Friday, May 15, 2026

RV & Camping Chow Time

 Copyright Janet Groene 2026. To ask about rates to  republish  this content, email janetgroene@yahoo.com/


CAMPING & RV RECIPE OF THE WEEK

Deep Sea Dumplings

Use any condensed, homemade or ready-to-serve Manhattan style (tomato based) clam chowder as long as it adds up to about 6 cups. Milk-based type New England clam chowder is not recommended for this recipe. 



6 cups Manhattan style clam chowder

1 cup tomato juice, Clamato or V-6 juice

1 ½ cups biscuit mix

½ teaspoon sweet paprika

1 teaspoon dried parsley flakes

Milk or water

Small can shrimp, drained and rinsed OR

1 cup cooked, chopped shrimp 

While soups and juice  come to a steady simmer (not a hard boil)  in a large saucepan, mix parsley flakes and paprika with biscuit mix. Add milk or water to make a thick dough. Do not over-beat. Cut up shrimp and fold into dough. 

Drop dough by teaspoons into simmering chowder and cook 10 minutes uncovered, then 10 minutes tightly covered.. Makes 4- 5 servings. 

See more of Janet’s galley-ready recipes at https://Boatcook.blogspot.com

           ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

SPECIAL REPORT

MAKE AHEAD DISH(ES) OF THE WEEK

Tons of Torpedos

Call them hoagies, gyros, grinders or submarine sandwiches....

These foil-wrapped meals are the only tummy fuel you’ll need on short camping tripS, a picnic or road trip. Eat them right out of the foil or roast them  until the filling turns into a hot, melty meal. Make them by the dozen. 


Heat on grate over medium coals, n the oven or in a covered grill

General rules:

+ Make torpedos only with fully cooked meat. Freeze promptly. 

+ For food safety, keep torpedos frozen, refrigerated or in a well chilled ice chest. 

+ Spread split sides of buns with a thin film of butter or oleo to keep bread from getting soggy.

+ Mayonnaise is not recommended as a binder for sandwiches that will be frozen. 

+ If sandwiches will be frozen,  raw vegetables (onion, green pepper, mushrooms)  should be blanched and well drained before adding to the mix.  

+ Unwrap foil carefully. Fillings, especially melted cheese,  can be scalding. 

Chicken Salad Torpedos

8 to 10 sub rolls, split

Soft butter

1 ½ bricks, 8 ounces each, cream cheese

1 tablespoon lemon juice

Small can diced water chestnuts, well drained

2 teaspoons dried tarragon

3 to 4 cups cooked , seasoned chicken,  chopped

Split rolls and spread cut sides with a thin film of soft butter. Soften cream cheese at room temperature and mix in lemon juice, water chestnuts, tarragon and chicken. Fill split rolls and wrap in foil. Chill or freeze. Eat as is or heat evenly just until heated through.  



Bully Beef Torpedos

Canned corned beef has been the camper’s, sailor’s and prepper’s best back-up food since Napoleon’s time. A little goes a long way. Caponata is an eggplant appetizer. 

12-ounce can corned beef

8-ounce package Velveeta, coarsely shredded

Small can or jar caponata, chopped (about 1 cupful)

2 to 3 tablespoons ketchup

8 sub buns or large hot dog buns

Scrape excess fat from corned beef and chop as fine as possible. Grate Velveeta on the large holes of a box grater and fold into the corned beef with the caponata and just enough ketchup to bind the mixture. Pack into split buns. Wrap and chill or freeze. In camp, thaw and heat the wrapped torpedos over medium coals.   

Spinach & Bacon Torpedos

2 packages, 10 ounces each, chopped spinach

1 tablespoon minced garlic

2 tablespoons olive oil

Salt, pepper

1 pound bacon, chopped

8-ounce package shredded mozzarella or Cheddar

1/4 cup shredded Parmesan

8 to 10 sub buns or  large hot dog buns

Thaw and drain spinach and cook in hot oil with garlic. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and set aside in a sieve to drain well. Press to remove excess liquid.

Fry out and drain bacon and fold into the cooled spinach with the cheeses. Fill buttered buns and wrap tightly in foil. Freeze or chill. To serve,  roast the wrapped sandwiches over medium coals, turning often for even heating. 


Wrap snugly in foil

Tuna Melt Torpedos

10-ounce can tuna, drained

1/4 cup pickle relish, drained

3 hard-cooked eggs, chopped

½ teaspoon onion salt

About ½ cup softened cream cheese

8 slices American, provolone or cheddar cheese

8 large buns, split and lightly buttered

Mix tuna, relish eggs, onion salt and cream cheese. Fill buns and top with a slice of cheese. Wrap in toil and chill or freeze. Thaw and roast in a medium oven or over medium coals until heated through.  


Hot Hula Torpedos

For each Torpedo you will need:

1 hoagie bun, split

Soft butter

Pineapple jam

Small jar diced pimentos, drained

2 thin slices of mild, melt-able cheese such as white American

1 slice canned pineapple, drained

I slice deli baked ham or roast pork lunch meat


Heat in foil, Eat out of the foil

Lightly spread both split sides of the bun with butter. Spread one side with pineapple jam and dapple with a few pieces of pimento. Press a light scattering of fine chopped macadamia nuts on the other buttered side.

Assemble with a slice of cheese, a slice of ham, a slice of pineapple and the second slice of cheese. Wrap tightly in foil and freeze or chill. This torpedo can be eaten at “room” temperature but heating brings out its magic. 

To serve, place wrapped torpedo over medium coals or in a medium oven and heat through. 


Muffaletta Torpedos

These New Orleans favorites are traditionally served at “room” temperature but no law says that you can’t heat ‘em over the campfire on a cold day.

8 slabs of French bread, 6 to 8 inches long

1/3 cup each red wine vinegar and olive oil

1 teaspoon each garlic salt and crumbled dried oregano

6-ounce jar marinated artichoke hearts, drained and chopped

Small jar salad olives, chopped and drained

Small can sliced black olives, drained

Thin slivers of sweet onion

1 pound thin sliced deli meats and cheeses such as provolone, salami and pepperoni.  

Split bread. Whisk vinegar, oil and seasonings and use a pastry brush to “paint” the cut sides of the bread with a light touch. Chop and mix artichoke hearts and olives to form a relish Drain thoroughly.

Assemble sandwiches with onion, meat and cheese and close. Wrap tightly and keep chilled up to three days. 


Make twice as many as you think you'll need


Wild  Rice Vegetarian Torpedos

8 burrito size flour tortillas

1 can vegetarian refried beans

About 1 tablespoon picante sauce

1 box wild rice and rice mix

8-ounces Monterey Jack cheese, shredded

½ teaspoon each chili powder and ground cumin

Mash refried beans with picante sauce until spreadable. Spread a thin smear on each tortilla. Cook wild rice mix according to package directions. Cool completely and fluff with a fork. Fold in cheese, seasonings and remaining refried beans. Fill burritos and wrap in foil. Chill or freeze.

In camp, warm wrapped torpedos over medium heat until heated through. Open foil. Make sure the food is cool enough to eat,  and eat from the foil. 


More filling ideas for freeze-able Torpedos:

Peanut butter and jelly

Ham and cheese

Cooked meatballs (go easy on the sauce now. Serve torpedos with a dipping sauce later)

Grilled hot dogs in toasted buns

Lamb meatballs with a little crumbled feta cheese. Serve with fresh raita

Sliced deli roast beef spread with boursin and rolled up

Seasoned refried beans mashed with whole kernel corn and diced green chilies from a can

Cooked, chopped salmon with drained, cooked or canned bean sprouts, soy sauce and sticky rice as a binder

Not recommended for freezing:

Egg salad, tuna salad, chicken salad with mayo

Sandwiches with sauerkraut

Raw vegetables or fruit

Pickle slices, Sour cream

Meats that are only partially cooked

           ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


JUST IN TIME FOR FATHERS DAY 

COOKING ABOARD YOUR RV

    For yourself or a gift,  Janet Groene's timeless RV cookbook is packed with shortcuts, tips and 270 easy, delicious recipes to cook inside the camper or outside on the campfire, camp stove or grate. Amazon will wrap and ship it for you. 

https://amzn.to/3nNndWY 









Campground Potluck Recipe of the Week

Mexicali Casserole

To make this a vegetarian dish, use vegetarian tamales. Canned tamales make this a quick and easy hot dish. 


3 cans, about 15 ounces each, tamales

2 cans, 12 ounces each, whole kernel corn with green and red pepper, drained

Small can sliced ripe olives, drained

½ cup stuffed green olives, chopped

I package Jiffy cornbread mix

Egg and milk (for cornbread mix)

1 cup grated  Monterey Jack cheese

Put tamales in a greased 9 X 13-inch casserole and sprinkle with corn and olives. Bake 10 minutes at 400 degrees, then drizzle with cornbread mix, prepared according to package directions. Bake until cornbread is golden brown. Remove from oven, sprinkle with cheese and let cheese melt. Serve at once or keep warm. Serves  8-12. 


STUFF HAPPENS. BE READY

FOR FOOD EMERGENCIES 


   Stuff happens when you're away from home too. Be prepared for delays, sudden evacuation,  breakdowns,  refrigerator failure, supply chain interruptions, civil disturbances.    http://amzn.to/1WdYqbe How much food will you need for a week in the woods for two adults and two kids?  A month in a remote fish camp? A two-week power outage? See Survival Food Handbook for tips on buying, stowing, and making meals from ordinary supermarket supplies that need no fresh ingredients. 

Campers have limited storage space for emergency food.  Survival Food Handbook  is just for campers, truckers, RV travelers and boaters. Make the most of every ounce, inch and dollar. Have a stash of staples you will use and replenish.  http://amzn.to/1WdYqbe


BONUS RECIPE

Drumstick Corn Dogs


10 medium drumsticks

1 cup flour

12 cup cornmeal

1 tablespoon each sugar and baking powder

½ teaspoon each paprika, salt and dry mustard powder

1 cup milk or light cream

1 egg

Fat or oil for deep frying


Season drumsticks with salt and pepper. Arrange on a greased baking pan and bake 10 minutes at 425 F. Reduce heat to 325 F. Roast until chicken tests done at 170 F. IT's important that chicken is thoroughly cooked. Cool completely and refrigerate or freeze.

To proceed, mix dry ingredients for the batter. Whisk milk and egg and mix with dry ingredients to make a thick but pour-able batter,  Bring oil to 375 degrees F. Pat drumsticks dry. Pour some of the batter into a tall glass or clean tin can. Holding drumsticks by the short end, dip in batter. Let excess batter drip off and fry drumstick until  golden and crusty.

Keeping oil at 375 F. dip drumsticks on at a time and fry. Serve at once or keep warm. 

Caution: deep frying requires extra caution in camping. The stove and pot should be on a firm surface. When finished, let the leftover oil cool and dispose of it in a suitable container. Do not pour it into the ground or the RV sink. For food safety, the chicken should be cooked thoroughly before deep frying in batter. 


NO BAKE DESSERTS OF THE WEEK

Hot Apple Shortcake

6 store bought shortcake shells OR

6 baked biscuits

1 can apple pie filling

1 cup  orange juice 

½ cup  sugar

Optional: 1 cup miniature marshmallows AND/OR  1 cup coarsely chopped pecans

Set out shortcake shells or split biscuits. Put apple pie filling in a pan and chop or mash it coarsely. Add orange juice and sugar and bring to a boil until sugar dissolves. Stir in marshmallows or pecans or both. Spoon hot over shells. Serve at once.  

Variation: try this with another fruit juice such as pineapple, apple or cranberry. 


Freckleberry Pie

Doctor up an ordinary icebox pie with fresh berries, freckled throughout the sweet custard filling. I found raspberries too delicate and strawberries too juicy for this recipe. 


9-inch crumb crust, homemade or store-bought.

14-ounce can sweetened condensed milk

½ cup fresh lemon or lime juice

8-ounce tub whipped topping

1 cup fresh, firm blackberries, blueberries OR

1 cup dried cranberries



Chill crust.  Wash berries and pat dry. Thaw whipped topping.  Whisk fruit juice and condensed milk. When it begins to thicken, fold in whipped topping and berries. Put in crust and chill. Serves 8. 

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Friday, May 08, 2026

Camping & RV Meals Rule!

 Copyright Janet Groene 2026.

Cooking at your campsite is part of the total camping experience. It saves money, teaches outdoor skills, makes memories, bonds the family. Let's Eat!


Set up camp in your own neck of the woods, then eat "in" as part of the camping experience. 

Camping & RV Recipe of the Week

Rags ‘n Riches

This  recipe uses up broken pieces of lasagna and cooks quickly in a skillet.  Make it meatless or stir in diced, cooked chicken, beef or pork ad lib.


About 2 cups broken lasagna 

Medium onion, finely diced

2 tablespoons minced garlic

2 tablespoons virgin olive oil

8-ounce can or jar sliced mushrooms, drained

10-ounce package spinach

1 cup milk

1 level tablespoon plus 2 teaspoons cornstarch

1/4 teaspoon grated nutmeg

1 teaspoon dried thyme leaves

4-ounce package (1 cup) grated Cheddar cheese

Salt, pepper to taste

Thaw, drain and squeeze spinach dry. Set aside. Boil the lasagna “rags” in salted water with onion and garlic until just tender. Drain, saving liquid. Stir ½ cup liquid with the olive oil, mushrooms and spinach into pasta. Cover and simmer over low heat while you whisk together the milk, cornstarch, nutmeg and thyme. Stir into pasta mixture and cook, stirring over low heat, until creamy. 

Thin with more of the pasta water. Add salt and pepper to taste.  Stir in cheese to melt it or save it to scatter on top. Serve hot. Makes 4 to 6  portions. 


PANTRY RECIPE OF THE WEEK

When you’re out of fresh food, or the fridge fails, or the ice machine breaks down, or you’re short of money, delve into your reserves to make a meal from cans and packages. This recipe requires no fresh ingredients. 

For tips on prepping with limited storage space such as your RV, boat or tiny home, see Survival Food Handbook below. 

Creamy Salmon and Rice

1 cup long grain white rice

2 tablespoons olive oil

2 cups water

1 chicken vegetable or fish flavor bouillon cube

Small can evaporated milk (2/3 cup)

1 ½ tablespoons flour

2 teaspoons mixed Italian seasoning

7-ounce can chunk salmon, drained and broken up

14.5-ounce can short cut green beans, drained

2-ounce jar diced pimentos, drained 

Optional: 1 cup dry bread crumbs + 1 tablespoon olive oil


Sizzle rice in hot oil. Add water and bouillon and bring to a boil Cover and reduce heat. Add water to canned milk to make 1 ½ cups liquid. Whisk with flour and seasoning. 

When rice is tender, stir in milk mixture until rice is thick and creamy. Stir in salmon, green beans and pimentos.  Heat through. If it’s too thick, thin with water or white wine. Adjust seasonings. 

Optional: Stir olive oil and bread crumbs in a small skillet until toasty and sprinkle over each serving. Makes 4 portions.  


WHEN FOOD EMERGENCIES 

TRIP UP YOUR CAMPING TRIP

   Stuff happens when you're away from home too. Be prepared for delays, sudden evacuation,  refrigerator failure, supply chain interruptions, civil disturbances.    http://amzn.to/1WdYqbe How much food will you need for a week in the woods for two adults and two kids?  A month in a remote fish camp? A two-week power outage camp? Survival Food Handbook for tips on buying, stowing, and make meals from ordinary supermarket supplies that need no fresh ingredients. 

Campers have limited storage space for emergency food.  Survival Food Handbook  is just for campers, truckers, RV travelers and boaters. Make the most of every ounce, inch and dollar. Have a stash of staples you will use and replenish.  http://amzn.to/1WdYqbe


MAKE AHEAD DISH OF THE WEEK

Pork Pot Pies

Make one pie to serve six, or freeze individual pies to bake one or two as needed.  Bake and freeze or freeze pies unbaked to bake later in camp.



For each 9/10-inch pie you will need:

2 pastry pie crusts

2 tablespoons Italian seasoned bread crumbs

1 pound bulk Italian sausage (mild or medium)

2 Roma tomatoes, diced and drained

2 cups diced yellow squash, zucchini or mixture

1 cup diced red, green or mixture sweet peppers

Medium onion, diced

8 ounce package shredded cheese such as provolone or Cheddar


Put the bottom crust in a pie pan and sprinkle with a tablespoon of the seasoned bread crumbs. Set aside.

Stir-fry sausage over high heat, breaking it up. Gradually stir in vegetables until they are crisp tender. Drain and cool. When it’s cool, fold in cheese and remaining bread crumbs. 

Place this filling in the cust. Add the top crust, crimp edges and bake now or wrap for the freezer.  In camp, thaw (unkaed)  pie(s) and bake 5 minutes at 425 degrees, then reduce heat to 350 F. until pie is golden brown. Let cool 5 minutes and cut in wedges. 


JUST IN TIME FOR MOTHER'S DAY 

(AND FOR FATHER'S DAY NEXT MONTH)

COOKING ABOARD YOUR RV

    For yourself or a gift,  Janet Groene's timeless RV cookbook is packed with shortcuts, tips and 270 easy, delicious recipes to cook inside the camper or outside on the campfire, camp stove or grate. Amazon will gift wrap and ship it for you. 

https://amzn.to/3nNndWY 





NO BAKE DESSERT OF THE WEEK

Shortcut Banana Pudding

14-ounce can sweetened condensed milk

1 1/4 cups water

1 package instant French vanilla pudding mix

1 tub whipped topping

3 bananas, cut up

32 vanilla wafers

Optional: Butterscotch ice cream syrup


Set out 8 dessert dishes. (I use clear disposable  cups) and place a vanilla wafer in each, flat side down. 

Whisk water and condensed milk, then whisk in the pudding mix. When it begins to thicken, fold in whipped topping. 

Set aside 8 wafers and break up the rest coarsely. Layer bananas, broken wafers and pudding mix in cups. End with a whole vanilla wafer on top. 

Optional: Drizzle a little butterscotch syrup on top. Serve at once or chill. 




Campground Potluck Recipe of the Week

Good-as-Gold Peach Pie

They’ll think you slaved for hours to make this easy-as-pie dessert. Keep your secret. Note that one can of peaches is used with juice. The other is drained. The surplus juice goes great in fruit punch. If peaches were canned in heavy syrup you may want to reduce the amount of brown sugar. 


2 large 26 to (28-ounce) cans peach slices 

2 sleeves buttery round crackers, such as Ritz 

2 sticks butter

16-ounce box brown sugar


1. Using your hands, crumble one sleeve of crackers into a greased 9 X 13-inch pan.  Drizzle with one stick butter, melted, and let set a few minutes. Press down with a flat spatula to make an even layer.   Empty one can of peaches and juice on the cracker layer. Arrange peaches in an even layer. 

2. Drain the other can of peaches and arrange them with the others to make a complete layer,  filling the pan. 

3.  Crumble the second stackof crackers and toss with the brown sugar. Sprinkle evenly over peaces and dot with bits of the remaining stick of butter. Cover with foil and bake 20 minutes at 350 degrees. Remove foil and bake 10-15 minutes more or until the top is crusty and brown. 

Cut in 12 to 16 bars and provide a pancake turner for serving. It’s good warm, cold or at “room” temperature. Serve it plain or with whipped topping. Bonus points: top each serving with a scoop of peace ice cream.  


WHAT IS FULL-TIME RV TRAVEL REALLY LIKE? 


 

We spill our whole story, start to end, warts and all.....
We traveled full-time for 10 great years. 

 Do you dream of living and traveling in a complete home on wheels? Living Aboard Your RV, 4th Edition by Janet Groene & Gordon Groene is a total guide to the full-time life on wheels. Should you sell the house or rent it out? Downsize possessions or put them in storage? Too young to retire? See our chapter on ways to make a living anywhere. Kids on board? We cover home schooling and also an exit strategy if and when it's time to settle down. Order at any book store or let Amazon gift wrap and ship it for you.   https://amzn.to/29XFEkq 



Bean soup is ready after winter  hikes in the Hocking Hills of Ohio

BONUS RECIPE; SUPERSIZE POTLUCK DISH 

Does your camping club get together for great feasts of a traditional food cooked in a large pot, vat or cauldron?  

It may be a Wisconsin fish boil, a Brunswick stew or the huge batches of bean soup served after a winter hike in Ohio’s Hocking Hills.

Start your club’s own tradition with this Italian classic. This recipe makes 50 servings to serve with rafts of  Italian bread or Texas Toast. 

Minestrone/MAXestrone

Minestrone is a vegetarian soup, so you may want to substitute three cartons, 32 ounces each, of vegetable broth for the chicken and beef flavors. 

3 pounds onions, diced

½ cup Italian olive oil

Large head garlic, chopped

2 cups chopped celery

2 cartons, 32 ounces each,  beef broth

1 carton, 32 ounces, chicken broth

4 cans, 28 ounces each, diced tomatoes

6-ounce can tomato paste

1/4 cup salt

1 ½ teaspoons freshly ground pepper

1/3 cup mixed Italian seasoning

6 cans, 15 ounces each, light red kidney beans

6 cans, 15 ounces each, dark red kidney beans

4 to 6  cups diced zucchini

3 packages, 8 ounces each, dilatini pasta

A wheel of Parmesan cheese, shaved to make thin, three-inch pieces.

Optional: a bag of baby spinach, cut chiffonade style

Melt butter and stir in onions until they soften, adding garlic and celery as you go. Add broth and seasonings. Reduce heat to simmer and tend the pot ad lib.  It’s part of the show if you want to keep it simmering for a long while.  Add water as needed to keep it soupy. 

About an hour before serving, stir in the rinsed beans and zucchini and simmer. Finally, raise heat until the soup is at an active simmer and stir in the pasta until it’s tender.

Just before serving, stir in spinach with a flourish. Place a slab of the cheese in each bowl and add a ladle of soup. 


FOIL MEAL OF THE WEEK

Make a meal for one or meals for the entire troop. 

WAFFLE TOWERS

For each meal will need

1 large square aluminum oil

Butter, shortening or nonstick spray

Thin slice from a whole, large onion

1 or 2 frozen waffles, thawed

2 slices Canadian bacon

1 thick slice from a whole, large tomato

1 or 2 slices smoked provolone cheese

1/4 cup cooked rice mixed with 

1 heaping tablespoon grated Cheddar cheese

Soy sauce

Grease a circle in the middle of the foil and place the slice of onion on it. Top with a waffle, one slice, of Canadian bacon, the tomato slice, the provolone and the rice. Drizzle with soy sauce and end with the second slice of Canadian bacon and a second waffle and slice of cheese if using. 

Seal foil and grill the packet over medium coals,  onion side down,  until it’s heated through. Eat from the foil. 

Cook’s note: Canadian bacon cuts easier with a sawtooth type blade. 



COMMENTS? QUESTIONS? JANETGROENE@YAHOO.COM 

Friday, April 24, 2026

Campfire & Chuck Wagon Cooking

Copyright Janet Groene 2026.


    What's your camping moment? Gathering 'round the campfire on a crisp spring evening or brewing that first cup of coffee in the morning mist? Whatever it is, these recipes go the distance. 




Camping & RV Recipe of the Week

Oatmeal Cookie Pie

This recipe is part cookie, part pie, part tart. If you recognize it as a close relative of pecan pie, you’re on target. Not everyone likes nuts, so this version is nut free. Use one-minute or old-fashioned oatmeal flakes, not instant. 


1 stick butter

1 cup flour, plus more as needed

½ stick butter

½ cup sugar

1 cup corn syrup 

3 eggs

½ cup each oatmeal (not instant) and shredded coconut

Melt the stick of butter in a pie pan and stir in flour with a fork until dough forms a ball. Using floured fingers, press dough into an even layer on bottom and sides of the pan. Flute edges.

Melt the other half stick of butter and stir in sugar, syrup and eggs. Whisk until smooth. Stir in oatmeal and coconut. Pour into pie shell and bake at 350 F. until the crust is golden and the filling set, as for custard. Cool before cutting.



BLACK POT RECIPE OF THE WEEK

Campfire-Baked Potato Chowder

Kindle the campfire early in the day and bake the potatoes in glowing coals. Then manage the fire to keep the pot simmering.  Make this soup  vegetarian or add ham, and doll it up with extra vegetables for color and showmanship.  


8 large baking potatoes, scrubbed

1 stick butter        3 large onions, diced

1 tablespoon  minced garlic

Optional: 1 turnip,  parsnip or  carrot, peeled and  grated 

Optional: 2 cups fine diced cooked ham

6 cups water

4 chicken or vegetable bouillon cubes

½ cup flour         1 teaspoon ground nutmeg

1 1/2 cups cold water

3 to 4 cans, 12 ounces each, evaporated milk

Optional: I can cream style corn

Salt, freshly ground pepper

Cool and trim baked potatoes and cut in bite size chunks, saving as much of the crispy skin as possible. Set aside.  Melt  butter and stir in garlic, onion and vegetables and ham if using. When they are browned and buttery, add 6 CUPS water and bring to a boil. Stir in bouillon to dissolve. Simmer ad lib, stirring occasionally and adding water as needed. 

When you’re close to serving time, whisk flour and nutmeg into the 1 ½ cups cold water and stir into the soup with the potatoes and  corn if using. When it thickens, stir in canned  milk to taste and more water as needed, Heat through but do not boil after milk is added. Add salt and pepper to taste. 

Suggested garnish: crumbled bacon, sliced scallions, shredded cheese, dollops of sour cream or tufts of packaged French fried onions. 


COOKING ABOARD YOUR RV

    For yourself or a gift,  Janet Groene's timeless RV cookbook is packed with shortcuts, tips and 270 easy, delicious recipes to cook inside the camper or outside on the campfire, camp stove or grate.  

https://amzn.to/3nNndWY 






ETHNIC RECIPE OF THE WEEK

Speedy Spiedis

Thank Italian immigrants for bringing this sumptuous sandwich to the Americas. Wrap your fist around  fresh slabs of Italian bread packed with flavorful pork.  Start it a day ahead, then bring the marinated pork to grill at a picnic or tailgating. 


2 pork tenderloins, 14-16 ounces each

2 large yellow onions, diced fine

2 tablespoons minced garlic

1  tablespoon  Worcestershire sauce 

2 tablespoons mixed Italian seasoning

8-ounce can tomato sauce

½ cup ketchup

1 cup water


Slices of Italian bread or rolls to make 12-14 hot sandwiches

Cut tenderloin in bite size.  Mix remaining ingredients except bread in a zip-top bag. Marinate in the fridge or ice chest overnight. Drain marinade and save it. Skewer and grill pork cubes.  Boil marinade 5 minutes. Make sandwiches with the pork and drizzle with the boiled marinade.  

WHEN FOOD EMERGENCIES 

TRIP UP YOUR CAMPING TRIP

   Stuff happens when you're away from home too. Be prepared for delays, sudden evacuation,  refrigerator failure, supply chain interruptions, civil disturbances.    http://amzn.to/1WdYqbe How much food will you need for a week in the woods for two adults and two kids?  A month in a remote fish camp? A two-week power outage camp? Survival Food Handbook for tips on buying, stowing, and make meals from ordinary supermarket supplies that need no fresh ingredients. 

Campers have limited storage space for emergency food.  Survival Food Handbook  is just for campers, truckers, RV travelers and boaters. Make the most of every ounce, inch and dollar. Have a stash of staples you will use and replenish.  http://amzn.to/1WdYqbe


BONUS RECIPE

A Wee Bit O’ Pudding

This old English dessert bakes in a skillet over low flame. It’s very dense and sweet, so make servings small.

2 eggs        1 cup sugar

1/4 cup flour

1 teaspoon baking powder

1 cup coarsely chopped walnuts

1 cup chopped dried fruit such as figs, raisins, Craisins or prunes


Whisk eggs, sugar, flour and baking powder. Fold in nuts and fruit. Heavily grease an 8- or 10-inch skillet (preferably nonstick). Spread batter in the pan. Cover and cook over low heat until it’s set. 

Optional: Serve with  cream, whipped topping, vanilla yogurt, Devonshire cream or milk. 


SKILLET MEAL OF THE WEEK 

Kicky Kielbasa  Cabbage

Horseradish and mustard add spark and spunk to this everyday budget dinner.


12-to-16-ounce kielbasa sausage

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

Medium onion, diced

Medium cabbage, coarsely cut up OR

16-ounce bag shredded cabbage for coleslaw

2 tablespoons flour or cornstarch

1 cup milk

2 tablespoons golden mustard 

1 tablespoon  horseradish

1 cup grated Cheddar cheese

Slice sausage in half lengthwise, then in 1/4-inch slices. In a large skillet or wok, brown sausage in hot oil, gradually stirring in onion and cabbage.  Cover and cook over low heat until cabbage is tender. Whisk flour into milk with the mustard and horseradish and stir into the cabbage mixture until it thickens. Sprinkle with cheese and serve warm. Serves six.   

See more of Janet Groene’s galley-ready recipes at BoatCook


WHAT IS FULL-TIME RV LIVING REALLY LIKE? 

 

Our whole story, start to end, warts and all.....
We full-timed for 10 great years. 

 Do you dream of traveling in a complete home on wheels? Living Aboard Your RV, 4th Edition by Janet Groene & Gordon Groene is a total guide to the full-time life on wheels. Should you sell the house or rent it out? Downsize possessions or put them in storage? Too young to retire? See our chapter on ways to make a living anywhere. Kids on board? We cover home schooling and also an exit strategy if and when it's time to settle down. Order at any book store or let Amazon gift wrap and ship it for you.   https://amzn.to/29XFEkq 

 



CAMPGROUND POTLUCK OF THE WEEK

Overnight Salad

This salad is ready to serve when you plunk it down on the potluck table. No tossing, saucing or sprinkling needed.  Your secret ingredient is the seeds you choose. Each imparts a distinctive overtone. Try a different one each time.

Go for color and variety

12 cups bite size  vegetables such as broccoli, sliced zucchini, radish, mushrooms, red and green peppers, sweet onion, celery, cherry tomatoes

½ cup each vegetable oil, cider vinegar and sugar

1 teaspoon  each salt, pepper, dried dillweed

1 tablespoon  poppy, anise, caraway or sesame seeds

½ teaspoon powdered ginger

Put vegetables in an extra large zip-top bag.  Whisk remaining ingredients well and pour over vegetables. Seal bag and chill several hours or overnight, turning occasionally to distribute flavor. 

Just before serving, up-end the sealed bag several times to distribute flavor. Cut a hole in a bottom corner of the bag to drain excess dressing. Then empty salad into a large serving bowl. 

Cook’s note: do not drain dressing into the camper’s  sink or outdoors in the ground. 




LIFESAVER SAUCE OF THE WEEK

Are you serving the same ol’ boiled or canned vegetable again?  Save it with a sauce, sweet or savory,  made in a small nonstick skillet


Sante Fe Sauce

Small onion, minced with 1 clove garlic

1 tablespoon vegetable oil

Small can diced green chilies, drained

8-ounce can tomato sauce 

½ cup shredded Monterey Jack cheese

Sizzle onion and garlic in hot oil until limp Stir in tomato sauce and chilies.When it’s hot, stir in cheese just until it melts to a swirl and spoon over fried corn, grilled drumsticks or a puffy omelet. 

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