Below decks

36:02.0N
50:27.1W A
modest 101 miles, but we’re satisfied with the day’s run given that we had eight
hours or so of very light winds. But today started very well and we’re making
excellent progress in a following wind of 15 to 20 knots. Our heading is still
generally northeast, working our way towards the upper edge of the Azores High
that hasn’t been in its usual place but does now seem to be
forming. The
balance of today’s blog will take you behind the glamorous exterior of Neroli
and her voyage; beyond the glossy facade: relaxing in the sunshine, enjoying
tropical drinks, composing Haiku, sampling the cuisine and enjoying peaceful
sleep in the luxury guest quarters. We’ll see past the evening studies of the
Ecliptic under the guidance of renaissance man Paddy Smyth; we’ll look beyond
new and ingenious ways of tying two bowlines simultaneously under the keen eye
of veteran sea salt Allan Collison; we’ll look deeper than practical exercises
in shipboard stowing, cleanup and organization led by new age skipper (or “chief
coach” as he likes to style himself) Charlie Tongue. Let us
instead take you into the working portions of the vessel, into the galley for
example, where the cook struggles to produce meals worthy of the over-the-top
descriptions Charlie used in recruiting Paddy and Allan to this project. To give
you some insights into the conditions that we have to work in, allow me to share
with you a few highlights from my first shipboard attempt at scrambled
eggs. The
conditions were not untypical of this voyage: Neroli was close-hauled on port
tack. And while that means, in layperson’s terms, that the boat is generally
tending to lean to the right as you look forward, this isn’t guaranteed.
Occasionally (quite often, actually, on this particular day) some combination of
autopilot, man on watch, wind and/or wave produces a surprising and unheralded
move in the other direction. To add
to the fun, encounters with large waves produce an additional kind of unexpected
movement in the form of a discontinuous jump that may be (and usually is) in any
direction at all, including up and/or down. If one is holding a container, you
and the container may move sharply (because one is holding fast to a part of
Neroli’s interior, as directed by the old maxim, “one hand for yourself, and one
for the ship”) while the contents of the container (if open) may not feel
constrained to move in the same direction. And if a further sharp movement in
another (e.g., horizontal) direction occurs, then those contents are very
unlikely to make it safely back to the container. So
there was I, following the “one hand for...” maxim, although in my case, and
especially when cooking, several more appendages than two hands are called into
play. A hip is wedged into the corner between the stove and the working surface;
a knee is braced against the counter opposite; an elbow is wrapped round the
post conveniently located nearby, with that hand holding a saucepan; the other
arm has an egg nestled in the crook of the elbow (creative, yes?) with the hand
clutching the box of eggs in an attempt to keep that under control while
breaking the first egg into the bowl in which I am attempting to assemble the
eggs prior to scrambling. The
skipper has thoughtfully equipped Neroli’s galley with an extensive range of
non-slip pads. The idea is that you put one of these on the working surface,
then place a container on the pad. The pad won’t slide and nor will the
container. Unfortunately, as you will very soon learn, other degrees of freedom
are usually available. I
managed to break eight eggs into the bowl, and placed it securely (as I thought)
on a non-slip pad. As I attempted to free up a limb to reach past the stove to
open a drawer to extract a fork to beat the eggs (and, by the way, another hand
is needed here to hold the drawer open while getting out the implement) Neroli
rolled sharply. (Charlie doesn’t like me to use phrases like “lurched wildly” or
I would have done so here.) 3M can
be proud: the non-slip material performed superbly. Neither mat nor bowl slid.
But as the angle increased, most of the contents of the bowl emptied neatly into
the sink. Disaster, you might think...but no (not yet) because at least the eggs
are still somewhat constrained and perhaps a fast rescue can be effected. But
there’s not a moment to be lost: the eggs are just about to slide down the
centrally-placed drain (since for just a moment the vessel is level).
Digression:
another blog may have to address this whole thing about working with sinks that
are moving oddly and unpredictably and are therefore not amenable to the usual
emptying arrangements, not to say pouring scalding water from a kettle that goes
off sideways because what your brain says is vertically down into the teacup is
actually 35 degrees to the horizontal since the whole galley (kitchen) is
leaning and you have no exterior frame of reference (a horizon would be nice but
it can’t be seen because of the lean – all you see is water racing by just
outside the window, looking as if it wants to get in). (End of
digression). But
then Neroli returned to her previous angle and the eggs slopped to the side of
the sink, out of reach of the drain. A mild curse, a couple of dropped
implements, a risky move with no hands attached to Neroli and I scooped up the
eggs (aided by the quality that before I had never appreciated, that if you get
one bit of a raw egg, the rest tends to follow) and I had let’s say 75% back in
the bowl along with a few coffee grounds and some scraps from Paddy’s breakfast
bowl (actually, it must have been Allan’s bowl because Paddy doesn’t leave any
scraps – but is a bit sensitive when we call him names like the Marine Vacuum
Cleaner aka the Gannet). Luckily
three more eggs remained in the box and these were very soon added to the bowl
to make up the deficit. Determined to avoid a recurrence, I moved the bowl
downhill to the outer edge of the kitchen, safely away from the sink and with
the added security of the bulkhead (wall) to wedge the bowl
against. Now I
had to light the stove, a process requiring at least three hands: one to hold
the lighter; one to turn the knob and hold it pressed in for several seconds;
and of course one more to keep me from flying in any one of the several
available directions. As ignition occurred Neroli repeated her earlier move,
this time with a charming little extra twist that was just sufficient to bounce
the bowl away from the bulkhead and enable it to tip again. I watched
helplessly, lunging fruitlessly with the gas lighter (though what effect that
was supposed to have I can’t imagine – perhaps instantly bake the escapees into
immobility) as the raw eggs exited the bowl pretty much in their entirety,
briefly marshalled themselves, and then began to flow across the working surface
towards the albeit distant sink. For a
moment I thought I had a chance to corral them again, using a couple of sponges,
a dishcloth and my hands. They had at least half a metre to go across the top of
the chest-type fridge. This being a marine-grade piece of equipment, I was
confident that it would be equipped with seals around the industrial-weight lid
that would keep out the Atlantic, let alone a few wayward uncooked eggs. No such
luck. As the leading edge of the viscous mass reached the lid it hesitated only
briefly before taking a sharp downward turn and flowing swiftly and silently
into the fridge, the aforementioned property of connectivity of raw egg ensuring
that the entire mass, yolk, white and all, took the trip. I
uttered several short words of Anglo Saxon origin, mostly beginning with earlier
letters of the alphabet (credit: Winston Churchill). I
stood silently for a few moments picturing the scene within the carefully stowed
fridge and considering what effect eight raw eggs would have as they flowed past
the contents and accumulated at the bottom. I
started to raise the lid of the fridge. As I did so I could hear the first-class
passengers chatting with the skipper as they relaxed over their morning cup of
tea. I let the lid drop and reached for the porridge oats. |