. 


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

1/2 cup very hot water

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 
Baked Red Snapper

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. 

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. 




   SCROLL DOWN TO SEE SAMPLES OF PAST POSTS

See Janet Groene's bio at https://janetgroene.blogspot.com















 


Friday, August 22, 2025

Small Boat Meals for Sea & Shore

Copyright Janet Groene 2025. This blog has had more than 97,000 views. To place your ad on  six Groene sites for one low rate, email janetgroene (at) yahoo.com

This blog is for liveaboards, cruising sailors and all who are afloat with a small boat and small galley. 



Darling Harbour, Sydney 

ONE BURNER MEAL OF THE WEEK

Roast Beef Puff 

Make a hot, quick, one-burner meal from roast beef lunch meat, leftover roast beef or cooked, crumbled ground beef. 


About 2 ½ cups  cooked, diced or crumbled beef

2 medium onions, diced

2 tablespoons lard, bacon fat, butter or vegetable oil

2 cups milk

3 eggs

½ cup flour

½ teaspoon baking powder

½ teaspoon each salt, pepper, crumbled dried thyme

1 tablespoon dried parsley flakes

Gravy, tomato sauce,, mushroom sauce or cheese sauce

In a skillet saute onions and beef in hot fat until onions are softened.   In a bowl whisk milk, eggs, flour, baking powder and seasonings.  Mix with meat in skillet. Cover and cook until set and puffy. Cut in wedges and serve with warm gravy or sauce. 



Gourmet? Perhaps not, but cruising sailors know the value in having a Plan B for times when the fridge fails, or stove fuel dwindles, or  the island's only ice machine breaks down, or you’re quarantined or broke in a remote port. For an entire cookbook for shelf-stable foods, see Survival Food Handbook.


    See tips on getting the most nutrition into your emergency food locker. My Survival Food Handbook is a guide to stocking an emergency pantry with the most nutrition per inch, per ounce and per dollar using familiar, affordable supermarket staples.   http://amzn.to/1WdYqbe


 




Pantry Recipe of the Week

This recipe can be made entirely from stowed supplies you can carry on board for weeks, even months. Gourmet, no, but recipes like this can be lifesavers when you’re out of fresh food.  

Rice & Artichoke Salad


1 package rice and wild rice mix, cooked and cooled

2 small or one large jar marinated artichokes, cut up

2 tablespoon diced, dried onions

½ cup drained, chopped stuffed olives

2 tablespoons diced sun-dried tomatoes 

Vinaigrette, bottled or homemade


As rice cools, fluff with a fork. Drain artichokes and reserve marinade. Soak onions in marinade to soften. Toss everything together and add vinaigrette to taste. (The marinade alone may be enough.) 


See more of Janet Groene’s galley-ready recipes at https://campandrvcook.blogspot.com/ Her healthy, homemade snack recipes are found at  https://CreateAGorp.blogspot.com/



The latest in the Yacht Yenta cozy mystery e-books brings sailboat widow Farley Halladay closer to the answer of her husband's death. 

Read the six cozies in any order as Farley copes, cooks and solves crimes with the help of her wacky cast of characters. You'll laugh at her frailties; cry with her as she grieves. Find it on Google Play and other ebook formats and also on  Kindle,   https://amzn.to/3wcf6ao



Vegetarian Galley Recipe of the Week

Roaring 40's Red Risotto

Make this showy dish as a vegetarian  main course for four or a side dish for up to eight. Short of burners?  Heat the broth first and put in a thermos bottle. 

1  cup dried cranberries

2/3 cup sweet red wine

3 tablespoons olive oil

2  ribs celery chopped

Medium red or yellow onion, diced

1 can beets, drained and chopped

1 ½  cups arborio or short grain rice

4 cups hot vegetable broth

1/2 teaspoon dried, crumbled thyme leaves

1  teaspoon dried dillweed

Grated cheese for serving


Put the dried cranberries and wine in a zip-top bag and let soak. Heat oil in a large skillet or wok and stir-fry celery, onion, beets and finally the raw rice.

Keep stirring while adding warm broth at about 1/3 cup each time. Do not add more broth until the last batch has been absorbed by the rice. 

When all broth is absorbed and rice tender, fold in cranberries, wine, thyme and dill weed.  Heat, stirring until excess moisture is gone. Serve with shaved or grated Parmesan. 



   Save your expensive doomsday rations for real emergencies and use this book for short-term food emergencies. Then stock a stand-by pantry with supermarket staples that can be combined to make a few balanced meals.  

This book is for sailors and campers who have limited storage space. 

For tips on getting the most nutrition into your emergency food locker my Survival Food Handbook is a guide to stocking an emergency pantry with the most nutrition per inch, per ounce and per dollar using familiar, affordable supermarket staples.   http://amzn.to/1WdYqbe

 


BONUS RECIPE 

Breakfast Pie

Eat slabs of this protein-packed pie cold or warm, alone or as part of a bountiful breakfast buffet. This recipe makes two big pies, so crank out some mimosas and invite the dockside neighbors in. 

1 pound bulk sausage

Medium onion, diced


      Preheat the oven at 375 F. and lightly grease two deep,  10-inch pie plates. Fry out the sausage and onion and spoon off any excess fat,


4 eggs

½ cup milk 

2 cups biscuit  mix   

24-ounce tub cottage cheese

8-ounce package shredded Cheddar

8-ounce brick cream cheese, softened

2 tablespoon dried parsley flakes

2 to 3  tablespoons sesame seeds


Whisk eggs and milk. Stir in cheeses and parsley flakes. Fold in crumbled sausage, Divide mixture between the pie plates and sprinkle tops with sesame seeds. Bake 30-35 minutes or until a tester in the center comes out clean. Cut in wedges. 


No oven? Make half the recipe  in a heavy 10-inch skillet with a tight lid. Put batter in a cold, greased skillet. Lid tightly and bake on a low-medium burner until it tests done. Top will not brown, so you might save some of the shredded Cheddar to melt on top.



Discover the Yacht Yenta Cozy Mystery Series....

People are dying in Okecoochie County FL, but nobody can guess how the deaths are related. Meet Farley Halladay, a salt-cured sailboat widow who has an online charterboat booking business, dodges a wayward sister, cares for an old Navy SEAL veteran who was her husband’s mentor and wrangles  a large circle of wacky friends. She cooks, copes and solves crimes in this unusual cozy mystery series.  Check your favorite e-book seller for all formats or go to Kindle,   https://amzn.to/3bB5XPh   

Bonus points: Throughout the books, Farley shares shortcut recipes from the days when she was a charterboat cook. 

Tips for the Galley Chef

* Make bread pudding as a savory side dish. Use whole wheat bread, bits of grated cheese and whispers of onion, herbs and garlic. 

* To make banana bread with Jiffy cornbread mix, combine 1 cup each milk and mashed bananas with 2 boxes Jiffy mix. Chopped nuts optional. Bake at 350 F. in two 8 X 4 X 2 loaf pans. 

* When an old recipe calls for a “gill” of some liquid, that’s ½ cup. Ditto if it calls for a wine glass of liquid. 

* Pat chicken pieces dry and “butter” them lightly with creamy peanut butter. Press into seasoned bread crumbs to coat. Brown in a hot pan in a mixture of half butter, half vegetable oil. Cover pan and braise until chicken is done. 




LIFESAVER SAUCE OF THE WEEK

When an imperfect dish needs a little  slipcover to give it eye appeal,  save the day with a sweet or savory sauce, gravy or this glossy glaze. Variation: use lemon-lime soda and no vanilla. 

Sugar Coat

1 cup sugar

1/4 cup cornstarch

1 cup plus 1 tablespoon club soda

½ teaspoon vanilla extract


Whisk everything together in a cold pan. Bring to a boil and stir until it clears and thickens. Drizzle sparingly over pound cake, muffins, hot rolls, fresh berries, buttered sweet potatoes, baked apples or hot strawberry waffles.  


BONUS RECIPE

Hacienda Hash



The soup may seem thin but the bread turns it into a hearty hash.   


1 ½ pounds boneless, skinless chicken

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

1.25 ounce packet taco seasoning OR

Heaping tablespoon homemade taco seasoning

1 quart tomato or V-8 juice

16-ounce jar chunky salsa (hot, medium or mild)

1 can whole kernel corn, drained

1 can black beans, rinsed and drained

6 to 8 slabs peasant bread, buttered

Garnish: sour cream, minced cilantro and/or grated Cheddar

Cut chicken in small bites and brown in hot oil, gradually adding seasoning. Add juice, salsa and corn.  Cover and simmer until chicken is done. Stir in black beans and heat through. Adjust seasonings. 

Place a slab of buttered bread in each soup plate, butter side down. Ladle with chicken mixture. Garnish with generous amounts of sour cream, cilantro and Cheddar. 


Your Own Taco Seasoning

I do not put salt in my homemade seasoning mixes. I prefer to add salt to taste in the finished dish. 


3/4 cup sweet paprika

1/4 cup smoked paprika 

1 tablespoon each cornstarch, ground cumin

2 tablespoons each chili powder, dried oregano, dried parsley flakes

1 teaspoon each sugar, onion powder, garlic powder, ground black pepper

Mix well and keep tightly lidded. 


APRIL SHOWERS BRING 

MYSTERY MURDERS


     Curl up in your bunk tonight with book 4 in the Yacht Yenta “cozy” mystery series, April Avenger  by widow Farley Halladay. Once a sailor, Farley now operates an online charterboat booking business that lets her sail virtually all over the world. She shares her shortcut galley recipes throughout the books. As a grieving widow she is also a cook, caregiver and kickass crime solver. For Kindle, Nook, Google Play and most other ebook formats.  Get it instantly from Amazon,   https://amzn.to/3EKgaoP   

 



































 

Sunday, May 18, 2025

Budget Boaters Eat on Board

Copyright Janet Groene 2025.  This blog has had more than 95,000 views. To ask about rights to reprint this content, or to  place an ad on all six Groene sites for one low rate, email janetgroene@yahoo.com



Cooking on board is the challenge. Eating on board is the reward. Liveaboards and budget boaters save money and eat better with "home" cooked recipes like these. Let's eat! 

Cold 'n Creamy Make-Ahead Wraps

Make these easy wraps ahead by the shipload and wrap individually to pass out to the cockpit underway. Chill. 

 For each 8 burrito-size wraps you will need:  

2 cucumbers, peeled and seeded

2 cans whole green beans, well drained

Half of an 8-ounce brick of cream cheese

1 cup lite mayonnaise

½ teaspoon dillweed

Optional: 2 drops hot sauce

16 thin slices good quality deli lunch meat 

Shredded lettuce or cabbage ad lib

8 burrito-size flour tortillas


This step is important. Cut cucumbers into 6-inch long, thin strips. Sprinkle with salt and let stand 30 minutes. Pat dry with paper towels. Let cream cheese soften at “room” temperature. 

Stir dillweed (and hot sauce if using)  into mayo and cream cheese. Use  to “butter” the tortillas. 

Arrange two slices meat plus portions of vegetables on tortillas and roll up, tucking in ends burrito style.  Wrap in plastic wrap and keep cold. 


(right) Be generous with the creamy spread.




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 

 


ONE POT MEAL OF THE WEEK

One burner. One pan to wash. One great dinner.


Turkey Marengo

1 loaf hearty artisan bread, torn in bite size

20-ounce package ground turkey

1 tablespoon minced garlic

½ stick butter

1/3 cup flour

1 tablespoon mixed Italian seasoning

1 jigger brandy

8-ounce package sliced mushrooms OR

1 can sliced mushrooms, drained

28-ounce can diced tomatoes. undrained

2/3 cup dry white wine

Salt, pepper to taste

Set out six soup plates and place bread chunks in each. 


Brown and break up turkey in hot butter, gradually adding garlic. Sprinkle with flour, Italian seasoning and brandy and toss to coat. Continue stir frying over high heat while adding mushrooms. 

When everything is nicely browned and mixed, add wine and tomatoes. Cook several more minutes for flavors to blend and excess moisture to boil away. Spoon over bread chunks. Serves 6.





Marina Potluck Recipe of the Week

Peachy Breakfast Bread

Get the gang together for morning coffee and wow ‘em with this fruity bread. It’s a good coffee cake in the morning and it also makes a showy dessert. 


Large can sliced peaches

½ cup vegetable oil

1 cup sugar

2 eggs

1 teaspoon vanilla

1 teaspoon cinnamon

2 cups flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

½ teaspoon baking soda

1 cup chopped nuts (optional in batter or in streusel) 

Optional Streusel Topping:

1/2 stick butter

1/3 cup each brown sugar and flour

    Cut butter into flour and sugar and sprinkle over batter. Bake. 

Set the oven for 325 degrees. Drain peaches and save juice to make fruit punch.  Chop peaches coarsely.  Put dry ingredients in a clean bag and “work” bag to mix. Whisk oil, sugar, eggs and vanilla until it’s well blended, then gradually add dry ingredients. Do not overe-beat.  

Fold in nuts and peaches. Spread in a greased 9 X 13-inch pan and bake 45 minutes or until it’s golden brown and springy to the touch. Using a serrated knife, cut in squares. Serve warm. 


Discover the Yacht Yenta Cozy Mystery Series....


People are dying in Okecoochie County Florida,  but nobody can guess how the deaths are related. Meet Farley Halladay, a salt-cured sailboat widow who has an online charterboat booking business, dodges a wayward sister, cares for an old Navy SEAL veteran who was her husband’s mentor and wrangles  a large circle of wacky friends. She cooks, copes and solves crimes in this unusual cozy mystery series.  Check your favorite e-book seller for all formats or go to Kindle,   https://amzn.to/3bB5XPh   


Throughout the books, Farley shares shortcut recipes from the days when she was a charterboat cook. 

BONUS PANTRY RECIPE

Out of fresh food? Short on time? Heavy weather?  Quarantined?  This complete,  quick, hot, one-pot meal comes from your back-up food shelf. It  heats in minutes and is easy to eat.

Creamy Cajun Chicken 

Low-sodium soups are best for this recipe. 


1 or 2 cans chunk chicken

1 can cream of chicken soup

1 can chicken gumbo soup OR

1 can chicken rice soup + small can chopped green chilies

Small can (2/3 cup) evaporated milk

Crisp Chinese noodles

Put chicken in a pan and break it up. Stir in soups, drained chilies and milk over moderate heat. Spoon over crisp Chinese noodles. 


VEGETARIAN RECIPE OF THE WEEK

Nutty Sandwich Filling

When you need a high protein sandwich filling without  meat, try this one.



2 hard-cooked eggs, chopped

1 cup grated cheese

½ to 1 cup toasted, chopped pecans or walnuts

1 rib celery, chopped fine

2 tablespoons chopped salad olives, well drained

Small sweet onion, chopped fine

About 2 tablespoons binder such as mayonnaise, sandwich spread, sour cream or ranch dressing

Optional: For an added kick, add a tablespoon of prepared horseradish or wasabi

Mix well, adding just enough binder to hold it together. Make sandwiches or wraps.  Makes about two cups. 

See more of Janet Groene’s galley-tested recipes at CampAndRVCook.blogspot.com

Questions? Comments? Recipes or tips to share? Email janetgroene@yahoo.com