I once wrote a book entitled "Voyaging on a Small Income" and the parts about provisioning and cooking proved very popular. "The Voyaging Vegetarian" would have followed, but so few people were then vegetarians that I thought no-one would publish it. Now many more people realise that eating dead animals is unkind and bad for the planet. I hope a blog, which I can update with new recipes, will work better than a book for liveaboards and aspiring voyagers, and those living simply in small spaces.
Back in the 80s, I wrote a book called "Voyaging on a Small Income", which was published and sold astonishingly well. It’s become almost a “classic” and is probably why you’ve found this site!
I’ve been living aboard and sailing since the 70s. Nine different boats have been home, sometimes for several months, sometimes for many years. I love the way of life, the small footprint and being close to Nature. I’m a great fan of junk rig and having extensive experience with both gaff and bermudian rig, I wouldn’t have any other sail on my boat. It’s ideal as a voyaging rig, but also perfect for the coastal sailing that I now do. I’d rather stay in New Zealand, not having to keep saying goodbye to friends, than go voyaging, these days.
Between 2015 and 2021, I built the 26ft "FanShi", the boat I now call home. For the last 45 years or so, my diet of choice has been vegetarian and is now almost vegan. I love cooking and particularly enjoy having only myself to please. I am combining all these interests (apart, perhaps, from junk rig!) in this blog. I hope you enjoy it. I also have other blogs: www.anniehill.blogspot.com and http://fanshiwanderingandwondering.wordpress.com
I have been doing
a lot of thinking about this topic. Should it be one page or several
pages? Do people even read the pages? Do they go to the tags, or to
the recipe and ingredient index instead? Unfortunately, I’ve had
no feedback, so am groping in the dark. I thought it might be better
to break down the pages showing the main ingredient or feature of the
main course, eg pasta, rice, potato, legume or vegetable-based.
However, this in itself is somewhat ambiguous:would a chickpea pilaf
come under the heading of legumes or rice? For now I’ve decided to
break it into the main categories, with probably another to come:
main courses – legume based; main courses: vegetable based; main
courses: seitan based; main courses: pasta based; main courses:
pastry based and, ultimately, main courses: Curries for Cooks. We
shall see! However, I do believe that it’s about time I got
cracking on putting up some main course recipes, because that is
certainly what I look for most of the time. And this paragraph will
lead each page, because I’d like to know what my readership, if
any, think!
Cooking
Pasta
In
a cool, damp place, or when, as is usually the situation on a boat,
you’re watching your water consumption, the conventional way of
cooking pasta is far from satisfactory. The instructions tell
you to fill a large saucepan with water, bring it to a full rolling
boil, plunge in the pasta and boil it, uncovered for the appropriate
length of time. In anywhere that isn't actually hot, with all
the hatches open, this method steams up the boat and in any
situation, it uses far too much water. I have two ways of cooking
pasta, which both yield very acceptable results without resulting in
a steamed-up boat or using excessive amounts of water.
Even
North American cookbooks bottle out and resort to ounce measures when
including recipes for pasta, because it's usually fiendishly
difficult to guess how much to make. A thrifty voyager
doesn't not want to waste pasta and it's one of the least useful
leftovers unless you happen to have a passion for pasta salad.
Of course, if you have a new pack, you can work out that you need a
quarter, or whatever, for 2 servings, but many voyagers – and I am
one of them – decant their pasta into large, plastic containers to
save them from weevils. Moreover, once you've taken out the
first serving, it becomes more and more difficult to divide up what's
left, let alone remember how many servings have already been removed.
I am therefore assuming this is the situation and as we can’t use
scales underway, I am giving my measurements by the handful. I
generally use about 4 handfuls of pasta for 2 people, assuming
a generous amount of sauce, because this is a main course, rather
than the smaller amounts used more to flavour the pasta, of
traditional Italian cuisine. I have small hands, but after
experimenting, I reckoned that a handful is about the equivalent of a
cup. Of course, this only works for small pasta, but if you follow
the same plan, I’m sure you’ll soon work out what is appropriate
for you. I'm afraid it will be a matter of trial and error. With
spaghetti, or linguine: pull it out of the container
and make a column of pasta with a diameter of about 25 mm (1 in).
this seems to be about right for two. You can actually get sticks
with holes in them for measuring long pasta, and they're very good.
I've had two in my time, but both got thrown overboard (not by me!).
When
cooking pasta, I generally use Method 1, but Method 2 is useful when
preventing the cabin from steaming up is really important.
This
recipe is very freely adapted
from one of Jamie Oliver’s. Firstly I tweaked it so that it just
made one serving, then I tweaked it again for this blog to serve two,
and then I adapted it for a voyaging locker, which probably doesn’t
include fresh basil, but might and, I now believe should, include a
jar of pesto.
Before
going any further, not all jars of pesto are created equal. Some
contain a ghastly green puree, while others look like something you’d
be quite proud to make yourself and have a delightful texture, just
like the Real Thing. When I first
came across jars of pesto, I was inclined to believe what it said on
the label about having to be kept refrigerated. However, my local
supermarket sells small jars at a very reasonable price and as I
wanted to try out different recipes for calzone,
I thought I’d probably get through the jar quite quickly, anyway.
I used most of it and then out of curiosity, left the near-empty jar
in my locker. it kept for months.
I
was also surprised how good it tasted: the one that looked the best
value, “Pam’s” is not an expensive brand, so therefore there
wasn’t much chance of it being made with Extra Virgin Olive Oil,
pine nuts or Pecorino cheese - all of which would be found in a
traditional pesto. In fact the ingredients were canola oil, 35%
basil, sunflower seeds, cheese (unspecified), garlic, sugar :-(, salt
and natural flavours, so it’s rather surprising that it does
taste so good, which implies that the best part of the pesto is the
basil. My “Pam’s” Pesto also included three e-numbers in the
ingredient list: E202 - potassium sorbate, E270 - lactic acid and
E300 - ascorbic acid, and I thought that before suggesting that
others put it in their lockers, I should see what these were. I had
a look online and even the most hysterical of ‘health-food’ sites
seemed pretty chilled about lactic and ascorbic acid. There was a
bit more tooth sucking about potassium sorbate, although it is
derived from sorbic acid, which occurs naturally in rowan berries.
It is very commonly used in all sorts of food production and the
worst that anyone had to say about it was that if it is consumed in
high doses during pregnancy, it might effect the DNA. Personally, I
feel quite happy about my jar of pesto: my only genuine reservation
is that it contains cheese, and I prefer to eat a vegan diet. The
reason I’m rabbiting on about this is because fresh basil doesn’t
keep well at all - even if you have a fridge and for something like
this recipe, you wouldn’t want more than a quarter of a cup, which
wouldn’t use up a whole bunch. However, by all means make your own
pesto if you prefer!
This
creamy broccoli sauce is perfect
for pasta, and so easy to make. Whizzed together with walnuts and
seasonings, it is both surprisingly satisfying and creamy. The first
time I cooked it, my reaction was that it was hard to believe that it
was dairy free. Broccoli is by no means a voyaging vegetable, because
it keeps so poorly, but it is readily available in many places. This
recipe is a particularly good way of using up
broccoli, when has started to turn yellow and it's great if you haven't
been able to use up the stalk.
I like to serve it with spaghetti, but I think it would go well with most varieties of pasta.
Even ‛traditional’, meat-based
strogonoff seems to vary considerably. In USA, it’s usually swamped with
sour cream (which is generally both thickened and
soured artificially); in Europe they are more likely to stir a couple of
tablespoonfuls of crème frâiche into the sauce. They also include a
little tomato purée and Dijon mustard is essential: although
mushrooms and onions weren’t included in the original recipe,
mustard most certainly was. Neither tomato purée nor mustard is
generally mentioned in USAnian recipes. A little white wine or brandy
can be added for special occasions.
Apparently allspice was
in the original recipe. I also include paprika for its earthiness, which
I really like.
Many vegan versions of this don’t use a ‛meat’ equivalent at all, so
couldn’t really be much further from the original. I like the
combination of textures of either seitan or lentils with the
mushrooms and I cook this meal in two different ways. The seitan
looks more like the original, the lentils are quicker to prepare. I
decided to put them as two separate posts, because they need slightly
different cooking and also, different pans.
This is
an old favourite of mine. Incredibly simple to make, but
astonishingly good to eat. Moreover, this is perfect voyaging food,
because it is made from ingredients that you will have in your
lockers. I prefer it with fusilli – spirals – but of course it
will go with whatever pasta you have on board.
Mushrooms and Brussels sprouts with creamy hemp sauce
Blender Alert
I love Brussels sprouts and it always
seems a bit of a shame to use them as an addition on the side rather
than star of the show. They go very well with mushrooms and mixed
with this thick hemp sauce, shine in a really good combination to go
with pasta.
Hemp seeds, also known as hemp hearts, are one of the
latest wonder foods, but I particularly like them for making vegan
milk and a cream for cooking, because there’s no need to soak them
first. Hemp is also a very low-impact crop to grow, requiring little
water and no fertiliser; it doesn’t have to be grown in the tropics
and processing the seeds doesn’t mean (generally) women are using
caustic chemicals, often with inadequate protection, so we should
certainly use it in preference to cashew nuts. To serve, linguine,
or fettuccine are my choice.
Unfortunately, you really do need a
blender or this sauce, although, of course, you could take the
concept and use some other form of cream.
Pasta with chickpeas and vegetables in tahini sauce
I have just suggested
'Pasta' for his recipe, because it will really go with just about any
short pasta. Indeed, if you make more sauce, it would also successfully
coat a longer type of pasta. While
I've suggested specific
vegetables, this is essentially a meal that can be made using
ingredients you’d have in your lockers, with whatever vegetables
you have to hand. There is, however, one proviso to this: I suggest
sprinkling black sesame seeds over the meal when it’s served: white
sesame seeds can be used as a substitute, but the black ones look and
taste great!
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