The heat dome this week is parked over most of the country, from the Midwest through the South and up the coast, and there is genuinely nothing worse than being wedged below deck sweating over a burner while everyone else is up top with a cold drink and a better view. Holiday cooking on the water shouldn't cost you the holiday.
So this year we're doing the whole thing out of the cooler. Char the corn in the cool of the morning or the night before, build the salad while you sip your coffee, snap the lid on, and go enjoy the festivities for the rest of the day. This is a grilled corn salad that improves while it sits, so the timeline works in your favor! It's celebratory without trying too hard, it plays nice next to anything off the grill, and it never asks you to turn on heat when the sun already did that for you.
From the Galley Club community: Boater Mike T. reached out asking us to send him a new recipe to try, and he gave this one a go up in Maine. His notes? You can never go wrong with extra cheese. "If you make a mistake and add too much, it's ok!", he says. Hard to argue with that. Catch his full review over on Instagram. Want us to send you an original Galley Club recipe to try? Email us at thegalleyclub@dockwa.com!
Serves 6 as a side · ~30 min · grill (or burner) optional · make-ahead, works out of the cooler
Sweet summer corn with real char, cooled down by lime and rounded out by salty cotija. Bright, smoky, and just spicy enough to keep it interesting. Add a protein and it's dinner.
The salad (treat yourself to some fresh ingredients this week. It's a holiday, after all!):
The Vinaigrette:
This salad goes great with a bottled chili-lime or cilantro-lime vinaigrette — just wake it up with an extra squeeze of fresh lime when serving, since bottled dressings always taste a little sleepy. For a creamier, elote-leaning bowl, use chipotle ranch or creamy cilantro. Shortcut of all shortcuts: good ol' olive oil, lime, and a heavy shake of Tajín. If you want to make the dressing from scratch, we'd recommend the following:
Spiced breadcrumb (totally optional, travels in its own bag):
Optional cooler add-ins: a big handful of massaged kale tossed in at the last second; crumbled tortilla chips instead of breadcrumb. Add shrimp, chicken, chorizo, or beans and it becomes dinner.
Mise en place: Salt the cucumber first and let it drain while everything else happens. Whisk the vinaigrette right in a jar; it doubles as your travel container. The corn can be charred and cut the night before.
How to do it:
This salad is a fantastic side, but it turns into a full meal with almost no extra effort, which is exactly what you want when the cooler is your whole kitchen for the day.
Grilled shrimp (our pick). Sweet char and honey-lime are a natural couple. Toss peeled shrimp in a spoonful of the same vinaigrette, thread them on skewers, and grill 2–3 minutes a side until just pink. The most Fourth-of-July-on-the-water thing on this list.
Chile-lime chicken thighs. The crew workhorse. Boneless thighs marinated in lime, garlic, and cumin, grilled and sliced over the top. Forgiving, cheap, and they hold up warm or at room temp all afternoon.
Grilled chorizo or good sausage. For smoke and richness against all that acid. Char it on the grill, slice it on the bias, fold it through. It leans the bowl toward corn-and-chorizo territory, which is no accident.
Beans, for the no-cook route. Rinse a can of white beans or chickpeas and fold them straight in. Suddenly it's a hearty, protein-packed bowl you built without touching a flame, which is the dream on a heat-wave holiday.
Docktail: a batched Paloma. Tequila, grapefruit soda (or fresh grapefruit and lime), a pinch of salt, plenty of ice. Bright, a little bitter, endlessly sessionable in the heat, and it batches in a bottle so you're not juicing citrus while the dock lines are still wet. The salt and lime shake hands with the cotija and the vinaigrette like they planned it. Leave the tequila out and it's an easy grapefruit spritz for whoever's still on watch.
Wine: a chillable coastal white with citrus and salinity, like Albariño, Vermentino, or a crisp dry rosé for the color. You want enough snap to cut the olive oil and stand up to the char. It should taste like it packed linen pants and a lime wedge.
The whole point of a good boat side is that the hard part happens early, on your terms, and the payoff waits for you. The corn gets its char up front (grill or one hot pan, your call), the dressing is a five-ingredient whisk, and everything sturdy sits dressed in the cooler for hours getting better, not sadder. No fridge to serve it, no second burner, no last-minute fuss. You bring it up on deck already done and keep your hands free for the important work of pouring drinks.
Galley Hack: Char keeps beautifully; crunch does not. Anything toasted turns to mush the second it hits a juicy, dressed bowl, so toast the breadcrumb, cool it, and pack it in its own bag. It rides bone-dry and gets showered on at the table, so the last forkful is as crisp as the first.
Cooking in a heat wave is really just cooking with constraints, and constraints are where the best tricks hide. Char once, or skip the char completely, keep it cold, let time and acid do the labor. That's not a Fourth of July compromise... it's the upgrade! Less time over a hot grate, more time in the shade with a cold drink and your people.
If you're looking for more holiday meal inspiration, check out these recipes:
Wishing you and your crew a happy and safe 4th of July out on the water! Make sure to tag us in your festive galley creations over on Instagram, @TheGalleyClub.
Cheers,
Max and Theresa