Thursday, July 17, 2008

From The Galley Sample

Here is a sample week of my menu on board the Safari Explorer. It tends to vary a little bit from week to week depending on what's available or what we ran out of.


From The Galley

Boarding Appetizers

Salmon Caviar
Orange Rosemary Mascarpone Dip
Fruit Platter

Dinner

First Course:

Smoked Tomato Bisque

From the Range:

Seared Rib-Eye Steak
Stilton Crumbles
Tobacco Onions

From the Sea:

Taku River Sockeye Salmon
with Garlic and Fresh Herbs

Accoutrement:

Mashed Sweet Potatoes
Zucchini and Summer Squash

From The Galley

Breakfast

Apple Oat Pancakes
Grilled Pit-Ham Steak with Red-Eye Sauce


Lunch

Parmesan and Gruyere Crusted Chicken Breast
Penne Pasta with Lemon-Caper Chardonnay Sauce
Steamed Mixed Vegetables

Cocktail Hour

Peel and Eat Alaskan Sidestripe Shrimp

Dinner

First Course:

Green Salad with Candied Walnuts
and Honey-Lemon Vinaigrette

From the Range:

Min Julep Leg of Lamb

From the Sea:

Steamed Alaskan King Crab

Accoutrement:

Citrus Cous Cous
Sautèed Spinach
Lemon Treasure Chest

From The Galley

Breakfast

Molasses-Oat French Toast with
Warm Berry Compote and Vanilla Custard Cream

Lunch

Grilled Panini
Rotisserie Turkey Breast, Pesto, Kalamata Aioli,
Tomatoes and Lettuce
Fruit Salad
Honey Yogurt Poppy Seed Dressing

Cocktail Hour

Baked Brie with Puff Pastry
and Raspberry Puree

Dinner

First Course:

Green and Red Leaf Lettuce
Apples, Stilton, Honey-Lemon Dressing

From the Range:

“Bear Mace” NY Pepper Steak

From the Sea:

Pecan Crusted Halibut
Blueberry and Cabernet Reduction

Accoutrement:

Smoked Cheddar Polenta
Steamed Broccoli


From The Galley

Brunch

Meatless Eggs Benedict
Smoked Cheddar and Caramelized Onion Quiche
Beet and Potato Rösti with Mesquite Sour Cream
Orzo Pasta Salad

Taku River
Smoked Salmon Lox
Caramelized Bacon
Minted Fresh Fruit Salad
Fresh Baked Sticky Buns

Cocktail Hour

Antipasto Platter
Bagna Cauda Dipping Sauce

Dinner

First Course:

Spinach Salad with Marinated Vegetables
Red Wine Vinaigrette

From the Range:

Hunter Style Braised Elk

From the Sea:

Two Fish in Phyllo
Halibut and Sockeye Salmon with Bernaise Sauce
over Sesame Veloute

Accoutrement:

Roasted Red Potatoes with Fluted Mushrooms
and Cherry Tomatoes


From The Galley

Breakfast

Strata Frittata
Fontina, Diced Reindeer Sausage, Red Onion


Lunch

Thai Chicken Wraps
Chilled Rice Noodle and Vegetable Salad
Toasted Peanuts and Chopped Cilantro

Cocktail Hour

Fresh Hummus
Baba Ganooj

Fresh Baked Pita Bread

Dinner

First Course:

Creamed Carrot and White Bean Soup

From the Range:

Cranberry Cornbread Stuffed Pork Loin
Caramelized Onion and Apple Chutney

From the Sea:

Macadamia Rockfish with Mango Salsa
Toasted Coconut Cream

Accoutrement:

Roasted Butternut Squash
Sautèed Zucchini and Bell Peppers


From The Galley

Breakfast

Petersburg Scramble
Bay Shrimp, Cream Cheese,
Fresh Dill, and Green Onion

Lunch

BBQ Sampler Buffet
St. Louis
Pork Ribs with Whiskey BBQ Sauce
Grilled Marbled King Salmon with Honey-Soy Glaze
Carrot Gaufrette and Cabbage Slaw
Home-style Potato Salad
Chilled Watermelon

Cocktail Hour

Warm Spinach Dip
Puff Pastry Straws with Argentine Parmesan Fresh Oregano and Thyme

Dinner

First Course:

Coconut Curry Butternut Squash Soup

From the Range:

Duck Breast Caccittori

From the Sea:

Dungeness Stuffed Sockeye Salmon
with Citrus Beurre Blanc

Accoutrement:

Walnut Cranberry Rice
Caccittori Vegetable Julienne

From The Galley

Breakfast

Spinach and Feta Quiche

Lunch

Black and Bleu Bison Burger
or
Chicken Cordon Bleu Burger
Side Salad with Balsamic Vinaigrette

Cocktail Hour

‘Just Caught’ Dungeness Crab

Dinner

First Course:

Pacific Style Smoked Salmon Chowder

From the Range:

Filet Mignon
Brandied Peppercorn Demi-Glace

From the Sea:

Smoked Black Cod

Accoutrement:

Pesto Risotto with Toasted Pine-Nuts
Salt and Pepper Roasted Cauliflower


From The Galley

Breakfast

Croque Madame:

Challah Bread Griddled with Ham, Gruyere
Topped with Poached Eggs and Fontina Mornay Sauce


It has been our pleasure serving you.

- Phillip Bunker
-
Angela Tack
-
Shelly Hopson

Smiles Go A Long Way In Juneau

Stepping off the boat, up the gently sloping metal-grated dock-access bridge, I had to turn around several times to worry about my galley, my crew, my ship. Very quickly after the hesitant pause I turned back smiling to face my two week vacation. My wife's hand in mine, we walked towards the Alaskan Hotel.

Downtown Juneau is great and small - everything is a few blocks away. Littered throughout the numerous gift shops and bustling sidewalks of cruise-goers, there are plenty of bars, enough restaurants, and various other diversions to keep Carey and I entertained for several days.

Just before we walked into the oldest Hotel in Alaska (established Sept. 13th, 1913) I spotted a familiar face across the street. Drew, a friend from the UAA Debate Squad was walking along brightly and we hugged in surprise greeting. The chance meeting was brought about by Drew's employment at the Alaska Democratic Party office in Anchorage. They flew him to Juneau the day before to film Alaska's Senator Ted Stevens. Always a good idea to film guys like Ted Stevens. We parted quickly as he bobbed down the street to meet some friends over coffee.

At the Alaskan Hotel desk, we had a nice long chat with Chuck. Chuck is a writer and former Psychologist who pays the bills by working the hotel desk. He served up some interesting tidbits about the Alaskan Hotel. As late as 1957, legal prostitution was the hotel's main attraction. Chuck claimed that there's been live music in the bar on the ground floor every night for something like seventy years. Prostitution still went on after its prohibition here until 1974 or 1975. Chuck was chuckling as he shared the reason for the continued outlawed trade; a political battle between the conservative Mayor and the un-scrupulous Chief of Police kept Juneau's other goldmines running for many years. John Wayne reportedly visited the hotel (pre-1974) and graced the stairs with his own stumbling-down-them.

Carey and I booked a room with two beds that Chuck said, "most people would push together." We were one of the lucky patrons with a private bathroom in our very own room. Since we were located towards the back of the hotel, the live band amid bar sounds were dull and distant. The open window made more noise than the bar; rain splattered on wood and concrete outside with big drops channeling down the many broad green leaves of summer, making an occasional puncuated 'slap' sound against the drizzle. Sleep came slowly with the worry of my galley, my crew, my ship, and my next menu, beginning two weeks from that day.

I rested better than any night in recent sleepy memory, and soon realized I had slept past my usual breakfast cereal by two hours.

Good morning Chuck.
"Oh, hey, the sane people, Carey and Phil, right? You wouldn't believe how many crazies we get in this hotel."
"How ya' doin'?"
"Good, you know..."
"We like our room."
"Oh good."
"We're headed to breakfast."
"Okay, you want my suggestion? Go to Costa's."
"Where's that?"
"You know the 'Y' junction of streets at the end of the block..."
"Yeah."
"...to the left is Front Street..."
"Okay."
"...take a left at the next block...blue building at the seaplane dock..."
"Yeah, okay, I think I know."
"...yeah, it's right there - great place. Local place."

And let me tell you about a wonderment and truly good breakfast. Get a mug off the the wall, get your coffee - ground fresh and brewed in aluminum bottomed diner standard coffee pots. Write down your order on a notepad and place on the counter - in order - left to right - no order hopping allowed. Inside Costa's - menu includes a kick ball game announcement, biscuits and gravy, corned beef hash, breakfast mashers, banana walnut pancakes, tomato soup and grilled cheese, piled high reuben sandwich, and more. If you forget to specify what kind of toast, you don't get toast on your plate. If that happens you can ask for it, and tip a bit more if you feel bad. Add up your own total, and deposit your cash in the copper bucket. If you need change, just take your change out of the copper bucket. Fan-friggin'-tastic.

Food wass good with a little love from the condiment bar and S&P shakers. Good coffee - one time fee of $1.00. One large eight-ish capacity table, funky decor (to say the least), 4 person bar seating on stools, and a squeezed-in feeling two-top in the restaurant. There's ice cream and fresh griddled waffle cones we noticed on the way out; also noticed two picnic looking four-tops outside the big blue building's mall-way hallway. Yeah, hey Wal-Mart, rollback that into your imported pipe and smoke it. Nothing beats a small town.

That day we walked, pin-ball moving across willy-nilly, knick-knacky, and sassy-tacky shops in Juneau. Clearance-d and stacked, expensive and handcrafted, carved or furry, ornate to simple, some wretched and wonderful, some perfect and breath taking. One just doesn't seem to mind all the rain. Dinner was Sushi . . . again. Finally Carey has taken a liking to sushi. That means I get to eat it too! We chatted with Choy, the sushi artist. He's been here eight years, married about that long, roughly our age, and like us is thinking of having kids in the next year. His tasty Sea Salad and Squid Salad were amazing - and on-the-house.

Later that night we poked our heads into the bustling Alaskan Hotel Bar. A good twangy bluegrass act was playing, but we didn't stay (too tired for drinkin'). Outside, an inebriated fellow was lecturing a bum-looking guy on how to shape up his life.

Good night Juneau.

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Lost at Sea

Writing now in the Juneau Public Library, a few days into my vacation, I'm having to retrace the last few hectic weeks aboard the Explorer. I must write down these nuggety crouton stories before they stale. As Angie left to work on the Quest, then Shelly for her two-week vacation, my workload changed and story-time fell by the wayside.

However, I've left my notebook at the Alaskan Hotel. Memory serves?

We made an impressive go of the Galley Rave a couple weeks ago. My relief chef, Mike, had his first week with Shelly and I. He's THE guy for the job, and I'm happy that I'll be leaving the galley in good hands, both this vacation and at the end of the season when I finally come home to stay. For his first Galley Rave, I thought it was important to go all out, so while in Petersburg on Wednesday we did some extra Galley Rave shopping. We hit the pharmacy for the Dora the Explorer Accoutrement, splurging a little by buying the Dora zipper-pulls and Go Diego Go slap-on wrist bands. Next we dropped twenty-four big ones at the Salvation Army and bought a crazy/silly t-shirt for every crew member. Highlights of the purchase included: three matching tank-tops with stylized fish in bright colors on the front of each, a family network care t-shirt, a striped polyester number with big, decorative nautical patches (a lighthouse, a boat, a seascape), a Juneau "Rain-Ball" t-shirt, and a tye-dye t-shirt. For myself, I picked up a UAA Hockey t-shirt, a tight polyester collared shirt, and some plaid boxer's (I hate wearing pants to Galley Rave). Shelly made Dora gift bags that afternoon, stuffing each with a bracelet or zipper pull, a t-shirt appropriate for the crew member, and an invitation. She also took the cake in the t-shirt department, picking for herself the little pink "Have you hugged my shirt today?" number. Obviously after all this effort, we outdid ourselves in attendance. Most crew showed up with additional wigs and things, and we even went so far as to play Twister. Captain Shonda took first prize there. Aimee added some rips to her tye-dye, and she wasn't the only one showing off a bit. A smashing success!

The week saw me take a different role in the galley. Mike took the helm, and my new baker, Monica, learned quickly to adapt to a totally new cooking experience. Though we tried to tone down the language a bit, but didn't. She actually taught us a few things to our surprise. Monica has kids my and Mike's age, so despite our antics, we were endearing to her. There were some teens on board and I was jovial as we all decorated my first Glacier cake together. Since Monica was green, it fell to me to carry on the glacier cake tradition. Don't have photos yet, but hopefully soon. So in the absence of evidence, let me just say the cake turned out mind-bogglingly amazing. Real glaciers are larger, sure, but hardly more beautiful than our pile of chocolate on chocolate on chocolate. The powdered sugar snow, the Rosemary Sitka Spruce trees, the edible Chocolate Rocks, and the blue-tinted White Chocolate Glacier flow are all more exciting than the real thing, in my humble opinion.

This same week, when I was guiding (and trying not to be Mr. Short-Timer/Slacker) and helping with Mike and Monica's products, we had our most amazing adventure yet. At La Conte Glacier which spills into Tracy Arm (I think) the passengers were taking skiff rides up the arm and right up to the glacier. Towards the end of the evening, the bridge staff decided we should have a crew-only skiff ride. 'Count me in!' Little did we know...

...The great thing about a crew-only skiff ride is our freedom to be loud, zany, and uncensored. One other skiff was still in the water, not far from us, but we kept our distance (especially since our skiff had a smoking section and we were frequently yelling nonsense at the top of our lungs). It was evening, past 9:30, but still plenty of daylight and twilight to suite our purposes. After buzzing at top speed through the lightly choppy water, we came upon our first ice burg. Gabe wanted to touch it, and Beth obliged by pulling the skiff in as close as she dared. Well, we pretty much ran into it, but the skiff stayed inflated, and Gabe touched the ice burg. First mission accomplished. Shortly afterward, we tried to depart to go see La Conte Glacier. Tried, but failed, as our engine began sputtering and making a whiny beeping sound. They killed the engine to examine it more closely for problems. The problems didn't get better. Eventually, with the outboard motor casing off, and with Kevin our Assistant Engineer digging with flashlights and tools, we discovered a hose clamp in a state of kaput. Right around this time, the second skiff, with passengers (and Aimee) pulled up. They had noticed we were drifting and probably wondered why. There were jokes about being stranded and adrift, and we learned the true meaning of jealousy as we found out that the passengers had encouraged and assisted Aimee in actually LICKING AN ICE BURG! Oddly, her tongue didn't get stuck to it - guess that's just metal that does that. We tried to save face in front of the passengers, and our skiff leader, Megan, tried not to seem too pissed that she was in charge of a stranded, drifting boat with a crappy hose clamp. They left, Sean the first mate promising to return. We kept entertaining ourselves as we drifted closer to shore. Megan grabbed one of the oars and began paddling - though just for effect. We turned on the emergency strobe - usually reserved solely for Galley Raves - and hoped Sean would be able to find us easily after off-loading the guests. Meanwhile our intrepid experts - Beth, Megan, and Kevin - tried to repair the leaking gas line with a nylon lanyard from one of the VHF radios. They partially succeeded. Then we ran out of gas. Then we waited some more...

Finally, we were rescued with more gas from Sean, and proceeded to huddle for warmth on the fast and long-awaited ride home. The guests at the bar cheered our return and I headed straight for the warmth and comfort of my bunk.

At the end of that week, we had an interesting time with our weekly rendition of Table Side Bananas Foster. It was Monica's first time making Bananas Foster, and her first time cooking table side in front of people. Fortunately the Bananas Foster song I've developed over the weeks has become more and more adaptable to changing circumstances. Though I patter her on the back afterwards, Monica felt a little chagrined at dropping not one, but two pats of butter on the floor right off the bat. I incorporated these strategic changes into my song, and may have even convinced a few people that she dropped the butter intentionally and with great care. Since we'd had a busy day (indeed, a busy week!) we hadn't had much of a chance to rehearse the ignition of the alcohol, so with my musical instructions from the piano bench, and with Mike's lead on the other burner next to her, Monica got a healthy flame to ignite. Out come the Stewards with complete fire-suites, oxygen tanks, and extinguishers in hand, and 'clap' go all hands in the dining room. Another week done and main mission accomplished.

After five weeks of work, we were relieved to disembark passengers and not have new ones coming that day. Without bookings, were looking forward to spending the week at dock and re-defining 'ship-shape.' This would be a new experience for me, and a great opportunity to quit flying by the seat of our pants for a while. Our project list included: cleaning, cleaning, organizing, organizing, and shopping (for equipment). Oh, and I got to finally clean under the flat top griddle (which I shorted out of existence - but that's a whole other story) and under the stove itself (which is a whole other story I probably won't go into detail about).

Next: hurry up and wait for Monday morning when I get to pick Carey up, and hopefully not freak her out with the insanity of a boat crew with free-time. Can't wait.