Mykonos Lemonade

Mykonos Lemonade

We’re totally Greekin’ over this tasty Mykonos Lemonade! Tastes like easy summer days from your childhood lemonade stand. Or, if you’re anything like me, it tastes like the odd concoctions of various alcohol pilfered from your parent’s liquor cabinet that you brought to the beach to mix with frozen lemonade. Just me? Oh.

Anyway, this cocktail either serves as a memory of happier times or time you got in trouble with your parents. Either way, it’s dang tasty. Enjoy this Mykonos Lemonade!

Ingredients:

1 lemon wedge (or 2 Tbsp. lemon juice)
2 Tbsp. sugar
8 oz. brandy
6 oz. Cointreau
6 oz. lemon juice
8 oz. lemonade (bottled or made from frozen)

Directions:

Moisten the rims of four glasses with lemon, then dip them in the sugar. Place glasses in the refrigerator to chill. Mix remaining ingredients and chill. Serve over ice in the sugared glasses.

Recipe from Lori Ross, Southern Boating, April 2019

More Greek Recipes:

Greek Salad Hummus Dip

Grilled Rosemary Lamb Chops

Greek Salad Hummus Dip

Crustless Spinach Pie

Greek Honey Cake

New Jersey Style Sloppy Joes

New Jersey Style Sloppy Joes

Host a viewing party on your boat! Whether you watch football, basketball, hockey, or soccer, enjoy game day with these New Jersey Style Sloppy Joes. They’ll work great for a large crowd and are very customizable.

Serves 4 generously.

Coleslaw Ingredients:
¼ cup sour cream
¾ cup mayonnaise
2 Tbsp. vinegar
2 tsp. sugar
1 tsp. celery salt
¼ tsp. pepper
14 oz. finely shredded coleslaw mix

Coleslaw DirectionsWhisk first six ingredients, add coleslaw mix and let stand for 30 minutes.

Russian Dressing Ingredients:
1 cup mayonnaise
1½ Tbsp. sweet relish
1 tsp. horseradish
3 Tbsp. ketchup
Dash each of Worcestershire and hot sauce
(optional)
½ tsp. each salt and pepper

Russian Dressing Directions: 
Whisk all ingredients together.

New Jersey Style Sloppy Joes Ingredients:
12 slices thinly sliced rye bread
4 Tbsp. softened butter
2 lb. thinly sliced ham, turkey, corned beef, or roast beef
½ lb. Swiss cheese, thinly sliced

New Jersey Style Sloppy Joes Directions:
Butter one side of bread slices. Place four slices on cutting board, buttered side up. Place 1/4 pound of meat on each slice, top with 3-4 tablespoons of slaw mixture, a slice of cheese, and two tablespoons of Russian dressing.

Cover with a second slice of bread, buttered side down, and repeat the layers of meat, coleslaw, cheese, and dressing. Top with a third slice of bread, buttered side down, to complete the sandwich. Cut in half or thirds and place on a serving platter.

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating January 2019

More game day recipes:

Paloma Punch

Seven Layer Dip

Mini Meatball Subs

 

Mini Meatball Subs

Mini Meatball Subs

Question: what’s a quick and easy crowd pleaser? Answer: mini meatball subs! This simple recipe can easily be doubled or even tripled if you’re hosting a big game day feast aboard your boat. You’ll love these mini meatball subs.

Ingredients: 
8 store-bought or homemade meatballs
1 cup tomato sauce
8 slider rolls, halved
4 thin slices provolone or mozzarella cheese, quartered

Directions: 
Preheat oven to 400°F. Heat meatballs in tomato sauce in a microwave for 3-4 minutes, or on a stovetop for 5-8 minutes on medium high, or in a 400-degree oven for 10-12  minutes.

Heat rolls in the oven for 4-5 minutes. Place a hot meatball on the bottom half of a roll with sauce. Top with two quartered slices of cheese and the roll top.
Makes 8 mini sandwiches.

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating January 2019

More game day recipes:

Seven Layer Dip

Buffalo Chicken Wings

Paloma Punch

New Jersey Style Sloppy Joes

 

Seven Layer Dip

Seven Layer Dip

Host a viewing party on your boat! Whether you watch football, basketball, hockey, or soccer, enjoy game day with these game day recipes and make this Seven Layer Dip. It’s incredibly customizable and can be served hot or cold.

Ingredients: 
8 oz. sour cream
1 oz. envelope taco seasoning mix
16-oz. can refried beans
8 oz. shredded cheese
2 cups diced tomatoes
2 cups diced scallions or onion
1 cup sliced canned black olives, drained
1 cup diced canned green chilies, drained
Tortilla chips

Directions: 
Combine sour cream and taco seasoning in a small bowl. In a shallow serving dish (preferably clear to see the layers), spread refried beans evenly. Top with sour cream mixture, then a layer each of cheese, tomatoes, onions, olives, and chilies.

Serve warm (bake at 350°F for 20-25 minutes or until bubbling) or cold with sturdy tortilla chips.

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating January 2019

More game day recipes:

Paloma Punch

Mini Meatball Subs

Buffalo Chicken Wings

New Jersey Style Sloppy Joes

Paloma Punch 

Paloma Punch

Host a viewing party on your boat! Whether you watch football, basketball, hockey, or soccer, enjoy game day with these game day recipes and make this Paloma Punch. It works great for a large crowd and is very customizable.

Serves 4 generously.

Ingredients: 

1 cup grapefruit juice
4 Tbsp. lime juice
4 tsp. sugar
1 cup tequila
1 cup club soda (grapefruit flavor preferred)

Directions:

Combine grapefruit juice, lime juice, and sugar in a pitcher and stir until dissolved. Add tequila and club soda. Pour into ice-filled glasses.

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating January 2019

More game day recipes:

Seven Layer Dip

Buffalo Chicken Wings

Mini Meatball Subs

New Jersey Style Sloppy Joes

 

 

Tips from Superyacht Chefs

Step up your onboard entertaining with advice from culinary pros: Superyacht Chefs.

A couple of months ago, my neighbors sent a text message inviting a few of us on the block to dinner. I responded as most people would: said thanks for the invite and asked what I could bring. I expected the reply to suggest an appetizer or a dessert, maybe a bottle of chardonnay. Instead, my neighbor asked, “Would you make paella?”

Another neighbor chimed in, “Ooh, the paella!” She added a heart emoji alongside a paella emoji (apparently a paella emoji does exist). I’d served the dish to them once, more than a year ago, in a pan that I bought on Amazon for about $25. My presentation consisted entirely of tying $4 white dish towels from Ikea around the handles so as not to burn my palms when I carried the pan to the dining room table.

When I served it, I mentioned that I got the recipe from a chef aboard the 67-foot Victoria sailing catamaran LIR. The charter yacht’s chef was from Spain, and the recipe was her grandmother’s, handed down through the generations.

That’s all it took for the paella to become legendary, my signature calling card at dinner parties for what, I assume, will be years to come. It’s one of the countless recipes I’ve snagged from charter yacht chefs since I started covering the industry nearly two decades ago. I have a binder in my kitchen that’s bursting with handwritten pages torn from my reporter’s notebooks, with seasoning secrets that chefs have brought to the yacht industry from the South Pacific, South Africa, the Indian Ocean, South America and, of course, the Mediterranean and Caribbean.

Tricks of the Trade

The trick with these recipes is that they’re all ingredients, but few include precise measurements. Most of these chefs— unless they’re baking—eyeball and taste their recipes to get them just right. A typical conversation that I might have with a charter yacht chef goes a little something like this:

I say, “So, then you add the garlic? How much?”

They reply, “Well, it depends on the size of the bulb. If it’s big, just use one.”

I will then ask them to define “big,” which will prompt a vague response like, “Well, if it tastes garlicky enough in the pan, you’ll know.”

This figure-it-out-for-yourself approach to cooking is their way of life, the very essence of how they put their own stamp on whatever dish they make.

And it’s the reason why, when I get back home with the recipes, I usually need two or three tries to perfect them to my tastes. They never come out bad, and sometimes, they come out exquisite. But even during those times when I decipher the magic combination, I don’t write down the measurements, either. Once I get them right, I’m somehow able, like those yacht chefs, to remember and repeat, based on what looks and tastes right in the pan. I guess that when so much thought goes into something that’s so much fun to figure out, the human brain stores it in a file that always remains accessible.

Here are three of my favorite recipes and tips from superyacht chefs, with my personal guide to approximate measurements. Go ahead and tweak as little or as much as you like. Then when you get it just right, buy a cheap pan and some dish towels and impress your onboard guests.

LIR’s Paella

The famous paella on the aft deck of the s/v LIR.

Ingredients:

One large sweet onion, finely chopped
Approx 10 Tbsp. olive oil
About 4 garlic cloves, chopped
4 or so tomatoes, peeled and chopped
1-2 cups shelled peas
1-2 cups green beans, in ¼-inch slices
About 2 Tbsp. sugar
Salt
About 1½ Tbsp. paprika
2 pinches saffron threads
4-6 cups Spanish paella rice or Arborio rice
6-8 cups vegetable stock
2 cups white wine
Fresh clams
Bay scallops

Directions: 

Place the paella pan over medium heat. Sauté the onion in olive oil. Add the garlic and sauté until tender but not too brown.

Add tomatoes, peas and green beans; sauté to blend, 1-2 minutes. Add sugar, salt, paprika, and saffron; then add the rice and stir to coat.

In a separate pot, bring vegetable stock and wine to a boil. Pour the liquid over the rice and vegetable mixture in batches, stirring almost constantly. As the liquid evaporates, add more. Continue to add liquid, along with pinches of salt, and stir and taste until the rice and flavor are the consistency you want.

Toward the end of cooking the rice, stir in the bay scallops.

Meanwhile, in a separate pot, steam the clams. (I steam them in a little bit of chopped onion, white wine, and water.) Once the clams open, place them around the top of the paella and serve.

Caviar Deviled Eggs and Potatoes

Try these deviled eggs– glammed up with tips from superyacht chefs!

A motoryacht chef served these two easy-to-make recipes together during a cocktail party at a boat show in Antigua. You might think that deviled eggs and new potatoes are unremarkable, but serving them this way makes guests go gaga.

Deviled Egg Ingredients:

A dozen hardboiled eggs, shelled
About 2 Tbsp. mayonnaise
About 1 Tbsp. Dijon mustard
About 2 pinches of sugar
Paprika
Caviar of your choice

Caviar Potatoes Ingredients:

Bag of new potatoes
Sour cream
Caviar

Directions: 

Slice the eggs in half and scoop out the yolks. Combine yolks with mayonnaise, mustard, and sugar. The consistency should be thick, not runny. Spoon the mixture back into the halved eggs. Shake paprika over all the deviled eggs, and then top half of the deviled eggs with a dollop of caviar.

Cook the potatoes as you prefer. I like to put them on a baking sheet and broil them with a little olive oil, salt and pepper. Once they’re cooked and cooled, slice off a little bit of each potato’s bottom so it will stand upright on a tray. Scoop out the top of each potato with a strawberry hulling tool or small spoon. Spoon sour cream into the hole at the top. Top half the potatoes with a dollop of caviar.

Infatuation’s Baked Stuffed Mussels

This recipe comes from a charter story I wrote about a decade ago in Italy aboard the 136-foot Jongert Infatuation. Baked stuffed mussels are simple to make; it’s the homemade breadcrumbs from this chef’s recipe that take the dish up a notch.

The aft deck of the s/v Infatuation. We’d love to eat with this view!

Ingredients:

Diced shallots
About 1 cup of white wine
Butter
Fresh-caught mussels

Directions:

Breadcrumbs (made to your personal taste from brioche, shallots, coriander, thyme, Parmesan, chives, butter and olive oil)

Steam the mussels in the shallots, wine, and butter, and then pick out the meat. Place three pieces of mussel meat in each empty shell. Cover with the breadcrumbs and broil until hot.

By Kim Kavin, Southern Boating August 2018

Ginger Grape Punch

Ginger Grape Punch

Relax on the aft deck with a cool glass of this Ginger Grape Punch. Refreshing, sweet, and fruit-filled.

Ingredients: 

2 cups seedless grapes, halved
1 orange and 1 lemon, thinly sliced
4 cups ginger ale
4 cups white grape juice
8 oz. vodka (optional)

Directions: 

Fill a pitcher with fruit. Top with ginger ale, grape juice, vodka, and stir well. Pour punch into four ice-filled glasses. Enjoy!

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating June 2018

More Father’s Day Food:

Summer Salad Bar

Quick and Easy Sauerkraut

Creamy Coleslaw

Hot Dog Bar

Hot Dog Bar

Nothing says “Father’s Day” like barbeque. Make it easy on dad and help him grill out with this hot dog bar on the aft deck.

This quick and easy Hot Dog Bar serves four. Add more or less depending on how many show up to enjoy your boat!

Ingredients: 
4 pork, chicken or turkey sausages
4 hot dogs
8 hot dog rolls

Optional Condiments:

Mustard
Relish
Ketchup
Pickled jalapenos
Pickle spears
Chili (canned or homemade)
Quick Sauerkraut
Creamy Coleslaw
Onions, tomatoes, cheese, bacon bits (from the salad bar)

Fry or grill sausages, turning frequently, until golden brown and cooked through (10-15 minutes). Boil, sauté or grill hot dogs until heated through (4-5 minutes). If you wish, heat hot dog rolls on the grill or in the oven until warmed.

Place sausages and hot dogs on a platter and hot dog rolls in a napkin-lined basket. Guests can construct their own dog or sausage creations with the condiments of their choosing.

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating June 2018

More Father’s Day Food:

Summer Salad Bar

Quick and Easy Sauerkraut

Ginger Grape Punch

Creamy Coleslaw

Quick and Easy Sauerkraut

Quick and Easy Sauerkraut

This quick and easy sauerkraut is delicious as a topping on sausages or on its own. Recipe serves for, so be sure to double if serving a crowd.

Ingredients:

3 cups cabbage, thinly sliced
1/2 cup onion, sliced
1/4 cup vinegar
1 Tbsp. apple juice
⅓ Tbsp. caraway seeds (optional)
⅔ Tbsp. salt

Directions: 

Mix ingredients in a microwave-safe bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and seal edges. Microwave on high 4-5 minutes. Let sit covered for 15 minutes and then refrigerate; reheat for serving.

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating June 2018

More Father’s Day Food:

Summer Salad Bar

Ginger Grape Punch

Creamy Coleslaw

Hot Dog Bar

Creamy Coleslaw

Creamy Coleslaw

This creamy coleslaw is a great accompaniment to any outdoor grilling dish. It is especially good with summer meals like hamburgers or hot dogs. Best served cold.

Ingredients: 

1/4 cup mayonnaise
3/4 Tbsp. mustard
1 Tbsp. sugar
1 Tbsp. vinegar
1 Tbsp. buttermilk, sour cream or Greek yogurt
3/4 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. pepper
2 cups shredded cabbage
1/2 cup shredded carrot

Directions: 

For dressing, mix the first seven ingredients well in a small bowl. Place cabbage and carrots in medium bowl and blend. Add the dressing, toss well and refrigerate until ready to serve.

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating June 2018

More Father’s Day Food:

Summer Salad Bar

Quick and Easy Sauerkraut

Ginger Grape Punch

Hot Dog Bar

Summer Salad Bar

Early Summer Salad Bar

Let everyone but Dad serve themselves with this simple menu suited for a day out on the water. This summer salad bar will serve four, so feel free to add and adapt to your preferences.

Salad Bar

Ingredients: 

6 cups chopped iceberg or romaine lettuce
1 cup sliced radishes
2 cups diced cucumber
2 cups diced tomatoes
1 cup chopped onions
2 cups chopped sweet peppers
1 cup black or green olives
2 cups shredded cheddar cheese or crumbled blue cheese
1 cup bacon bits

Ranch Dressing

Ingredients:

1 cup mayonnaise
1/2 cup sour cream or Greek yogurt or buttermilk
1/2 tsp. garlic powder or one clove minced garlic
1/4 tsp. each dried dill, chives and parsley
1 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
1 Tbsp. lemon juice
Salt and pepper to taste

(make ahead of time and refrigerate):

Directions: 

Put chopped lettuce in a large bowl. Put ranch dressing in a separate bowl and place in the middle of a platter. Place salad ingredients around the bowl in rows for guests to self-serve.

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating June 2018

More Father’s Day Food:

Quick and Easy Sauerkraut

Ginger Grape Punch

Creamy Coleslaw

Hot Dog Bar

 

Baked Bahamian Grouper

Quick, festive and very Bahamian! This Baked Bahamian Grouper is sure to please your onboard guests. Recipe serves four.

Ingredients

3 Tbsp. olive oil
2 small onions, peeled and sliced
1 sweet bell pepper, seeded, cored, and cut into strips
.3/4 cup canned crushed tomatoes
5 Tbsp. tomato paste
1/4 tsp. each salt and pepper
2 lbs. skinless grouper filet, cut into 4 servings
1 tsp. lemon pepper (or 1/2tsp. lemon zest, 1/2tsp. black pepper, 1/4 tsp. salt)
2-3 pinches cayenne or one chopped 1 jalapeno pepper

Directions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Heat oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add onions and peppers; cook until soft, stirring often (about 10 minutes). Stir in tomatoes and paste, reduce heat to medium-low and simmer, stirring often, until onions are very soft (about 15 minutes).

Season sauce with salt and pepper. Place grouper in a baking dish. Season fish with lemon pepper and cayenne. Top with sauce and bake until fish is cooked through, about 15-20 minutes. Serve over plain rice.

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating May 2018

More Bahamian Recipes:

Arugula Pineapple Salad

Sky Juice

Baked Coconut Shrimp

Sweet Banana Cake 

Haunted Pumpkin Bars

These recipes for October are spooky and delicious!

Haunted Pumpkin Patch Bars

4 eggs
1 2/3 cup sugar
1 cup vegetable oil
16 oz. canned pumpkin (may substitute pumpkin pie filling but reduce sugar to 2/3 cup)
2 cups flour, sifted
2 tsp. each baking powder and cinnamon
1 tsp. each salt and baking soda
1/2 tsp. ground nutmeg
1 cup walnuts (optional)

Frosting:
8 oz. cream cheese
¼ cup honey

Place eggs, sugar, oil, and pumpkin in a large bowl and beat until fluffy; set aside. In another bowl, mix together flour, baking powder, cinnamon, salt, baking soda, and nutmeg. Add to pumpkin mixture and stir until blended (add walnuts if desired). Spread batter in greased 9×13 pan. Bake at 350º for 35 minutes or until lightly browned; cool. For frosting, mix cream cheese with honey until well-blended, spread evenly on the cooled cake. If desired, decorate with additional walnuts (as rocks), crumbled graham crackers (as dirt), orange M&Ms, candy pumpkins, ghost marshmallow peeps, or gummy worms. Cut and serve.

Halloween Party Ideas

While a costume party is traditional for Halloween, it isn’t necessary for a fun evening. Neither are complex decorations. Simple mood lighting and a few white scarves or napkins (ghosts) hanging from walls will create an ambiance for guests. Set the stage with a few real or cut out pumpkins, store-bought spider webs, battery candles, and some ghostly music (Phantom of the Opera, Bach’s Toccata and Fugue in D minor). Welcome guests with a Bloody Mary bar, dipping the rims of glasses in Tabasco sauce and salt. For a larger group, consider some extra nibbles:

  • Goblin Green and Bloody Red Salsa with Blue Corn Chips (store-bought salsa and chips)
  • Witches Cauldron Guacamole with Blue Corn Chips (your favorite guacamole recipe and store-bought chips)
  • Devil’s Meatballs (frozen cocktail meatballs heated in chili sauce and grape jelly)

Other Halloween favorites:

Haunted Pumpkin Bars
Black and Blue Petrified Cheese Log
Vampire Blood Chili
Sea Monsters with Hellish Cocktail Sauce
Bloody Mary’s 

By Lori Ross, Southern Boating October 2017

Mother’s Day Cruising Menu

Mother’s Day is just around the corner and if your mom is anything like mine, there is nothing she’d enjoy more than a cocktail cruise around the harbor (complete with a radish-topped appetizer).

So indulge mom this weekend, and say thanks with a boat ride to her favorite spot.

With a little luck, we’ll have sunshine and warm weather. Bring just a few ingredients on board, and you’ll be able to craft these simple drinks and light bites for an unforgettable Mother’s Day!

 

Rosa Rubino

 Ingredients:

  • 1.5 oz Amaro Donna Rosa
  • 0.75 oz Don Ciccio Prickly Pear
  • Prosecco
  • 1 Maraschino Cherry
  • 1 sprig of thyme

Directions:
Add all ingredients to a wine glass with several cubes of ice. Stir quickly with a bar spoon. Serve immediately.

Menta Fresca Spritz

 Ingredients:

  • 1.5 oz Amaro Don Ferne’
  • 0.75 oz C3 Carciofo
  • Prosecco
  • Orange slice
  • Two sprigs of fresh mint

Directions:
Add all ingredients to a wine glass with several cubes of ice. Stir quickly with a bar spoon.  Serve immediately.

Drink recipes courtesy of Don Ciccio & Figli.

About Don Ciccio & Figli: Founded in 1883, the Amodeo family’s distillery enjoyed nearly a century of liqueur production on the Amalfi Coast. Today, the tradition lives on in Washington, D.C., where Francesco Amodeo produces spirits in small batches using traditional methods. Don Ciccio & Figli currently offers 13 nationally available products, including amari, aperitivi and cordials.

Radish & Feta Toasts

INGREDIENTS

  • 1 bunch watercress, thick stems discarded
  • Salt and freshly ground pepper
  • Eight 1/2-inch-thick slices of peasant bread
  • 1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil, plus more for drizzling
  • 8 to 10 radishes, thinly sliced
  • 6 ounces feta cheese (preferably goat), crumbled

Heat a cast-iron grill pan.Brush the bread with 1/4 cup of the olive oil and grill over high heat, turning once, until toasted.

Top the toasts with the feta, radishes, and watercress.

Drizzle with olive oil, sprinkle with salt and pepper and serve.

TIP: Use any assortment of radishes for these toasts, like watermelon, pink beauty, cherry belle or d’Avignon. If you slice the radishes ahead of time, keep them in a bowl of ice water, which makes them extra cold and crispy.

Recipe adapted from Food and Wine.

Roasted Red Pepper & Garlic Puree Toasts

INGREDIENTS

  • 5 red, orange or yellow bell peppers
  • 4 garlic cloves, unpeeled
  • 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons extra-virgin olive oil
  • Kosher salt
  • Four 3/4-inch-thick slices of rustic or sourdough boule (12 ounces), cut in half on the diagonal and toasted
  • Finely chopped flat-leaf parsley, for garnish

 Preheat the oven to 425 degrees. On a large rimmed baking sheet, brush the peppers and garlic all over with 2 tablespoons of the olive oil and season with salt. Roast for about 30 minutes, until softened and browned in spots. Transfer the peppers and garlic to a large bowl, cover with plastic wrap and let steam until cooled, about 30 minutes; peel the garlic.

Peel, stem and seed the peppers. In a food processor, combine the roasted peppers with the roasted garlic and puree until smooth. With the machine on, gradually add the remaining 1/2 cup of olive oil until incorporated. Season the puree with salt. Spread the pepper puree on the toasts, garnish with parsley and serve.

Recipe adapted from Food and Wine.

 

Bahamian Menu

This flavorful menu celebrates the best of The Bahamas!
Each recipe in this Bahamian menu recipes serve 4.

Plantation Rum Punch

8 oz. rum
8 oz. lime juice
3 tbsp. sugar
Pinch of nutmeg

In a shaker, mix rum and lime juice with sugar until it dissolves. Pour over cracked ice into 4 glasses. Top each with a pinch of nutmeg. (The nutmeg elevates this cocktail, so please don’t skip it!)

Bahamian Conch Salad

½ tsp. salt
¾ cup lime juice
1 tbsp. chopped cilantro or parsley (optional)
4 cloves garlic, finely chopped
1-2 jalapeño peppers, minced or
1-2 tsp. of hot sauce
½ cup red onion, diced
1.5-lb. conch, diced (may substitute small cooked shrimp or raw fish—snapper, grouper, mahi, or tuna)
1-2 limes, quartered
Tortilla chips, plantain chips or crackers

In a large bowl mix salt, lime juice, cilantro, garlic, peppers, and onions. Add conch and toss to combine. Chill for several hours if possible. Serve family-style in a bowl along with chips or crackers, or serve individually on 4 plates lined with lettuce and surrounded by sliced tomatoes and cucumbers with a basket of chips or crackers. Garnish with quartered limes and hot sauce on the side.

Bahamian Barbecue Shrimp

¼ cup lemon juice
1 cup Worcestershire sauce
1 ½ tsp. each, onion powder and garlic powder
2 tsp. each, dried thyme, oregano and paprika
½ tsp. each, salt and pepper
¼ tsp. hot sauce, or to taste
3 tbsp. beef base such as Better than Bouillon, Knorr, Tone’s, or Herb Ox
16-20 large shrimp, shelled and deveined
½ stick cold salted butter, cut into 5 pieces

For the sauce, mix the first seven ingredients (except for the shrimp and the butter) in a bowl, cover and set aside for several hours or overnight to allow flavors to meld.

To prepare shrimp, place them in a heavy skillet with 1 cups sauce. Bring to a simmer over medium heat and cook until shrimp is barely done, then remove them from the pan. Remove pan from the heat and begin stirring one piece of butter into the sauce. As one piece of butter melts, add another until all are incorporated into sauce. Add shrimp and heat over low until warm. Serve shrimp on toasted bread or steamed rice to soak up all the delicious sauce!

This barbecue sauce is dark, smoky and well-spiced, but not hot. I suspect it is also delicious with fish, chicken and beef.

Spicy Cucumbers

1 tsp. hot sauce
2 tbsp. lime juice
2 garlic clove, minced
2 scallions or 1 small onion, chopped
4 cucumbers, thinly sliced
Pepper

Mix hot sauce, lime juice, garlic, and onion in a bowl. Toss with cucumbers and then marinate for 1-2 hours. Serve with a sprinkle of pepper.

Coconut Macaroons

14 oz. sweetened condensed milk
2 tsp. vanilla
4 oz. shredded, sweetened or unsweetened coconut (depending on preferred sweetness)

Preheat oven to 350ºF. Combine coconut, sweetened condensed milk and vanilla in a large mixing bowl; mix well until it creates a stiff dough. Roll each cookie tightly in a ball and place on parchment or aluminum foil-lined and greased baking sheets.

Chill for 1 hour. Bake 10-15 minutes or until lightly browned on edges and top. Macaroons will spread out when cooking. Cool and carefully remove from baking sheet.

Store covered in refrigerator or on counter top.

Go to southernboating.com/food for more onboard entertaining ideas!

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