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FREEING GALLEY SLAVES


Cooks on boats, in camp or at home who labor in tight quarters with often uncertain footing and minimal help muse about the Emancipation Proclamation as they try to figure out how to bake a 17-inch long casserole in a 16-inch long oven. As my wife noted on a honeymoon houseboat trip, "Kitchen chores aren't exactly what I had in mind when you mentioned 'cruising." In the 17 years since, we've cruised off the US, Mexico, Central America, British Columbia, Hawaii, the Bahamas and elsewhere in the Pacific. We've written seven cookbooks. With nothing to prove we spend little time in the galley on weekend cruises. We'd rather tend sail, fish or gunk hole. Could be this has something to do with our sticking together?

Galley management starts with KISS, the sound advice to "Keep It Simple Stupid." Never cook on board what you can cook at home. This avoids mess, wasted leftovers and cleanup. Even better -- cook a big batch, portion to suit and freeze. With two in our family, we cook for eight, portion for two and freeze "made" dishes until needed.

Freeze food in foil-lined pans, then pop the contents out, wrap with more foil and segregate different dishes in common Zip-Lock(TM) plastic bags to free your containers and avoid "what's that" confusion at the freezer. When you head for the boat, replace the made dish in its container. Even if you leave home Friday you can thaw a frozen dish for Saturday's dinner.

Do, when possible use "real ingredients" such as wine vinegar, fresh herbs and fresh vegetables that taste much better than "the canned and bland." Granted, the right canned goods can save the day. For example, a can of black olives, a small jar of capers, a tin of anchovies and a little Parmesan cheese container will, with a pound of pasta and a bit of oil, butter or margarine, cook up into Pasta Putanesca, an Italian classic ready in 20 minutes. Cook the pasta. Heat the rest. Drain the pasta, add the sauce and enjoy. Stash ingredients in a sealed plastic bag on board until needed.

Be creative. Breakfast all day. Consider a good mix such as Krustez (TM), or a wild rice pancake mix. Stash a container of maple syrup and, if you cruise with compulsive carnivores, some canned bacon. Note: Cook bacon in the oven if your burners are busy. Otherwise, fry it in a deep pot so grease won't splash.

The copyright of the article FREEING GALLEY SLAVES in Fishing is owned by Louis Bignami. Permission to republish FREEING GALLEY SLAVES in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.

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