Provisioning Post 3
Jun. 14th, 2013 10:19 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
This time of year with all the boats leaving we're often gifted with ships stores that won't last till next year.
Tins are always welcome even if you're not completely sure what's in them. People have been all over before coming here and a bad photo and a description in Arabic isn't all that helpful.
Sometimes you have to google to find out how to use things.
I've been give two big containers of dried onions. I've never used anything like it before but they are coming in handy in the chilli I'm making for the passage down to Trinidad. I used them reconstituted to make onion bhaji for nibbles when we Skipper Tim over for drinks. We seldom have crisps on board, we begrudge the money and calories, but in twenty minutes I can have a plate of bhajis which are worth the calories. The dried onions made a much crispier bhaji that fresh.
Sometimes you can see why it hasn't been used.
Right now, I am eating the WORST muesli I have ever run across, but am compelled to eat it because it's got to be so good for you. It's a five grains muesli but none of those grains have been toasted or drizzled in honey or had tasty plump raisins added. Not quite what my early morning taste buds are yearning for - truly a bowl of bird food. And I never feel the desire to have a second bowl because the first one was so good. Unlike the crunchy granola that I eat at every opportunity until it's gone.
Sometimes you get lucky.
We often have Skipper Tim over for meals when he's in the area. He's getting ready for Stormbird to be hauled out for the summer. This means the freezer needs to be emptied and I offer cook meals there to help use the contents up. (We always have him over for dinner so it's a way he can reciprocate and we still end up with a good meal. I cook but he does the dishes. ;D) When he was listing what was in the freezer, he started with pork chops, minced beef, home-made spaghetti sauce that I could possibly improve on, stewing beef, etc...
Now, I've worked on this boat before and I know very well what might be in the freezer, so I hang on until he gets to 'A bag and a half of large prawns,' before I say, 'I can probably do something with those.'
We haven't had a prawn/shrimp in a very long time. So along with the snow peas, peppers, onions and the easy stir fry sauce recipe I always use it's so good, I fried the prawns in garlic and ginger, then stir-fried the veg and added the sauce. omg. It truly was the best stir-fry I've had in a long time. There was probably enough for six people, but the three of us ate every bit.
Most of the food stuffs on Stormbird is promised to Lance, his day help, and I wouldn't even have begrudged Lance the prawns if I hadn't seen them first. :D
We are now off tomorrow morning, Saturday, and will probably sail straight down to Trinidad in 3 days. We'll only stop briefly if it look like we're going to arrive at Chaguaramas, Trinidad in the dark.
Today, I'm cooking and baking and we're readying ourselves to go a first light. I have a thermos of yoghurt on the go and passion fruits and beautiful mangoes to flavour it with. Yum.
And best of all, I'm picking up a couple of memory sticks with the whole Game of Thrones Season 3 on them this evening at 5 from Don, Tim's scuba instructor. *GLEE*
So we'll see you later. :D
Tins are always welcome even if you're not completely sure what's in them. People have been all over before coming here and a bad photo and a description in Arabic isn't all that helpful.
Sometimes you have to google to find out how to use things.
I've been give two big containers of dried onions. I've never used anything like it before but they are coming in handy in the chilli I'm making for the passage down to Trinidad. I used them reconstituted to make onion bhaji for nibbles when we Skipper Tim over for drinks. We seldom have crisps on board, we begrudge the money and calories, but in twenty minutes I can have a plate of bhajis which are worth the calories. The dried onions made a much crispier bhaji that fresh.
Sometimes you can see why it hasn't been used.
Right now, I am eating the WORST muesli I have ever run across, but am compelled to eat it because it's got to be so good for you. It's a five grains muesli but none of those grains have been toasted or drizzled in honey or had tasty plump raisins added. Not quite what my early morning taste buds are yearning for - truly a bowl of bird food. And I never feel the desire to have a second bowl because the first one was so good. Unlike the crunchy granola that I eat at every opportunity until it's gone.
Sometimes you get lucky.
We often have Skipper Tim over for meals when he's in the area. He's getting ready for Stormbird to be hauled out for the summer. This means the freezer needs to be emptied and I offer cook meals there to help use the contents up. (We always have him over for dinner so it's a way he can reciprocate and we still end up with a good meal. I cook but he does the dishes. ;D) When he was listing what was in the freezer, he started with pork chops, minced beef, home-made spaghetti sauce that I could possibly improve on, stewing beef, etc...
Now, I've worked on this boat before and I know very well what might be in the freezer, so I hang on until he gets to 'A bag and a half of large prawns,' before I say, 'I can probably do something with those.'
We haven't had a prawn/shrimp in a very long time. So along with the snow peas, peppers, onions and the easy stir fry sauce recipe I always use it's so good, I fried the prawns in garlic and ginger, then stir-fried the veg and added the sauce. omg. It truly was the best stir-fry I've had in a long time. There was probably enough for six people, but the three of us ate every bit.
Most of the food stuffs on Stormbird is promised to Lance, his day help, and I wouldn't even have begrudged Lance the prawns if I hadn't seen them first. :D
We are now off tomorrow morning, Saturday, and will probably sail straight down to Trinidad in 3 days. We'll only stop briefly if it look like we're going to arrive at Chaguaramas, Trinidad in the dark.
Today, I'm cooking and baking and we're readying ourselves to go a first light. I have a thermos of yoghurt on the go and passion fruits and beautiful mangoes to flavour it with. Yum.
And best of all, I'm picking up a couple of memory sticks with the whole Game of Thrones Season 3 on them this evening at 5 from Don, Tim's scuba instructor. *GLEE*
So we'll see you later. :D
no subject
Date: 2013-06-26 12:57 pm (UTC)Basic Stir Fry Sauce
Ingredients:
1 1/ 2 tsp. sesame oil
1/ 2 tsp. minced garlic
1/ 2 tsp. minced ginger
1/ 2 cup chicken broth
1 Tbs. soy sauce
1 Tbs. brown sugar
1/ 8 tsp. Tabasco
1/ 2 tsp. salt
1/ 4 tsp. pepper
1 1/ 2 tsp. lemon or lime juice
1 1/ 2 tsp.cornstarch
1 Tbs. rice wine or sherry
Directions:
Heat the sesame oil in a small saucepan. Add the ginger and garlic and stir-fry 15-30 second over medium heat to bring out the flavor. Add the chicken broth, soy sauce, brown sugar, Tabasco, salt, pepper, and lemon juice. Bring just to a boil, stirring. Dissolve the cornstarch in the wine and whisk into the sauce. Heat until sauce thickens and reaches a full boil. Simmer for 30 seconds. Remove from the heat and set aside.
no subject
Date: 2013-06-27 05:15 am (UTC)I did one that's almost similar to that but minus the chicken broth, ginger, cornstarch and wine. I used butter instead of oil and added curry leaves, shallots, turmeric powder and chopped bird chillies. From this recipe.
I must try your recipe soon, sesame oil will ceratinly add the ZING to the prawns!
no subject
Date: 2013-06-27 12:11 pm (UTC)Butter. lol. I never expect that to be used to such an extent in Asian cooking but we watched a UK cooking program on India last night and they were deep frying in butter! (I'm forgetting ghee, I guess) I was so surprised. And now I find that you do as well.
Live and learn. :D
no subject
Date: 2013-06-28 04:15 am (UTC)I want to try butter prawns next but the making the egg floss is a huge challenge. I've tried it before but it never turned up like the ones at the restaurants.
no subject
Date: 2013-06-28 10:44 am (UTC)http://tiaracloud.blogspot.com/2013/02/egg-floss-butter-prawn.html - I'd love to know what her tips are, only the odd word is in English.
Don't know when I'll be trying. Maybe the next time I get a free bag of prawns. We're on quite a strict budget and things are expensive here so that might well be a birthday or holiday meal.
In fact, we went out for my b'day this year and although it was nice, I'd rather have had a big bag of prawns and cooked myself. :D Tim still doesn't quite believe that 'special' cooking, isn't work at all. I never need a break from special cooking.
no subject
Date: 2013-06-29 02:46 am (UTC)Here goes:
Tiara's tips for egg floss:
Before curah egg yolk dalam kuali make sure minyak panas betul2. Pastu letak butter dlm minyak tu and then the moment u nak letak beaten egg yolk, kena curah tinggi2 and AT THE SAME TIME kena kacau kuali dengan senduk. Senduk tu yang macam mangkuk tahu? bukan yang leper buat nasi goreng tu. Kacau laju2 in circular motion. Bila dia macam berbuih kira jadi la kut. Bace doa sikit haha. Both hands play important role simultaneously i tell u. Ha paham ke? Tak paham kita buat scramble egg jela ye.
Before pouring in the egg yolk, make sure that the oil is smoking hot. Add in the butter to the oil. Pour the egg yolk from a height and AT THE SAME TIME stir it with a ladle. Bowl-shaped ladle, you know? Not the flat one. Stir very fast in a circular motion. It should get bubbly. Say a little prayer haha. Both hands play important role simultaneously i tell u. Ha understand? If not, just make scrambled egg.
I've seen on youtube before where a chef used a pair of chopsticks to make the egg floss. I've tried before ( with various utensils ) but it usually turns out like what she said, like scrambled eggs.
It should look something like this.
no subject
Date: 2013-06-29 03:43 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-06-29 08:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2013-07-01 02:27 am (UTC)