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
This
sounds like veganism gone to extremes, but is actually
extraordinarily good!
Serves
2
Skins
from two bananas
1
tsp smoked paprika
1
tsp soy sauce
Take
the banana skins and cut off the stalk and the base. Scrape the
white ‛pith’ off the skins so that they are almost translucent. Cut them into strips along the ridges.
In
a wide bowl, or on a dished plate, lay out the skins. Spoon equal
amount of smoked paprika and soy sauce over the skins mixing and
turning until the skins are completely covered with the mixture.
Add more if necessary.
Leave
the skins to marinade for a quarter of an hour or so.
Add
olive oil to a frying pan. Scrape in the skins with any leftover
marinade and fry over a fairly high heat, turning them as necessary
until they are nicely browned on both sides and turning crisp.
Add
to a traditional ‛English Breakfast’, or use in Bacon
Sandwiches.
As well as being delicious with the 'cooked breakfast' and with eggs, this
is also an acceptable substitute for toast, if you have no toaster and
aren't counting calories. Indeed, you can make passable toast in a good
quality frying pan, without the oil.
1
tbsp olive oil
1
slice bread
Heat
the olive oil sizzling hot in a frying pan.
Put
in the bread, move it around to mop up the oil and then turn it
over. There should still be some oil in the pan and you should mop
this up, too.
Keeping
the heat high, cook the bread until it starts getting crisp and some
of the oil that has been absorbed starts to run out again. Turn the
bread. If it isn’t sufficiently brown, flip it back for a bit
longer.
Then
cook the other side. When it’s properly cooked, it should be
crisp on both sides.
These
are so delicious, that I often cook extra potatoes the night before
so that I can have them for breakfast next day.
Ingredients
Cold
boiled potatoes
1
tbsp olive oil
salt
and pepper or Annie's Seasoned Salt
Method:
Cut
the potatoes into chunky pieces, while heating the oil in a frying
pan.
Ensuring
that the oil is hot, put the pieces of potato into the pan.
Although it’s a bit fiddly to do them one at a time, it actually
makes sense, because all the pieces are in contact with the oil and
can be turned over to brown the next face.
By
the time you’ve put every piece in the pan, you can start turning
the ones that were put in first. Ideally, they fry brown and crisp.
Grind salt and pepper over them while they’re cooking.
When
they’re all heated through and crisp, serve with fried or boiled
eggs, a fried tomato – or just one their own!
Measure
1¼ cups of the milk into a jug or bowl. It should be at least
‘room temperature’, because if it’s too cold, even a hot
frying pan will be insufficient to raise the batter. If in doubt,
warm it until it’s ‘hand hot’.
Add
the oil or butter and then whisk in the egg or flax seeds/water.
Dump in the flour and then whisk.
Add
the baking powder and whisk again. Check the consistency. Made
with wholewheat flour, this can vary, depending on the absorbency of
the flour. For thick pancakes, the batter should drip off the wires
of the whisk, but only just. If it seems too thick, add some more
milk or water. If you’re uncertain, test a teaspoon or so of
batter and see what it looks like. Normally, you will need all the
milk. Leave it to stand for about 10 minutes.
Put
your frying pan over a high heat. If you feel it might stick, put
in a few drops of oil – the pan acts as a griddle: you
don’t fry pancakes.
Sprinkle
a few drops of water onto your frying pan. If it’s the right
temperature, they should dance across the surface before
evaporating. Now drop a couple of tbsp of batter into the pan. It
should immediately start to bubble and then cook dry around the
edges.
When
about a third of the pancake looks dry, turn it over to cook the
other side. You should be able to get a production line going and
cook about three at a time. Keep them between two warm plates, or in
a low oven until they’re all cooked. Regardless of what the
pundits say, they seem to stay fine like this and don't need to be
layered with greaseproof paper.
Serve
with jam and yoghurt, preserved fruit and cream, or whatever takes
your fancy.
In my wanderings through food blogs, I keep coming across the serving
suggestion of ‛smashed potatoes’ and for a long time, I assumed
that this was a new and trendy way of saying ‛mashed potatoes’.
However, I saw a recipe for them, linked under something else I was
looking for and All Was Revealed.
I suspect that the better celebrity
cooks are trying to improve people’s dietary habits; they also
realise that many of their fans are as lazy as the rest of us (and
probably much more so than their grandparents) when it comes to
cooking, so they make a lot of use of an oven, on the principle that
it does the work without being supervised. I thoroughly endorse their
first goal – smashed potatoes retain their skins; I am much less
enthusiastic about the latter – ovens require a lot of energy and
we should all be using as little as possible. (I should be so much
happier if celebrity cooks and food bloggers enthusiastically
endorsed counter-top ovens, which are, of course, a complete
irrelevancy to Voyaging Vegetarians. Apparently, according to Vegan
Punks, smashed potatoes can also be finished in an Air Fryer,
which is even more of an irrelevancy!)
Anyway,
below is my way of producing smashed – or far more accurately,
squashed
– potatoes
without an oven.
Put
the trivet in the pressure cooker, add (sea)water just up to the
level of the trivet, put in the potatoes and cook at full pressure
for 5 minutes
Reduce
the pressure at room temperature
Put
a large frying pan over a low heat and add some olive oil – just
enough that you can swirl it round the pan.
Take
a potato, put it on a chopping board and just split the skin with a
sharp knife, in a cross – if the skin is a bit tough, it may not
split on the top of the potato unless you do this.
Now
take a broad spatula, or – if you don’t mind making washing up –
the base of a cup and gently squash the potato so that it splits
into several lumps, still joined by the skin at the bottom.
Carefully lift it into the frying pan, followed by the others, dealt
with in the same way.
Sprinkle
them all with garlic, Italian seasoning, salt and pepper and cover.
Cook for about 15 minutes until the base of the potatoes is crisp.
If you cook the potatoes first, they can be crisping up while you
make the rest of the meal. They will stay hot long enough for you to
cook a separate vegetable, too, if you only have two burners.
These
potatoes are, in fact, a great substitute for mashed potatoes: not
everyone likes peel in their mash, but most people love crispy potato
skins!
Variations:
You can use whatever
herbs or spices take your fancy, of course and fresh ones would be
lovely.
I suppose you could
always serve these smashed potatoes ‛loaded’ as USAnian food
bloggers would say, which I gather means covered in whatever takes
your fancy. I’m not a fan of heaps of different ingredients piled
haphazardly on top of something else, but I can see the toppings
that you might put on baked potatoes, to turn them into a full meal,
would work well on smashed potatoes.
I am not as organised as I would like to be, when it comes to cooking. Often I can't decide what to eat until the last minute and the only thing I can pat myself on the back for, is that sometimes I at least decide I'm going to eat, for example chickpeas, and an hour before I usually start cooking, I pour boiling water over them in preparation. Then I have plenty of time to look through recipes and decide what to do with them!
My friend, Janette, who drew all the sketches on the Topics for Voyaging Vegetarians, is a much more organised person than I am. While I, of necessity, use my pressure cooker most nights, she thinks ahead and uses what is effectively a (nearly) energy-free, slow cooker. It uses the same principal as a Hay Box, but is a much more sensible size for a small boat: in fact, you can fold it up. Best of all, you can make it yourself for very little outlay.
She writes: "you might be interested in one of my latest makes. I made
a thermal cosy for my biggest saucepan. I have been interested in
thermal cookers for a while, but most of them take up too much room, like the Wonderbag, which you might have seen in South Africa, or some that look like huge cooler
boxes.
"I made mine from a windscreen sun shield. The folds were the
right height for the pan, I sewed them together cutting a hole for the
handle, then cut a couple of covers for the lid, using the black tape,
and elastic from the original to finish it off. The best part is that it
folds away.
"It really works as a sort of slow cooker. Once the soup or
stew has been brought to boiling, you can leave it for an hour or two,
and it is still hot. If you leave it longer, you can always bring it to the boil again before
serving. Being vegetarian, and using tinned beans, it can save on fuel,
another advantage we have over the meat eaters."
When you take the cost of fuel into account, tinned beans can often make sense, especially if you have to buy them from a supermarket, rather than some sort of co-op or similar. I have to walk a long way to dispose of my recycling, so prefer to use dried beans for that reason alone. I tend to buy in bulk (well, bulk for a single person!), when I get the opportunity either to do a big order on line that reaches the 'free postage' threshold, or when I get the chance to go into a town that has a Bin Inn, which is a shop where you take your own containers and fill from a bin of beans, nuts, grains, etc.
I think this is a brilliant idea and it could be adapted to make a cosy for keeping yogurt warm while it sets, or wrapping around a bowl while bread rises.
Let me know in the comments what you think about it!