Galley slave?

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Sailor Nicki

tomato and pesto bread recipe please

Any chance we can get the recipe for that sun dried tomato and pesto bread. Both my husband and I both got hungry upon reading your post.
 
Aug 7, 2007
2
- - Cape May, NJ
Cruising cuisine

While cruising in the BVI's on a charter this past spring, I was in charge of cooking for 8 aboard a 50' Beneteau. It was easy to plan and prepare meals. We did plan on dining out a few nights onshore. BUT, no one wanted to leave the boat to eat when they were treated to fresh fruit smoothies, creme brule' french toast with fruit compote, banana pancakes, saussage, bacon fresh baked muffins, fajitas, quesadillas, homemade pizza, pocket sandwiches, grilled fish, steaks and marinated chicken. Every meal had salads, 2 side dishes and dessert ranging from fresh fruit to fresh baked aboard pies and cakes. I just love the challenge of cooking in small spaces. No one went hungry and the chef did not have to clean up after dinner!
 
Jun 3, 2004
1
Catalina 320 Sue Creek off Middle River, MD
Meals on Board

My Bro-In-Law and I own one share of a 4-share Partnership in a Catalina 320. Generally we sail Monday-Thursday once per month. We snack on board and sail from restaurant to restaurant for dinner during those four days. Our boat is a 2001 - none of us have never filled the propane tank for the stove. For all practical purposes that tank is as full today as it was in 2001 when the boat was new. I don't know what the other Partners do - but they certainly don't cook on board. If there is no wind we day sail, return to our slip and go out for dinner. We have any number of restaurants that we like, in and near Essex, MD. Works for us. bob seiden
 
Jun 16, 2005
476
- - long beach, CA
cooked to a T

I'm skipper and cook, with help from the Provisioning Officer. I/we try to keep it Quick Easy and Delicious (QED). Meals are almost events onboard, so breakfasts run the gamut from a full-on eggs/bacon/blueberry hotcakes/homefries to a simple PBJ with a banana. Coffee, of course, has its own requirements and is the same as we do at home; a 1/1 blend of vanilla coffee with Folgers Dark Roast. Dinner can be simple and quick; a cold roasted Costco chicken with doctored up (onions, red peppers and celery) flavored box rice, to pasta Alredo (from Trader Joe)with grilled in butter/garlic large tiger shrimp (also Trader Joe). Grilled stuffed pork chops or pan-fried stuffed salmon with rice or pasta and a veggie usually fills the bill and the belly.
 
B

Beverly

Best ever Rum Cake

Let me know how this comes out. I tried it before but do not remember the outcome. Beverly's Best Ever Rum Cake Ingredients: 1 or 2 quarts Rum Brown sugar 1 tsp baking soda 1 tsp sugar Baking powder 1 cup dried fruit 1 cup butter Nuts Lemon juice 2 large eggs Before starting, check the quality of the rum by sampling (good, isn't it?). Now, go ahead. Select a large mixing bowl, measuring cup, etc. Check the rum again. It must be just right to insure the quality of the cake. To be sure it is of the highest quality, pour one level cup into a glass and drink it as fast as you can. With an electric mixer, beat one cup of butter in a large, fluffy bowl. Add one seaspoon of thugar and beat again. Meanwhile, make sure the rum is of the finest quality. Try another cup. Open a second quart if necessary to complete. Add two large eggs, two cups fried druit and beat until high. If druit gets tuck in beaters, just pry loose with a drewscriver. Check rum again. Sift one-half pint lemon juice, flod in chipped butter and strained nuts. Add one babblespooon brown thurgar, or whatever color you can find. Mix well. Grease inside of oven and turn cake pan to 350 gredees. Pour whole mess into oven. Check rum again. Go to bed.
 
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Becky

Tomato/Pesto Bread

Sundried Tomato & Pesto Bread Recipe Here's what I do to make this bread. I have to be truthful, I don't do precise measurements on the tomato and pesto parts! However, for the bread, I always use a scale to get the exact weights as listed. This results in a great, light, and moist dough. The basic bread dough is as follows: 9 oz. Unbleached White bread flour 9 oz. Whole Wheat bread flour 2 oz. Semolina Pasta flour 1 1/2 tsp. yeast 2 tsp. sea salt 2 to 3 tbl. Olive Oil 13 fluid oz. water 1/2 cup Sundried Tomatoes (Note: I use the type that are soaked in Olive oil. They're more moist. I slice these up and soak up most of the olive in in paper towels before putting them in the dough) Pesto: I literally make a drier style pesto so the bread doesn't become too gooey from a moist pesto. The basic ingredients are the usual ones: basil, toasted pine nuts, parmesan cheese, garlic and a smaller than normal amount of a good quality olive oil. Blend all these ingredients together to make a dried pesto. By dried, I mean that you can form the pesto into a shape and are able to slice it. Blend flours, yeast and salt together. Add olive oil and then water. I sometimes use a Cuisinart to mix this. Otherwise, I use my hands and mix in a large bowl until the ingredients come together in a ball. Then I have a space (albeit a very small amount of space) on my countertop in my galley that I take the dough and use the throwing method bakers use in making breads. It really works well and is a great way to take out any frustrations of the week. Once the dough is slightly sticky. Sprinkle a small amount of flour in the bottom of a bowl. Knead the dough by folding the dough inwards toward the center of the ball just until there is barely a seam there. Place the round of dough, seam side down into bowl. Cover bowl with damp towel and let dough rise until double in size. You can now divide the dough into two for making two loaves of bread, or keep in one piece for a large loaf, or make rolls. Whatever you choose, flatten dough into a round or rectangle. Take the sliced sun dried tomatoes and press them throughout the dough. Follow this with thin slices of pesto and press the pesto down into the dough as best you can. Fold in the ends of the dough over the tomato/pesto ingredients and then roll the dough as if you're making a log. This can be a bit frustrating as the pesto and tomatoes will fight you a bit. However, you can work the dough into a round or a large bagette shape. You'll want to press in the seam on the bottom to form a seal so the ingredients won't fall out or split the dough while baking. It takes a bit of practice but over time you'll learn how to work the dough and win the battle! Once you have your loaf formed, place the loaf on your baking pan and place the damp towel over the dough and let rise again for at least 30-45 minutes. While dough is rising, heat the oven to 350. On my boat, I don't have a thermometer so I just wing it. I also fill the bottom rack in my oven (as it's more like a cookie sheet style rack) with water just before baking the bread. Another hint: I use a Silpat and it seems to make the dough brown better and gives my bread a good crunchy crust. Because I don't have a true temperature to go by, I just bake my bread until it's done, which in my galley oven takes about 30 minutes. Enjoy!
 

Ross

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Jun 15, 2004
14,693
Islander/Wayfairer 30 sail number 25 Perryville,Md.
Steve, That link gets me to the page but there

is no "post a new receipe" tab. Becky, I use a large bowl for all of my kneading and rising. A method that I find works very well is to combine my water, salt, sugar, and yeast and add it to all of the flours at once. mix just until it is throughly moist and cover with plastic for about 20 minutes. This allows the flour to hydrolize and when you come back to knead the dough it handles much better. I make an olive bread that is close to your tomato and pesto receipe except it uses calamati olives. For a rustic bread try prefermenting your whole wheat flour with all of the water and just a pinch of yeast for about 12 hours or over night. It brings out the wheat flavors.
 
C

capn Bill

Don't use it much

I think we've used our alcohol 2-burner "camp stove" once in all the years we've been sailing & cruising. It works ok - but we just don't care to use it much. Of course - we have a rail-mount grill - and we use that a lot - and we have an electric frying pan, griddle, & coffee pot - but gormet meals below aren't a priority. Bill on STARGAZER
 
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Jim P

Turkey Cruise

My boat (C310) has a stove with a propane oven. I try, at least once annually wr try to have a "Turkey Cruise" with good friends or family. Basically, it's a white meat turkey breast roast that gets put in the oven about 1.5 hours before returning to the marina. There is nothing quite like completing a tack on a breezy day and getting a whiff of roasting turkey. Once we get back in, we make it easy with instant stuffing, canned gravy and cold beverages. It's work, but worth it.
 
S

Stef

I enjoy feeding my crew well!

Whenever we go for a cruise my husband and I make up a menu. If it is a weekend with other boats we plan on who will provide the main dish for the day and then sort out the sides. If the Fox III (our boat) is going for a long cruise we make up a menu and I prepare the meals in advance, seal them and freeze them. It is easier in bad weather to heat and serve and then just make up either a salad or veggie or both. I want everyone happy and well fed, I enjoy making sure everyone gets a good meal as well as time off to rest between shifts at the helm. My husband may be the Capt., however I'm the Admiral!
 
D

Deebee

Kalmar Nyckel in P-Town

I had the pleasure of seeing the Kalmar Nyckel in Provincetown a few years ago. It's a beautiful ship and you are a lucky person.
 
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Pam Evans

Cooking on 380

We eat better on our boat on weekends. I do most the cooking, and I plan menus for the weekends. It's mostly a time issue, as we tend to work long hours during the week and cooking a dinner after 8pm is just too much hassle on a weeknight. On the boat we have the whole day Saturday and Sunday to get back to a normal schedule of 3 meals a day. I also consider it a very enjoyable challenge to cook on the boat in my galley and deliver a great dinner.
 
Jun 2, 2004
1,438
Oday 25 pittsburgh
The only meal on the boat that is an every

weekend meal, is the first meal. My wonderous wife makes chicken wings for the first night. Just wings with garlic salt in the oven at 350 for about 1.5 hours. Add some celery and Blue cheese and a packaged salad.... it is wonderful and fairly easy for the first meal. From then on, it is what either my wife has planned or what I come up with. rib steak, chicken thighs, chicken breasts, italian sauage, flank steak, all on the grill. What ever veggie we picked up and maybe even something like Rice-a-roni. If it is raining, my wife loves linguine in white clam sauce. So if the few odd things that are needed are in the cooler, it happens. I have had chicken thighs that were to be put on the grill. Rain canceled that idea. I deboned the chicken thighs, cut into small 1/2" x 2" diameter pieces and shook them up with some italian bread crumbs in a plastic bag. Then fried them in olive oil until brown. I add garlic early on (smashed but not chopped.The wife has a hard time if she has too much garlic.) then remove it after it has flavored things. Deglaze with a little chardonnay. Cook off most of the chardonnay, then add a can of Chicken broth. Continue cooking it on low heat. Boil some pasta like thin spaggetti or smaller. When the pasta is done, drain the pasta and add to the chicken. Remove from heat and add Parm cheese. Let set for the pasta to adsorb some of the sauce. When the temp drops so that you can eat it, start eating it. It is even good reheated.. Boat meals are all special. Even if I open a can of sardines (Riga sprats), I have triscuits and some slices of good swiss. Ahhhh, food. We both enjoy cooking so Slave is not a factor. Now if we are sailing and one of us goes below, that "hey, while you are there, could you ....." is another story. r.w.landau
 
Jan 24, 2005
4,881
Oday 222 Dighton, Ma.
Cooking on board

First off; I do all the cooking on board as well as washing dishes. I use a two burner non pressure alcohol stove, along with a stove-top grill and an old Stanley Ovenette stove-top oven. Hot dogs are always great on the stove top grill, and the grill can't be beat for making toast. I like to heat up left overs from home, or maybe pop a chicken pot pie and fries in the oven. I've baked an occasional freshly caught Blue Fish and made a chowder from scratch on my stove, but undoubtedly my most favorite meal is a boiled dinner that consists of string beans, summer squash, onion, Chourico, franks, and potatoes. This meal goes great with corn on the cob, fresh tomatoes, and cucumbers. I bake corn muffins in the morning and they always come out great in my Ovenette. To my way of thinking, cooking is one of my favorite past times on my boat and it's all part of the cruising experience.
 
S

Sandi

I ENJOY my galley

and use it often. We rarely, if ever go out for dinner. I use my vaccuum sealer to help things stay fresher longer. Planning is the key. We eat mainly organic simple meals,and nothing that is ever processed. I do make everything from fresh baked muffins and breads to enchiladas and roasts. Our dock neighbors are threatening to make a burgee with a muffin on it so they know when come over to get the ones right out of the oven! Our niece and nephew recently spent several days with us and their favorite part of sailing was helping in the galley. Planning is the key. I double freeze my meat, vaccuum seal everything I can, and I even make my own mixes from scratch at home so I only have to add the wet ingredients. Keep receipes to 5 ingredients or less. I am still trying to figure out how to keep the fresh herbs longer - they just don't make it in the cooler and they take up too much room in the fridge so I have had to resort to dried. I miss the fresh parsely. Any ideas on that one?
 
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Mike Moore

Hot Stuff is Good Stuff

Food prepared on board is always great. In my book a boat must have a stove, sink , and ice box as a minimum . Years ago I would prepare food on a coleman stove on the cabin sole....The carry on cooler was lashed in the cockpit.....Now I use a two burner alcohol stove and have sink, water and icebox on a 27 Hunter. My theory is to have canned and frozen foods to prepare. I will buy fresh fish or produce in ports for the days cooking. Casseroles are popular if you have an oven. The stove top is very conducive to Quesadillas, Hamburger Helper, Seared Ahi Tuna, boil in the bag omelettes, Chicken Corn Chowder, and we also keep a small chopper/processor to make our own Hummus, and Black Bean Chip Dip. Recipes should stay with fewer ingredients.
 
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