It doesn't take much thought to arrive at the perfect conclusion:
sail down the coast to next town where there's a supermarket near the
beach. Strange as it seems to go to sea to buy salt I quickly prepare
OB and launch into a flat sea and offshore breeze. I sail large
parallel to the beach and lie back with my weight to windward as the
inevitable gust powers OB to top speed. The town turns up way too
early and I sail out to sea for a few turns on the stiffer wind. The
Mestral when blowing moderately and early in the day usually
foretells a noon calm and subsequent wind shift to the south west. So
as the wind dies I stow the sails and row to the beach, rolling OB up
the sand on a fender.
I dig out some flip flops and coins and cross the beach and the busy
promenade, through an alley, across a square to the small supermarket
where I buy salt, wine, bread and potatoes. I've earned a beer and so
I sit down at an aluminium table on the terrace of a near-by bar. I'm
half way though the beer when a familiar figure comes down the
street. It's skipper MacGyver out to buy a roast chicken for Sunday
lunch. He sits down and we order more beer. He's seen the boat on the
beach and is tickled when I tell him I've come shopping. Another
fisherman turns up, the shopping story is retold and more beers are
ordered.
We could sit here all day but people have wives to get home to and
MacGyver still hasn't bought his chicken. The wind has kicked in
again, now from the southwest. MacGyver walks a way with me,
confessing that although he's spent all his life on the sea, he's
never been sailing. He refuses to tread on the sand and watches me
prepare the boat from the promenade.
I launch OB, row out a short way, quickly lower the rudder and
daggerboard before hoisting the sails. I back the main to turn the
boat, the wind catches and we fly large, winging homeward. OB covers
the two and half miles in half an hour and soon I'm in the kitchen
burying the wrasse in coarse salt, I dig through the snowy layer
until I uncover the eye, left bear this glassy orb will turn opaque
when the fish is cooked through.
I parboil some potatoes then saute them in olive oil. But I'm having
trouble judging if that eye has turned sufficiently pale and
eventually err far on the side of caution. By the time I chip the
fish out of it's salt crust it is overcooked and drier than I'd like.
However, the spirit of the morning pervades and the inexpensive wine
I've bought is surprisingly good. And as so often happens with food
the enjoyment comes from the situation and the story that accompanies
it. Overcooked, over-salty, bony corkwing wrasse never tasted so
good.