Friday, June 26, 2026

Easy Galley Meals for Small Boats

 Copyright Janet Groene 2026. To ask about reprinting Groene content, email janetgroene@yahoo.com



For 10 years the Groenes were happily houseless. Always on the go as a travelwriter and photographer team, they wintered under sail in a 29-foot sloop and traveled summers in a 21-foot diesel camper. Janet specializes in easy, nutritious, everyday recipes that save space, mess, resources and money.

Groene  OP books, found on Amazon include How to Live Aboard a Boat, Cooking on the Go and Dressing Ship


 Galley Recipe of the Week

Carolina Chicken Bog

This flavorful, easy, affordable one-dish recipe is a Low Country icon, celebrated each October in South Carolina with the Loris Bog-Off Festival.

A traditional bog begins with a whole chicken that is cooked, cooled, skinned and then cut up. Spices vary, depending on the chef. The festival began in 1980 as a contest for the best bog and is now a community feast where all chefs have their own secret seasonings.  

  Here’s my simplified version for the small galley.   

1 pound boneless, skinless chicken thighs

1 ½ pounds boneless, skinless chicken breasts

6 cups water

Large onion, diced

1 ½ cups long-grain rice

8 ounces smoked sausage cut in bits

2 tablespoons Italian-blend herbs

2 teaspoons powdered chicken bouillon

Salt, pepper to taste

Hot sauce



Cut chicken in bite size. Put water, salt and onion in a big pot, bring to a boil and cook chicken 10 minutes. Add remaining ingredients to the pot, keeping it at low boil. 

Reduce heat, cover and cook 20-30  minutes, stirring often,  until rice is plump. Taste before adding salt. (Sausage and bouillon are salty). 

Bog is a soupy, stewy sort of thing, easy to spoon into shallow soup plates and eat with a spoon even if you're wedged into a seat in heavy weather. Pass the hot sauce, preferably a southern favorite such as Texas Pete or Tabasco. Serves 6 to 8. 


ONE BURNER SKILLET MEAL

Sausage and Shreds

Cabbage, or some variation of it, is found in most  street markets around the world. It’s usually one of the lowest priced vegetables in the stall, a staple in many local diets. Shredded cabbage is sold as Coleslaw Mix in modern produce centers.  


2 pounds of your favorite bulk sausage

2 tablespoons vegetable oil

14- ounce bag shredded cabbage

 Small red cabbage, cut in coarse shreds

Medium red onion, diced

Salt, pepper

2 tablespoons grainy mustard

3 tablespoons thawed apple juice concentrate

In a large skillet or wok heat oil and stir-fry the sausage, breaking it up into crumbles,  until it’s no longer pink. Spoon off any excess fat (but leave some for flavor). Continue stir-frying, adding cabbages and onion until crisp-tender. Add salt and pepper to taste. Whisk juice concentrate and mustard together and stir into the sausage mixture.

Refrigerate now to nuke later or serve at once.  Freezing is not recommended. Serves 10 to 12.


Even a day sail can turn into a hungry ordeal when things go wrong. Think of spare food as insurance. This book is not about those awful doomsday rations in the bilge (you may need them later) It's a planning guide for a stand-by cache of shelf-stable foods you use and rotate. 


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 

  

Pantry Recipe of the Week

Wild Rice Burgers

2 cups cooked wild rice  OR

1 box wild rice/white rice mix, cooked according to package directions

½ cup dry bread crumbs

1/3 cup pecan meal

½ teaspoon garlic salt

1 tablespoon soy sauce

2 eggs or equivalent

Small can mushroom stems and pieces, well drained

Small jar (2 ounces) chopped pimentos, well drained

Oil for frying

While a layer of oil heats in a skillet to shimmering hot, mix everything else and form into patties. Fry on both sides until crispy brown and serve hot.  

Cook’s note: these patties are also good for breakfast. Serve with  applesauce or yogurt.


MAKE AHEAD SALAD

Sweet Broccoli Salad

4 to 6 cups broccoli florets, cut in bite size

1 bunch scallions, sliced

2 cups halved seedless grapes

1 cup lemon flavor yogurt

1/3 cup sugar

1 tablespoon white wine vinegar

4-ounce package real bacon bits

Bottled ranch dressing (optional)

Toss broccoli, grapes and scallions lightly in a bowl. Whisk yogurt, sugar and vinegar, then toss with the broccoli mixture.  If more dressing is needed add ranch dressing ad lib. Sprinkle with bacon bits. Serve now or chill. Serves 4 to 6. 

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 e-book series. Go to Kindle,   https://amzn.to/3bB5XPh   

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


HOT OR COLD SANDWICHES

Mexican Meltdowns


6 bakery buns

1 stick butter

1 teaspoon chili powder


1 pound sliced roast chicken deli lunch meat

1 ½ cups mayonnaise

8-ounce package shredded Mexican cheese blend 

Small can diced green chilies, well drained

Slice buns. Soften butter and mash with chili powder. Spread a light film on cut sides of buns. Fold chilies and shredded cheese into mayonnaise. 

Make sandwiches with the buns and layers of lunch meat and smears of the mayo mixture. Wrap individually in foil (to heat in the oven or on the grill) or in wax paper (to nuke). 

Refrigerate. Eat cold or heat gently until the cheese melts. Serves 6. 


GIVE IT THE SLIP


Rubberized waffle weave non-skid material is useful all over the boat. It’s sold in small rolls for shelf lining but a better deal is the large sizes sold  for use under rugs, such as 4 X 6 feet. Cut it to fit lockers, tool and tackle boxes, book shelves, the chart table. It’s not just non-skid, it’s a noise absorber.
Caregiver suppliers sell nonskid mats for sickroom use

 To make table place mats in any size to fit an odd-size galley table or drink holder, simply cut with scissors. Most edges need no binding, but  colorful tape adds a nice touch. Warning: In time the rubbery coating dies and welds itself onto surfaces. Cleanup gets messy. Replace shelf linings every year or so.


SEAFOOD MAKES THE MEAL

Stretch-a-Catch Alfredo

Make a medley of different seafoods-–the more variety the better-- to supplement leftovers or today’s meager catch.  Add  canned tuna, frozen cooked shrimp, grilled salmon, imitation crabmeat, poached scallops and such to make 1 to 2 pounds cooked seafood.





3 to 4 cups bite size bits of cooked seafood

1 pound fettucine

2 tablespoons olive oil

1 tablespoon capers, drained

2 jars, 14 ounces each, Alfredo sauce

Optional: minced parsley 


Cook and drain fettucine, saving some of the pasta water. Toss hot fettucine with olive oil and capers. Fold in seafood and sauce, adding some of the pasta water if needed. Cover and heat gently over low flame until piping hot. Serves  8. 


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


HAPPY HOUR

Prickly Beer And Pretzels


2 bricks cream cheese, 8 ounces each

About ½ cup dark beer such as stout

 .07-ounce packet zesty Italian dressing mix

8-ounce package shredded sharp Cheddar


Warm up cream cheese to “room” temperature and mash in beer,  dressing mix and cheese. Serve with pretzels



A SAUCE SAVES THE DAY

Orange Coconut Rum Sauce


10-ounce jar orange marmalade

1/3 cup coconut rum

1 teaspoon red pepper flakes, cut fine

Stir over medium heat until well blended. Spoon warm over grilled pork chops, ham steaks, baked chicken or skewered shrimp. 


                     ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Janet Groene’s

Survival Soup Mix 

copyright Janet Groene.

Make enough individual packets of this nourishing mix to last all summer. Gourmet it isn't but, unlike some commercially packaged 15-bean soups, this one requires no soaking.  It cooks in only 30 to 45 minutes and even less in a pressure cooker.  It’s also ideal for long, slow cooking in a solar cooker or beach fire.  

After you’ve made your first master mix you’ll want to vary the recipe your own way with different rices or seasonings.  Just don’t add dried beans that require hours of soaking.

Why two bags per batch?  Dried peas and lentils need sorting and rinsing  to remove dirt and debris. They are kept separate from the seasonings package, which is ready to use. 


   

Shopping list:

1 bag dried yellow split  peas

1 bag dried green split peas

1 bag brown lentils

1 bag red or yellow lentils 

1 bag brown rice

1 bag pearl barley

2 small bags tiny pasta such as alphabet, orzo or mini-shells

Large bottle of box of  chicken bouillon cubes

Ditto beef bouillon cubes

Ditto Knorr tomato bouillon cubes 

Large bottle dried parsley

Large bottle dried onion bits


To package soup mixes for four servings each: 

Mix all  peas and lentils. Put ½ cup in each snack size bag and zip closed.  

In a separate bag or jar place: 

3 tablespoons each brown rice, pearl barley and tiny pasta 

1 each beef, chicken and tomato bouillon cubes

1 tablespoon each dried onion bits and dried parsley

½ teaspoon garlic granules or powder (not garlic salt) 

½ teaspoon celery seed

Combine the two containers in another bag or jar and add instructions.

Instructions for Making Survival Soup:

1. Inspect and rinse peas and lentils. Drain.  To reduce cook time, soaking optional for 30 minutes or so. 

2. Bring 4 cups water to a boil and stir in pea- lentil mix. Bring back to a low boil. Unwrap bouillon cubes and stir with the  other ingredients into the soup.  

3. Cover, lower heat and simmer 30 to 45 minutes or until tender. If soup is too thick, add water, broth or tomato juice. Stir well, adjust seasonings and ladle into soup bowls. 

Cook’s note: To make a vegan/vegetarian mix, substitute vegetable bouillon cubes for the beef and chicken cubes. 

Optional garnish for the finished soup:

Diced scallion, white and light green only

Small sweet onion, diced

Shredded cheese

Shaved hard cheese

Bits of jerky

Diced fresh tomato

Croutons

     +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

   See more for the small kitchen, boat galley or outdoor campsite at https://campandrvcook.blogspot.com. See Janet's timely road trip news at https://janetgroene.blogspot.com and general RV tips plus late-breaking campground intel at https://solowomanrv.blogspot.com/




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. 

          SCROLL DOWN FOR MORE 




































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. 




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