A Foodie's Guide to Hurricane Supplies
The folks who write this stuff are probably nice enough, and they mean well. But when the H-word strikes and you've got no power and it's a million degrees outside with two-million-percent humidity and cable TV is gone and you can't update your Facebook page and the line at the gas station stretches all the way to Jupiter, you really think spooning tuna out of a can or stuffing down a molten PB&J is going to make you feel any better?
As People of Food, we demand more. And, godammit!, we intend to have it. So here are a five foods that will keep your taste buds from being trashed along with your neighborhood. Until the power comes back on life will still suck a Chevrolet through a straw, but at least you'll eat well.
• Individual packets of mayo, mustard, catsup and relish. You can by these things by the gazillion on-line for cheap. Not only will you never have to suffer through a dry, mouth-gumming sandwich again, but you can mix them with other shelf-stable ingredients to create something resembling real food. Mayo, mustard, lemon juice, garlic and olive oil makes a reasonable Caesar salad dressing. Mayo, catsup and relish makes a decent Thousand Island. And you can blend them with lots of other ingredients too. (See below.)
• Fresh herbs. One of the two easiest ways to add flavor to foods, a few pots of fresh herbs (rosemary, basil, oregano, thyme, chives, etc.) require only a little water and sharp knife for chopping. Stir the finely chopped herb(s) of your choice into mayo for tasty sandwich spread or mix it with canned or bagged chicken or tuna, some chopped onion and celery, maybe some chopped nuts and/or raisins for better-than-decent chicken-slash-tuna salad. Or skip the mayo and add minced garlic and olive oil for a quickie pesto.
• Dry spices and spice blends. The other easiest way to add flavor to foods. For variety, mix curry or jerk or Cajun or Moroccan spice blends with mayo in place of herbs for sandwich spreads, salad dressings or protein salads. If you've got a charcoal or propane grill or one of those cheap little burners that runs on butane canisters (and if you don't, see: doctor, head examined), sprinkle them on grilled veggies to chop and toss with couscous and garbanzo beans for a Moroccan-style dish or with rice and pigeon peas for the vague approximation of something Jamaican.
• Spanish dry-cured chorizo. These potent little thumb-sized sausages don't need refrigeration until opened (which is fine because you probably don't have it anyway). Despite their small, they pack an awesome flavor punch and can goose bland starches such as Minute Rice and couscous like nobody's business. Toss cubes with cooked rice, chopped tomatoes and veggies, a pinch of saffron (if you have it) and maybe some chicken-in-a-bag for a semblance of paella or skewer slices with veggies and grill.
• Rice noodles. Unless you have a gas stove (and assuming gas hasn't been shut off to your neighborhood), boiling pasta is way too energy-inefficient to make sense. Rice noodles, however, need only a good soak in hot tap water to make them edible, and they absorb any flavors you add to them like a sponge. Toss them with soy sauce, rice wine vinegar and sesame oil, then top with grilled veggies and whatever canned or bagged protein you can handle. Or shred some raw veggies, add shelf-stable tofu and noodles, then wrap them all up in a lettuce leaf for an impromptu handroll.
And don't forget a glass or three of crisp, chilled white wine to accompany your meal. After all, we do have standards here.
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