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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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When i was a kid,my grandmother made a great Polenta.Forgot what her
recipe was,but she served it under a gravy or tomato based sauce.I guess you might call it the 'poor person's Spam'.Leftover Polenta was sliced and fried in oil/butter.Would appreciate any of your Polenta recipes. |
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T > wrote:
> Would appreciate any of your Polenta recipes. Here is Luigi Veronelli's recipe, complete with his comments. I think that "rock salt" called for in the recipe is likely to be a misleading translation of coarse (or kosher) salt. Considering that it is used for salting water, I don't think the type matters very much, as long as it is good quality table salt. Victor For a soft and creamy polenta, look for finely ground cornmeal; for a more unrefined, chewy polenta, use coarsely ground cornmeal. Traditionally, polenta is prepared in a large copper pot known as a _paiolo_, but any type of large pan will suffice. Although the cooking time here may seem excessive, don't try and skimp on it. You will end up will hard polenta that is bitter and hard to digest. Rock salt to taste 6 cups (1 1/2 litres) water 1 lb (500 g) cornmeal for polenta In a large pot, bring generously salted water to a boil. As soon as it begins to boil, add the cornmeal very slowly in a thin stream, stirring continuously with a wooden spoon. Continue, stirring constantly and in the same direction, until the polenta is extremely thick (stirring should be difficult) and can be pulled away from the sides of the pan, about 45 to 60 minutes. Serve the polenta warm, or pour onto a wooden bowl to cool. Cooled polenta may be cut into slices, which can then be toasted, fried or grilled. |
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T > wrote:
> Would appreciate any of your Polenta recipes. Here is Luigi Veronelli's recipe, complete with his comments. I think that "rock salt" called for in the recipe is likely to be a misleading translation of coarse (or kosher) salt. Considering that it is used for salting water, I don't think the type matters very much, as long as it is good quality table salt. Victor For a soft and creamy polenta, look for finely ground cornmeal; for a more unrefined, chewy polenta, use coarsely ground cornmeal. Traditionally, polenta is prepared in a large copper pot known as a _paiolo_, but any type of large pan will suffice. Although the cooking time here may seem excessive, don't try and skimp on it. You will end up will hard polenta that is bitter and hard to digest. Rock salt to taste 6 cups (1 1/2 litres) water 1 lb (500 g) cornmeal for polenta In a large pot, bring generously salted water to a boil. As soon as it begins to boil, add the cornmeal very slowly in a thin stream, stirring continuously with a wooden spoon. Continue, stirring constantly and in the same direction, until the polenta is extremely thick (stirring should be difficult) and can be pulled away from the sides of the pan, about 45 to 60 minutes. Serve the polenta warm, or pour onto a wooden bowl to cool. Cooled polenta may be cut into slices, which can then be toasted, fried or grilled. |
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T > wrote:
> Would appreciate any of your Polenta recipes. Here is Luigi Veronelli's recipe, complete with his comments. I think that "rock salt" called for in the recipe is likely to be a misleading translation of coarse (or kosher) salt. Considering that it is used for salting water, I don't think the type matters very much, as long as it is good quality table salt. Victor For a soft and creamy polenta, look for finely ground cornmeal; for a more unrefined, chewy polenta, use coarsely ground cornmeal. Traditionally, polenta is prepared in a large copper pot known as a _paiolo_, but any type of large pan will suffice. Although the cooking time here may seem excessive, don't try and skimp on it. You will end up will hard polenta that is bitter and hard to digest. Rock salt to taste 6 cups (1 1/2 litres) water 1 lb (500 g) cornmeal for polenta In a large pot, bring generously salted water to a boil. As soon as it begins to boil, add the cornmeal very slowly in a thin stream, stirring continuously with a wooden spoon. Continue, stirring constantly and in the same direction, until the polenta is extremely thick (stirring should be difficult) and can be pulled away from the sides of the pan, about 45 to 60 minutes. Serve the polenta warm, or pour onto a wooden bowl to cool. Cooled polenta may be cut into slices, which can then be toasted, fried or grilled. |
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Thank you.
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![]() T wrote: > When i was a kid,my grandmother made a great Polenta.Forgot what her > recipe was,but she served it under a gravy or tomato based sauce.I guess > you might call it the 'poor person's Spam'.Leftover Polenta was sliced > and fried in oil/butter.Would appreciate any of your Polenta recipes. At my house, back in the day, we didn't serve polenta, but did serve corn meal mush (polenta chilled and sliced, fried and covered in butter and maple syrup. Think I'll go make some for the weekend.... N. |
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![]() T wrote: > When i was a kid,my grandmother made a great Polenta.Forgot what her > recipe was,but she served it under a gravy or tomato based sauce.I guess > you might call it the 'poor person's Spam'.Leftover Polenta was sliced > and fried in oil/butter.Would appreciate any of your Polenta recipes. At my house, back in the day, we didn't serve polenta, but did serve corn meal mush (polenta chilled and sliced, fried and covered in butter and maple syrup. Think I'll go make some for the weekend.... N. |
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