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Polenta

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TasunkaWitko View Drop Down
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    Posted: 04 May 2011 at 13:29

Polenta

A staple of northern Italy, polenta is a mush made from cornmeal. It can be eaten hot with a little butter or cooled until firm, cut into squares and fried. Polenta is sometimes mixed with cheese such as Parmesan or Gorgonzola. It can be served as a first course or side dish and makes hearty breakfast fare.

·  1 lb. coarsely-ground corn meal
·  8 cups water
·  1 tsp. salt

Measure water into a large pot; add salt. Heat water to boiling.

Add corn meal to boiling water in a very slow stream, stirring constantly with a wooden spoon to keep lumps from forming. Don't let the water stop boiling.

Continue stirring as polenta thickens, about 30 minutes, adding small amounts of boiling water if necessary The longer you stir, the better the polenta will be; finished polenta should have the consistency of firm mashed potatoes). Polenta is done when it peels easily off sides of pot.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Boilermaker Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 10 May 2011 at 21:08
Very similar to our cornmeal mush, http://foodsoftheworld.activeboards.net/cornmeal-mush_topic741_post8396.html?KW=mush#8396which is popular in the Midwest and here in the South. 
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Hoser Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 11 May 2011 at 04:39
Originally posted by Boilermaker Boilermaker wrote:

Very similar to our cornmeal mush, http://foodsoftheworld.activeboards.net/cornmeal-mush_topic741_post8396.html?KW=mush#8396which is popular in the Midwest and here in the South. 


The only real difference between mush and polenta is the fact that if you decide to call it polenta, you can charge some poor schmuck $11.95 for it in your restaurant! LOL
Go ahead...play with your food!
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote dla69 Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 22 May 2011 at 05:43
That's not quite true. 

Polenta is served from the pan, often with flavorings, instead of turned into loaves and then fried.

I love them both, but I don't think of them as the same, or even close.  Maybe it's because I think of mush as sweet (maple syrup) and polenta as savory.

Hmm, now I'm sitting here thinking about some corn pone (similar to bread but sweeter, moister and stickier) with honey and milk.  I just ate breakfast and now I'm hungry.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote gracoman Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 March 2015 at 12:40
I am a great fan of polenta and find it a remarkable dish for many reasons.

Polenta
- Italy's Other National Dish
From Life in Italy

It often happens that a nation of people will identify themselves as a distinct culture by their traditional foods. For Italians, it always seems both pasta and pizza are the cornerstones of what makes Italian food "Italian". However, there is a staple food of Northern Italy that does not get the recognition, but certainly makes up the third aspect of the Italian food trinity: Humble, yet versatile and satisfying polenta. Italian cuisine has been characterized by being the food of the peasant and just as poor Southern Italians worked the fields with their bellies full of pasta, Northern Italians subsisted on little more than polenta for centuries. In this way, polenta is truly an Italian national dish, and may have a history much more ancient than either pizza or pasta.
 
Origins of Polenta
Polenta has been dubbed by some "Italian grits" and there are similarities to the hominy grits that is so popular in the Southern United States. In this way polenta, grits and other "mush" type foods share a common link as the food of poverty. However in ancient times, what would later be called polenta started out as one of the earliest and simplest foods made from grain. Made from wild grains and later from primitive wheat, faro (a popular Italian grain), millet, spelt or chickpeas, the grain was mixed with water to form a paste that was then cooked on a hot stone. In this way, early polenta may have pre-dated leavened bread, since yeasts were often hard to come by and milling techniques were not yet refined.

 
History of Polenta
In Roman times, polenta (or as they knew it, pulmentum) was the staple of the mighty Roman Legions and would eat it in either a porridge or in a hard cake like form, much like today. By this time, milling techniques had greatly improved and the course grind favored for pulmentum had mostly been replaced by farina, a flour. However even though bread was widely available in Ancient Rome, the legions and the poor alike preferred the simplicity and tastiness of their early polenta. For the next few centuries, nothing changed in the history of polenta, much like the living conditions of those who ate it most - the peasantry. However things would slowly improve for polenta, if not the peasantry - the first was the introduction of buckwheat into Italy by the Saracens.
 
This nutritive grain - known as grano saraceno is still popular in Tuscany for making polenta near and adds a distinctive flavor that was widely favored for centuries. Buckwheat polenta would eventually fall out of favor when a crop from the New World arrived in Italy sometime in the 15th or 16th centuries known as maize. The new crop was a perfect match for the farms of Northern Italy, where landowners could grow vast fields of corn for profit, while forcing the peasantry to subsist on cornmeal. This new form of polenta was abundant, but seriously lacking in nutrients compared to earlier forms of the dish.
 
However cornmeal polenta is very tasty and filling, and therefore continued to be a staple long after conditions improved for the poor. Amazingly, this simple act of greed on the part of landowners helped shape a major component of Italian cooking. From then on most of Italy's polenta consumption was made from corn, which ranges in color from golden yellow to the Veneto's white polenta.
 
Making Polenta
In the world of cooking, few dishes have the stigma attached to their preparation as polenta does. Much of Italy's polenta is still made the tedious old-fashioned way using a round bottom copper pot known as a Paiolo and a long wooden spoon known as a Tarello. The process to make a soft polenta involves a 3 to 1 ratio of water to polenta and constant stirring for up to 50 minutes. Today in a modern kitchen with a good heavy pot, polenta preparation is not so painstaking, but it still does need attention and occasional stirring. Cooking polenta using a double boiler method is even easier. There are now even instant polenta - but the less said about it the better. When finished the polenta can be served in this soft form or poured out onto a slab and allowed to cool to form a cake.

Serving Polenta
The key to the popularity of Polenta is its sheer versatility. It can be served with nearly anything and that is why it has spread to every corner of Italy, always making use of what is locally grown or raised. Soft polenta is often a replacement for bread during a meal, or instead of the pasta course, served with butter and cheese and possibly shaved truffles. Polenta can also be served as a contorno (side dish) to regional meat dishes such as Osso Bucco, waterfowl and fish. Polenta in cake form can be layered with Parmigiano-Reggiano cheese and baked.
It can also be grilled and served with Bruschetta-like toppings like mushrooms and tomatoes. Leftover polenta is also very versatile as it can be fried and covered in butter, melted lardo, or cheese. In many ways, polenta reflects the people who have relied upon it for so long - those long suffering peasants that had to make do with what they had. They have left Italian cooking the legacy of an eminently flavorful, filling and versatile dish known as polenta.

Polenta Gourmet
Defying its humble origin now polenta is moving toward a new audience, the gourmet food restaurant and a more high end class of clientele.

Last night I put together a Polenta Pizza using a recipe from the original Moosewood Cookbook.  I've been making this pie since the early eighties.  It is a good example of polenta's versatility so I thought I'd share.

Make some cheesy polenta and bake in a 9" pie plate at 375° for 30 minutes


Sauté minced onion, sliced green bell peppers, mushrooms and garilc in a bit of EVOO and spread on top


Add sliced tomatoes, fresh mozzarella, basil, thyme, oregano, crushed red peppers, parmesan,and a drizzle of EVOO.


Bake for another 20 min at 350°F


Slice


And serve




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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote drinks Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 02 March 2015 at 13:43
I have to agree, just corn meal mush with a fancy price tag and a bunch of hype.
Indians were able to live on corn because they used lime water to process it into masa for tortillas which made it a more complete food than just cooked corn meal as the Europeans used it.
The indians also used just about any varmit that they could catch in the food, even using shield beetles, alive, as a taco filler and so rounded out the food values.
The southern grits are a more balanced food as it is almost always served with milk and or butter and corn bread is often eaten crumbled up in a glass of buttermilk, clabber or milk right out of the faucet,aka, cows teats.

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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote TasunkaWitko Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 23 March 2015 at 21:33
Looks great, gMan - I could really go for that polenta pizza, and I like the idea. 
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