JULY 2018
WORLD’S LEADING SAILING MAGAZINE
EDITORIAL
EDITOR-IN-CHIEF PETER NIELSEN
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Setting Sail
BY PETER NIELSEN
H
opefully, Carolyn Shearlock’s
provisioning tips this month (p.
45) will help those of you who, like
me, are useless at stocking their
boats for a cruise of any duration. Bacon,
eggs, cheese, a couple of steaks, a handful of
onions and a loaf or two of bread, and I’m
good to go. A couple of days later I’m pulling
long-forgotten cans out of the lockers,
wondering what culinary masterpiece I
can throw together from pickled beets,
artichokes, peas and a suspiciously rusty tin
of Spam. In the end it’s usually sardines on
toast, washed down with the kind of last-
resort boxed red that leaves you with pink
teeth and an ache behind the eyes.
I should know better, because I’ve sailed
with some irst-rate sea cooks and eaten like a
prince (rather than a prisoner) on most of the
long passages I’ve sailed. On shore, I can twirl
a spatula with the best of them. It’s just that
I lose inspiration at sea. Especially when it’s
rough, food becomes a duty, not a pleasure.
I know I’m not alone here. he sailor’s
diet has traditionally been a dull one. Our
ancestors sailed the world on a regime of
ship’s biscuit, salt meat and dried peas, with
a splash of lime juice in the daily rum tot to
keep scurvy at bay. (his is still not a bad
idea.) When the prime consideration is the
calories, not the method of delivery, you
tend to cut to the bare essentials, and it is
quite surprising how well you can survive on
a fairly limited diet.
One of my sailing heroes, Bill King, a
British wartime submarine commander
who raced in the original Golden Globe,
sustained himself solely on a mixture of
almond paste and dried fruit and legumes
that he called burgoo, brightened up with
bean sprouts cultivated in his dank cabin.
(I can only imagine his joy at harvest time.)
King lived to be 102, thus proving his own
point. Micro-boat sailor Sven Yrvind is
about to set of around the world fueled
only by sardines and muesli. here must be
something about solo sailing that destroys
taste buds.
I fondly recall a charter in Tonga’s Va’vau
islands a few years ago, where we found
precious little in the way of interesting
provisions in the port’s markets. he irst
night, we hooked a wahoo the length of my
leg and, away from the civilizing inluence
of spouses, promptly regressed to basic
hunter-ishermen; the three of us ate little
but that ish for three days, irst as sashimi,
then ceviche, then grilled, with only bacon
and eggs in the mornings to relieve our ishy
diet. It was superb eating, and we cared not
at all when the greens ran out. A couple of
small skipjack provided enough variety for
another night.
Dr. Atkins would certainly have approved,
for our clothes got looser by the day, but
truth to tell, by the time we hooked a fat
yellowin tuna toward the end of the week we
were about ished out; we took that beautiful
25-pounder to the nearest (only) restaurant
we could ind and traded it for three
hamburger dinners, with extra fries and
a large salad. I think by then we were also
hankering ater muesli, but most certainly
not sardines. s
Bellying Up