What do you eat when you're a larger-than-life polar explorer, kayaker, dogsledder, educator, homesteader and climate advocate? Like many people, Will Steger enjoys a good apple pie, meatloaf and ice-cold watermelon.
It's where he ate those favorite foods that sets the Minnesota-born explorer apart.
He devoured the melon on the banks of the Mississippi River after a motorboat adventure from Minnesota to New Orleans at age 15. The meatloaf was stuffed into sandwiches that would last him through three days of hitchhiking and hopping freight trains, his preferred way to get around as soon as school let out for the summer.
And his beloved apple pie, a gift from his mother Margaret, dropped from a resupply plane delivering provisions to the North Pole. The frozen pie sprung out of the box and rolled down the runway. Steger chased it until it landed in a snowbank.
"That thing was destined to make it," said Steger. "It was thoughtful, as she always was."
Stories about the sustenance that powered Steger through his awe-inspiring achievements in exploration accompany recipes for these dishes and more in "The Steger Homestead Kitchen: Simple Recipes for an Abundant Life."
There are the homemade granola bars he'd pack for students on his Outward Bound expeditions. The warming stew he would serve his friends who come up once a year to help him cut ice from nearby Picketts Lake and haul it to the icehouse at his Ely homestead as an alternative to refrigeration. The gingersnaps — one of many recipes from his mother's spiral notebook — that he puts out for guests on retreat at his isolated conference center, the Steger Wilderness Center.
This transporting collection, which Steger wrote with his niece Rita Mae Steger and local cookbook author Beth Dooley, is as much a cookbook as it is an argument for eating whole, clean and local during a time of environmental strife.