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
is a way of cooking rice so that
it looks attractive, when you’ve worked a bit harder at the main
course and want the rice to complement your efforts. It’s not difficult,
but worth the extra few minutes it
takes to make it. Obviously, the ingredients aren't going to combine
that well with your Spanish stew, but it will pretty much go with any
recipe that originates east of Italy. It was intended as a sort of
Indian pulao.
It's an out-and-out voyaging recipe and can even be made in the unlikely event that you've run out of onions, heaven forfend!
Serves 2
Ingredients
generous knob of butter OR (vegan) ghee OR 2 tsp olive oil
1/2 cup brown basmati rice
1/4 tsp turmeric
1 cup water
1/4 tsp dried, minced garlic
1 tbsp dried onion OR 1 tsp onion powder OR 1/4 onion, sliced
1 cardamom pod
2 cloves
Method:
Melt the butter in a saucepan and
gently fry the rice and turmeric for a couple of minutes.
Add the water and while it’s
coming to the boil, add the garlic, onion, cardamom and cloves.
When the water has boiled, stir,
cover and simmer for about 25 minutes, until all the water is absorbed.
Take the pan off the heat and leave it a few more minutes to dry out. This will also release any grains from the bottom of the pan which may have caught.
Remove the cardamom and cloves
before serving.
Variation:
You might like to add 2 tbsp raisins, if you like a touch of sweetness. Add them with the onion.
This recipe is very freely adapted
from one of Vegan Richa’s. For a ‘real’ curry, there are no
weird and wonderful spices and there aren’t too many of them,
either, which made me feel that the recipe might be tackled by a cook
who likes curry, but doesn’t want to faff around too much. It’s
a one-pot meal and Swiss chard, if bought very fresh and looked after
with loving care, will last for 4 or 5 days, which will take you well
into a thousand-mile passage. Spinach would also go very well in
this recipe.
Black-eyed peas are quite popular in
Indian cuisine and have the advantage that they don’t need soaking.
They also need the same time to cook as brown basmati rice, so make
a perfect match. This is a very pleasant curry, even following my
method rather than making it the ‘right way’, which involves a
blender and thus some awkward washing up.
Serves
2
Ingredients
1 tbsp of oil or ghee
1 medium onion, sliced
1 green chilli pepper,
chopped
1 tsp ginger paste or
chopped ginger
3
cloves garlic, diced
1/2
tsp salt
1 tsp garam masala
1/4
tsp ground cinnamon
1/4
tsp ground cardamom (seedsif you don’t have ground)
2 medium tomatoes,
chopped
3 or 4 large leaves of
Swiss chard
1/2 cup brown basmati
rice
1/2
cup dried black-eyed peas
2½
cups water
salt
1/2 tsp kasuri methi/dried fenugreek leaves
Method:
Heat the
oil in the pressure cooker over medium heat. Add the onion,
chilli, ginger and garlic, sprinkle over the
salt and mix it in.
Cook until the onion is
translucent.
Now add the garammasala,
cinnamon, and cardamom, lower the heat and cook until
the spices smell fragrant.
Stir in the chopped tomatoes
and cook for several minutes until they become juicy. Loosely
cover and add a tablespoon of water if the mix seems to be getting
to dry: it very much depends on your tomatoes.
In the meantime, dice the chard.
Don’t worry that there won’t be any texture after it has been
cooked: the original recipe calls for it to be blended.
Now add the black-eyedpeas to the pressure cooker, together with the rice
and the water.
Put on
the lid, bring up to pressure and cook for 10 minutes, let the
pressure reduce naturally.
Taste the mixture: you will
probably need more salt. If it seems very wet, let it
simmer over a low heat until some of the water evaporates. The
amount of moisture will depend on both the tomatoes and the greens.
Add the dried fenugreek,
if you’re using it.
Serve hot, maybe with roti
if you’re really hungry!
Note:
If you are using spinach,
you would want ‘ bunch’. It is usually sold in an unspecified
amount, but as it’s not filling and it shrinks away to nothing
once you heat it, unless the bunch looks enormous you’re
unlikely to have too much.
Variation:
Try other greens, such as mustard
greens or spring cabbage.
Whole lentils would also
work with this recipe, as would mung beans.
Long grain brown rice
should also cook satisfactorily in the same time as the black-eyed
beans. If yours seems to take a very long time, I suggest adding
it with the water and cooking it for a few minutes, letting the
pressure reduce, then adding the beans and spinach to ensure that
the rice is cooked through without cooking the beans to a mush.
Sharp-eyed observers may notice a family
resemblance to one or two other recipes on this blog. I make no
apologies. Mushrooms and chickpeas were made for each other and are
complemented superbly by tarragon and green peppercorns.
Mushrooms, a
sublime gift from a benign Providence, are becoming more and more
easily available to cruising people. Because of this, I include them
rather more often than I would have done had I written this blog 15
years ago - if there were blogs, 15 years ago. While canned
mushrooms are a sad travesty of the real
thing, ‘freeze-dried’ ones are a very acceptable substitute and,
where available, are not outrageously expensive. While they don’t
need pre-soaking, it does them no harm. If you're cooking the
chickpeas from scratch, rather than using a tin, put the dried mushrooms
in
at the same time. Half a cup of mushrooms would need about the same
water. You can of course buy such exotics as porcini or Chinese dried
mushrooms, although I find the latter rather too chewy and, particularly
the dark ones, slightly
overpowering unless diced quite small. On the other hand, those packets
of Chinese, dried 'white' mushrooms are wonderfully versatile and have a
lovely flavour profile.
Serves 2
Ingredients
1/2 cup chick peas, soaked
3/4 cup rice
2½ cups water
2 tbsp olive oil
6 or 8 fresh mushrooms OR 1/3 cup
freeze dried mushrooms
1 onion, chopped
1 clove of garlic, chopped
1 tsp tarragon
2 tsp green peppercorns, crushed
salt
Method:
Put the rice and chick peas in the
pressure cooker and cook for 15 minutes. If you are using dried
mushrooms, put these in at the same time and add an extra 1/2 cup of
water.
While these are cooking, heat the
oil in another saucepan, slice the mushrooms and chop up the onion
and garlic. Put them all into the pan and cook over a medium heat,
turning frequently to prevent them from burning. Be gentle – you
don’t want to break up the mushroom slices.
Using a pestle and mortar, crush
the peppercorns and grind the tarragon in with them. (If you don’t
have a pestle, crush the peppercorns in a shallow bowl with the back
of a spoon. Be careful, they tend to fly about a bit.) Add these to
the vegetables and stir to mix everything together. Lower the heat
to a minimum.
When the chickpeas, etc have
finished cooking, reduce pressure gradually and then empty the
contents of the pressure cooker into the saucepan. Mix carefully,
and leave for a few minutes so that the flavours mingle before
serving the food.
Variations:
If you’re not fond of ‘spicy’
food, you may find 2 tsp of green peppercorns a bit much. In that
case, reduce the amount to 1 tsp.
If you substitute 1/4 cup wild
rice for brown rice, you get a luxurious version, which you can
happily serve to any guests.
If you don't happen to have green peppercorns aboard, use black
Thyme
can be substituted for tarragon: it goes well with mushrooms, but will,
of course, impart a completely different flavour to the dish.
It is often difficult to lay hands on the actual beans called for in a recipe, so I'm trying to remember to use the phrase 'white beans' in the title, while suggesting what would be ideal, in the text.
This recipe is quick to make and when eaten
with bread as intended, would make a substantial starter for four, or a
good lunch or light dinner for two. If you use canned beans, which speeds the whole process up substantially, it would also make a good snack with something like large crackers or Melba toast, to give to visitors who have lingered until sundowners. The combination of bread, beans
and Swiss chard make for a pretty well-rounded meal nutritionally.
I first made this when I had no appetite and little enthusiasm for cooking, but had a large bunch of chard looking at me. As it soon yellows, it had be to be eaten up! I slightly altered the recipe to what is shown below, and
ate it on the previous day's naan bread (= ½ cup flour), reheated on
the toaster, rather than the recommended sourdough. It was still
was surprisingly good; indeed, I ate more of it than I'd anticipated. Although the original called for cannelini
beans, I can only buy them canned and as I prefer to cook my own legumes,
I used haricot beans. However, using canned
beans would make this meal almost ‘instant’.
Although the stems are a little more sturdy, the leaves of chard tend to disappear like spinach, when heated, so you will want at least six large leaves of chard and possibly more.
Serves 4 as a substantial starter or two for lunch or a light dinner.
Ingredients
1/2 cup haricot beans, soaked and cooked in the usual way.
1 large bunch of chard (any type)
2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
5 large cloves of garlic, sliced
1/4 tsp sea salt
1/2 tsp sage
1/2 tsp red pepper flakes
1 tsp wine vinegar
generous grind of pepper
Method
Cook the beans and set aside.
Cut off the stems from the chard and chop them into smallish pieces. Set aside.
Cut the leaves into strips lengthways and then across into manageable-sized strips - remember you're going to be piling this on bread!
Heat the olive oil in a large frying pan over a medium
heat. Add the chopped garlic and cook for 2 minutes, making
sure it doesn't burn.
Add the chopped chard stems and cook for 2-3
minutes, stirring frequently until they start to soften. Sprinkle over the salt.
Add the leaves, toss well and cook
until they start to wilt.
Season with sage
and red pepperflakes.
Tip in in the cooked, drained beans. Gently
mix together and continue to cook for 4-5 minutes, until the
beans are hot.
Add the vinegar. Mix gently to ensure the flavours are all spread around and cook for an additional 3-5
minutes. Grind over plenty of black pepper.
Serve hot over thick slices of sourdough bread, or home-made
bread, or even flat bread if that’s all you have. Put it on a big plate
as most of the topping will try to fall off!
It truly tastes much better
than you might anticipate from the few ingredients, used.
Note:
I really recommend the vinegar, it adds a je ne sais quoi that you wouldn't get from lemon juice.
Variations:
If you retain the liquid
from the can, or use a little stock to moisten the mix, it would make
a more filling meal over polenta, short pasta or mixed in with rice,
pilau-style.
Spinach could be used instead of chard, as could any sort of softer green, such as mustard greens or spring cabbage.
I
had bought a big bunch of chard, which doesn’t keep very well, so
was looking for another recipe using it. I have, in my collection, a
recipe for a baked rice and spinach/chard (with cheese and eggs);
I have a recipe for whole lentils and spinach/chard; I have several
recipes for lentils and rice, but to my surprise, I realised that I
had none that combined all three. I therefore decided to create a
recipe which would. My lentils and spinach recipe is vaguely Middle
Eastern, so I decided to make this one vaguely Middle Eastern too,
but with the spices giving it a ‘lift’ rather than dominating.
There is plenty of precedent for this: lentils, in one form or
another, and rice are frequently combined from the Eastern
Mediterranean’s Mojadarra, throughIran’s Pulao and
Egypt’s kusharito India’s(similarly-named) kitchari:
I dare say that there are a zillion recipes similar to this,
available on the Internet.
This
is much simpler than most of those I’ve just mentioned, and I was
very pleased with the result – there is just enough seasoning to
stop it from being bland, which is what I wanted, this day. It’s
also quick and easy to make. When one buys Swiss chard, it tends to
come in fairly large quantities and while the green part disappears
in much the same way as spinach does once you cook it, the stalks
are more noticeable. I like the stalks and don’t always want to
put them aside for another meal: this recipe combines both parts of
the chard very acceptably. However, the combination of dark lentils
(I used green), brown rice and dark green chard don’t make for a
visually very exciting meal!
Serves 2
Ingredients
1 medium
onion, sliced
olive oil
1/2 tsp
salt
2 or 3
large cloves of garlic, chopped
1/2 tsp
ground coriander
1/2 tsp
ground cumin
1 tsp
harissa powder
1 tsp
za’atar
1/2 cup
whole green lentils
1/2 cup
brown basmati rice
Swiss
chard – about 5 or 6 large leaves.
black
pepper
Method:
Slice
the onions as you prefer – I did them fore and aft rather
that in half moons – and add them to the pressure cooker, together
with a generous amount of olive oil. Sprinkle over the salt
and fry until they are softened, as brown as you wish.
Add
the chopped garlic, cumin, harissa powder and za’atar
and mix well. Fry for a minute or two until the spices are
fragrant.
Now
add the lentils and rice and mix until they are coated
with the spice mixture. Add a cup of water, put the lid on
the pressure cooker and bring up to pressure. Cook for 7 mins.
While
this is happening, trim the base of the chard stalks and then
cut them away from the leaves. Chop the stalks into 1cm/1/2 in
pieces and set aside. Put the leaves in a stack and slice them four
or five times lengthwise. Then cut these across into narrow strips.
Let
the pressure reduce at room temperature. Open the lid and stir the
contents. If the mixture looks too dry, add a couple of tablespoons
of water. Then put all the chard into the pressure cooker, on top
of the rice-lentil mix. Bring up to pressure for 1 min and
let the pressure come down naturally.
Season
with generous amounts of black pepper and serve hot.
Notes:
Ifyou don’t have green/Puy lentils, then use beluga or small brown
lentils. The big, flat brown lentils won’t give as pleasant a
result and split lentils will end up a mush. Mung beans could be
used at a pinch.
If you don't have za'atar, use dried thyme instead.
If you have no harissa, use some form of chill.
Variation:
Add
red chilli flakes or a chopped red chilli for a hotter dish.
Some
chopped carrots would go very well in this recipe and make it a
little more colourful, too.
I
discovered something similar to this on the Minimalist
Baker blog, when I was looking for a 'store-cupboard' ingredients, quick and easy recipe. The blog suggested a 5-minute, vegan queso.
Not having had a lot to do with Mexican food, I thought they were
suggesting some sort of quick, vegan cheese; however, it turns out
that ‛queso’ is short for ‛chilli con queso’ and is a runny,
spicy, cheesy sauce, which is served warm, with tortilla chips. It sounded
a bit like fondue! I didn’t want anything that liquid, or anything
warm, but the seasonings looked interesting and I was short of time.
So I took the recipe and adapted it to end up with a spicy, thick
dip, ideal for spreading on crackers. Indeed, it was quick to
make and has proven popular; nor does it taste of peanuts!
Assuming conditions aren't too rough to use a blender, this is a great voyaging dip, because everything will be in your lockers. At the other end of the scale, it's ideal for taking to another boat for sundowners.
Serves 2 to 4 as a dip
Ingredients
1/2 cup hot water
1/2 cup blanched
peanuts
1 clove garlic, chopped
OR 1/4 tsp garlic granules
Add water, peanuts, garlic, yeast, cumin, chilli, salt, paprika
and harissa to a
blender, and blend until creamy. You may need to add a little more
water, depending on the required consistency.
Taste and adjust flavour as needed, adding more nutritional yeast
for cheesiness, salt to taste, cumin or paprika for smokiness,
chilli powder or harissa for heat, or garlic for zing. It should
have plenty of personality, so don’t be shy. If you don't have
any harissa, use extra
chilli, cumin and paprika.
Serve with crisps, crackers or bread. Garnish with additional harissa and
olive oil, if you like
Note:
If you're not in too much of a hurry, you might like to soak the peanuts for a while, to make them easier to blend into a smooth paste.