Cooking on a boat, Barbecues, recipes

Discussion in 'ClubSeaRay.com Suggestions' started by Blueone, Feb 16, 2021.

  1. techmitch

    techmitch Well-Known Member PLATINUM Sponsor

    May 1, 2008
    Chesapeake Bay, Middle River/Frog Mortar Creek MD.
    1999 270 DA
    Twin 4.3s W/Alpa I Gen II's
    Outstanding offer! You'll probably be looking for a 340 DA or a 40DB or some where in between. Wide range I know, but it is treacherous out there, even with a 150K Max budget.
     
    SKybolt likes this.
  2. Blueone

    Blueone Well-Known Member SILVER Sponsor

    Jan 24, 2007
    Lake Erie, Ohio
    2004 420 Sundancer
    Cummins 6CTA 450's
    Might have been beginners luck….but it was perfect. ….

    now in hind sight…for what I paid for that bone I could have reverse seared an old shoe and thought it tasted great :)
     
    Last edited: Feb 6, 2022
  3. SKybolt

    SKybolt Well-Known Member SILVER Sponsor

    Nov 11, 2014
    Kent Narrows, MD
    Reel Nauti
    460 EC
    Detroit 6v92TA
    (Low profile's)
    Alison Gears
    Westerbeke
    12.5kw Genset
    Haha! - Yes they are expensive even from your local butcher, that's for sure. That said worth every penny!
     
  4. Creekwood

    Creekwood Well-Known Member GOLD Sponsor

    Apr 26, 2009
    Oakville and Georgian Bay, Ontario
    '97 330 Sundancer, Raymarine C80 suite with radar, Mercury 310 Hypalon w/8hp Yammie 2stk
    2X 454 carbs w/ vDrives
    Another great lamb meal for the boat BBQ is lamb spiedini skewers. I don't know if you can get them in the US, but this is what they look like. The skewers are tiny. The lamb cubes are about 1/2" in size. So they cook quickly and get that wonderful crispy lamb fat taste (drooling on my keyboard thinking about it).

    [​IMG]
     
  5. Pirate Lady

    Pirate Lady Well-Known Member

    Jun 2, 2020
    Chesapeake Bay, Middle River
    Sundancer 250 ‘91
    7.4 Bravo 1
    Creek,
    Sicilian here, those are a once a month tradition in my family but we use veal not lamb. God’s food!
     
  6. Pirate Lady

    Pirate Lady Well-Known Member

    Jun 2, 2020
    Chesapeake Bay, Middle River
    Sundancer 250 ‘91
    7.4 Bravo 1
    No gen, alcohol stove,

    120587D3-6013-4AC6-BED8-C594F07BE9D6.jpeg 11FA1E28-41DF-4BC9-96F6-BFEAC67DEC9E.jpeg
     
  7. Blueone

    Blueone Well-Known Member SILVER Sponsor

    Jan 24, 2007
    Lake Erie, Ohio
    2004 420 Sundancer
    Cummins 6CTA 450's
    zool and Thornton69 like this.
  8. Pirate Lady

    Pirate Lady Well-Known Member

    Jun 2, 2020
    Chesapeake Bay, Middle River
    Sundancer 250 ‘91
    7.4 Bravo 1
    A man has to know his limitations. I wouldn’t do that.
    Well, maybe, don’t tempt me.
    What was it Col Trotter said in Rambo?
    I know “He can post things make a billy goat puke”.
     
  9. Blueone

    Blueone Well-Known Member SILVER Sponsor

    Jan 24, 2007
    Lake Erie, Ohio
    2004 420 Sundancer
    Cummins 6CTA 450's
    I take that back it was @El Capitan
    1B69F799-2FF4-49DA-9457-1DC5E129EE36.jpeg
     
  10. Creekwood

    Creekwood Well-Known Member GOLD Sponsor

    Apr 26, 2009
    Oakville and Georgian Bay, Ontario
    '97 330 Sundancer, Raymarine C80 suite with radar, Mercury 310 Hypalon w/8hp Yammie 2stk
    2X 454 carbs w/ vDrives
    I have a stainless small charcoal BBQ designed specifically for them (not for the boat though). Little grooves all along. Nothing better. Never tried veal, but sounds like a great idea. You must have to add some kind of fat and seasoning though. Post up a recipe!
    upload_2022-2-6_13-47-55.jpeg
     
    ErikE likes this.
  11. Pirate Lady

    Pirate Lady Well-Known Member

    Jun 2, 2020
    Chesapeake Bay, Middle River
    Sundancer 250 ‘91
    7.4 Bravo 1
    Wish i could, mom used incredible spices. they were my favorite food, she in a home, not well, and that recipe is about to be lost. I can still taste in my mind, prolly never taste again in mouth. The old home cooking is going away.
     
  12. Creekwood

    Creekwood Well-Known Member GOLD Sponsor

    Apr 26, 2009
    Oakville and Georgian Bay, Ontario
    '97 330 Sundancer, Raymarine C80 suite with radar, Mercury 310 Hypalon w/8hp Yammie 2stk
    2X 454 carbs w/ vDrives
    Damn. We can't lose those old recipes. My Slovenian immigrant grandmother cooked the recipes she learned in Slovenia before she came over in the 1930s till she died in 1996. My family tried to learn and write down as many as we could, but she did it from her head. I remember calling her one time asking for her goulash recipe. Most of the measurements were like this (read with a heavy eastern European accent):
    "Put some marjarime" (that was how she said marjoram) and paprika
    How much? I asked
    "Some. Just enough. No too much."
    "Cook slow slow"

    She never measured anything, but it was always spot-on consistent, no matter the size of pot.

    Oh, and the open pit spit-roast pig or lamb at big BBQ get togethers in the summer. Man, drooling on my keyboard.
     
    Last edited: Feb 6, 2022
  13. my3sons

    my3sons Well-Known Member SILVER Sponsor

    Feb 24, 2009
    Western NY (Lake Erie)
    2004 400DB, Onan 9 kw Generator, Highfield RIB,
    Cummins 6CTA M-3
    When I married an “O’Brien”, I knew what I’d be eating every March 17th. Put it all in the instant pot this morning and slow cooked it. Superb.
    Happy St Patrick’s Day!

    FF9C3FDC-9146-44EC-A4AE-3351B0D6E29B.jpeg
     
    Phil S likes this.
  14. Pirate Lady

    Pirate Lady Well-Known Member

    Jun 2, 2020
    Chesapeake Bay, Middle River
    Sundancer 250 ‘91
    7.4 Bravo 1
    So after posting this, I have become a cooking fool. Right now I have an awesome pot roast in the slow cooker, been simmering since 8am, i spend down time at work searching net for recipes.
     
    my3sons likes this.
  15. Phil S

    Phil S Well-Known Member

    Oct 16, 2020
    Taxachusetts
    Former 2004 300DA

    BW 210 Montauk
    BW 130 S/S
    Sundolphin 9.4 Tender
    Merc 200/40/9.9
    Slow cookers are the best! Yesterday did a 12-hr pulled pork, I'm already hungry again :eek:
     
    my3sons likes this.
  16. Creekwood

    Creekwood Well-Known Member GOLD Sponsor

    Apr 26, 2009
    Oakville and Georgian Bay, Ontario
    '97 330 Sundancer, Raymarine C80 suite with radar, Mercury 310 Hypalon w/8hp Yammie 2stk
    2X 454 carbs w/ vDrives
    In the Canadian Maritimes that is called "Boiled dinner" or in Newfoundland, "Jigg's Dinner"
    Lots of Irish, Scottish in Atlantic Canada.
    The first time I had it was when I moved to Halifax in highschool and a friend had me over for dinner. Loved it ever since. A little mustard on that beef!
     
  17. my3sons

    my3sons Well-Known Member SILVER Sponsor

    Feb 24, 2009
    Western NY (Lake Erie)
    2004 400DB, Onan 9 kw Generator, Highfield RIB,
    Cummins 6CTA M-3
    My wife’s ancestors came to America via the Canadian Maritimes.
    Two thumbs up on the mustard! Being how we are from the Buffalo area, Weber’s horseradish mustard of course!
     
    Last edited: Mar 18, 2022
  18. Pirate Lady

    Pirate Lady Well-Known Member

    Jun 2, 2020
    Chesapeake Bay, Middle River
    Sundancer 250 ‘91
    7.4 Bravo 1
    I reached a point I just don’t much care for beef. 2 weeks ago I made a pulled pork melt in mouth in slow cooker.
    This beef, the wife likes and will eat, I still like a great gourmet burger. But knawing on a masticated cow? just no, prefer pork these days.

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    Last edited: Mar 20, 2022
  19. Jus Cruisin

    Jus Cruisin Well-Known Member

    Oct 6, 2021
    Lake St Clair - MI (Belle Maer Harbor)
    2004 390 DA
    8.1's
    But you have a pot roast in the cooker? Puzzling....
     

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