Saturday, September 28, 2019

Boat Food

Diane

If Rob and I are Yondering...

Even when I have my cooking mojo working for me, I appreciate the ease of pulling together an appealing plate without needing to turn on the stove or fire up the barbecue. Especially if Rob and I are Yondering for a ten hour day, or have just dropped anchor after a long sail, I'm glad to have some cold cured meats, cheese, crackers, nuts and pickles for a refreshing quick bite.

So for my course, I chose a charcuterie board. As this was the Epitourists, I provisioned at St. Lawrence Market, with stops at Scheffler's Deli, Future Bakery, and Kozlik's mustards, to pull together a charcuterie platter:  saucisson (truffle and blueberry); salami (hot and not); provolone wrapped in sundried tomato; prosciutto wrapped feta; marcona almonds; pickled garlic, onions and mixed vegetable; hot gherkins; roasted artichoke; pretzels; and a selection of mustards (dijon, honey mustard, balsamic fig and date, triple crunch).

 

To accompany, a quick cocktail with lots of ice: Whisky Soda.

Kaarina

Medina, our 30-foot Ticon Sailboat

I learned early on that we like to eat on the boat the same kind of food we eat at home. But that hasn’t cured me. Spring after spring I carry a carefully curated supply of cans and packages of dried foods onto the boat. And every fall I carry the same cans and packages off the boat. Most of the stuff simply doesn’t get eaten.

We like our food fresh.

On Medina, our 30-foot Ticon sailboat, dinner has become a ritual, especially when we’re at anchor. I plan, shop and prep. Mike barbecues. The menu is simple: Meat and a salad, mini potatoes or fresh corn in season. Lots of tomato salads. Grilled peppers. Guacamole.

Wilted Spinach and Carmelized Onions with Feta Dressing was this summer’s new favourite. It’s quick - 10 minutes - to make. Simple, fresh and quick! No fancy ingredients required. Except for the sherry vinegar, everything is available in most supermarkets. Onions, spinach, olive oil, feta cheese. (You can substitute balsamic for the sherry vinegar, which has become hard to find. I picked it up at St. Lawrence Market, lower level.)

 

Wilted Spinach and Carmelized Onions with Feta stands up on its own as a salad course, which is how Epitourists had it on Ruby Tuesday. I also like to serve it together with a steak, pork or lamb chops and I’ve carted it off to potlucks on land and on the water.

Caroline

AB is a good ol' boat!

Seven consecutive weeks on the water this season! The more you do, the more things happen. And happen they did. A small shroud popped while I was under sail. It was more like a very loud bang. Needless to say, it scared the bajesus out of me. That put an end to the race around Waupoos Island. We managed to duck out without incident, lower the sails and limp back to the anchorage. Dang. Good thing she's keel stepped. Dave, the owner of Marine Outfitters had her fixed up in no time. He even gave me the keys to his car so I could re-provision. And then, she sprung a leak in her exhaust pipe. Carbon monoxide is a bad thing in a confined space like a boat. Had to get that fixed too. What can I say. AB is a good ol' boat. I will admit that madness overtook me and I put her up for sale and bought me a trawler. Yup. A trawler.

I do digress. This is suppose to be about Boat Food. Yes. I looove to cook onboard. The space is small and like a maestro conducting an orchestra, I can put together a fine meal while standing in one spot. I have, over the years, compiled a yummy repertoire of boat foods. Some from scratch while others are just plain cheatin'. And plain cheatin' is what I chose for our September Epitourist lunch onboard ma new trawler Ruby Tuesday (semi cheating... I did bake dessert.) This boat food is a no-brainer. It comes ready made. In a box. Requires no refrigeration. Keeps forever. Will overwinter nicely inside your galley pantry. Calls for a glass of ruby wine or two, fresh bread and a simple salad and like Bob's your uncle, dinner is served. What is it you ask? It is cheese fondue in a box! Dipping ingredients consisted of fresh sourdough bread, grape tomatoes, roasted baby potatoes and cauliflower florets, Granny Smith apple slivers. For libation, I experimented with cider but must say that the ruby won hands down!


Our Epi Lunches go on for a forever long time! After five hours of sipping and noshing, dessert is the last thing on your mind. BUT, I was very excited about this finale. I will admit that Ruby Tuesday is lacking a decent oven. Decent ovens on boats are hard to come by. On AB, I had an oven but could only cook/bake ingredients that stood no taller than 4 inches. Well, Ruby has, wait for it, a toaster oven! HA! Yes. I kid you not. Have oven will bake (but only when connected to shore power 😶). So, in my little toaster oven, I baked an Orange and Black Olive Chocolate Cake. Rich, moist and a flavour combination that will blow your mind! Try it. You will like it.