Polenta

"This is a lesson in how to cook polenta that I have copied from Chef Stefano De Pieri."
 
Download
photo by a food.com user photo by a food.com user
Ready In:
40mins
Ingredients:
3
Serves:
8-10
Advertisement

ingredients

Advertisement

directions

  • Gradually add the polenta to the lightly salted, hot water by allowing it to fall from your hand from above the pot like sand through your fingers.
  • If the water is not boiling, you will be able to stir in all the polenta without lumps forming.
  • As the temperature rises, the flour will integrate with the water and thicken.
  • Stir all the time, and if you have used too much of the flour and the mixture is too thick, add a little water.
  • I taste for salt and perhaps add a little parmesan cheese.
  • When the polenta is smooth and does not taste of raw maize, it is ready.
  • You can use this sloppy polenta with anything that has been braising for a while.
  • Alternatively, pour the polenta into a flat baking dish where it will cool and become firm.
  • At that point, it can be grilled or oven baked for 20 minutes.
  • As a grilled slice, polenta can be used as a base for eggplant slices, goats cheese, rocket, prosciutto and so on.
  • For me, grilled polenta is good with either baked or fried fish and lumps of parmesan cheese.
  • Baked polenta can be dressed with cheese, roasted capsicum and fine pancetta.
  • After you have poured the polenta into a tray, some will remain stuck to the sides of the pot.
  • Let it dry even for a day, and peel these skins off.
  • They are delicious with parmesan cheese.

Questions & Replies

Got a question? Share it with the community!
Advertisement

Reviews

  1. Not a recipe for a beginner. With no indication of what heat to use, how thick is too thick, or any other such details I had to give up with a sore shoulder after an hour of stirring a paste so thick I could stand my wire whisk with the long, heavy handle in it. I glopped it out into the pan I had ready for molding and stuck it into a slow oven to try to bake the raw taste out of it.
     
  2. Fast and easy to make,however I thought instructions are missing one important note that one needs to reduce heat to low just before water begins to boil,otherwise you will end up with polenta splashing all over as you are stirring it and will get one nasty burn on your hand like I did.
     
  3. I wanted a recipe for plain, authentic Italian polenta and this fit the bill! It's the same basic recipe as the one in my Northern Italian Cooking cookbook so I didn't have to add yet another polenta recipe to 'zaar! The only thing I would add to the very clear instructions here is that my cookbook says the polenta is done when it comes away cleanly from the sides of the pot. That may make it a little easier to tell when it's done. Thanks for this great recipe!
     
  4. Such a clear explanation of fool-proof, lump-free polenta. Thank You!
     
  5. I did not know what polenta was until I looked it up.We were poor growing up in Louisiana 60 years ago and we had this for breakfast every morning.A little would go along way.What do you know?Now this is served in fancy restaurants at probably high prices.We called it cush-cush.No wonder I didn't have a clue.lol I can probably make it now with my eyes closed.Good old cush-cush, a popular dish now.Thank you for a taste of my childhood.Oh,if it comes back on you it can burn bad as it is holding a lot of pasty heat, so be careful.
     
Advertisement

Tweaks

  1. Excellent. I did substitute 2 cups of beef broth for 2 cups of water, added some garlic powder and, at the end of cooking, I stirred in about 5 tablespoons of grated Parmesan cheese. It was ready to eat in less than 30 minutes. We ate some hot and then put some in a flat pan, let it cool, then cut it into 3 inch squares and fried it in a tad of olive oil. Made a terrific base for fried haddock filets.
     

RECIPE SUBMITTED BY

Our dear friend Latchy passed away from acute myeloid leukemia in August 2006, after being diagnosed with the disease in October 2005. She was a dear friend to many Recipezaar members throughout the world and she will be greatly missed. Latchy was a great chef; and her speciality was Asian food. She loved wine and cheese, but wasn’t fussed on desserts. She had a great sense of humour and was the life of any party. Latchy was her childhood nickname, and those of us who knew her real name still called her ‘Latch’. We loved her. With the permission of Latchy’s daughter, here is the eulogy read at her funeral (edited slightly to maintain the family’s privacy). Recipezaar and her Recipezaar chat group, the ‘Tipsy Tarts’ were represented at the funeral by Latchy’s close Zaar friends, Mummamills, Chrissyo and Liara: “Latchy, was born in Melbourne in 1939. In her younger years she led a very energetic life and was very involved in swimming and dancing. She had the opportunity to compete in the 1956 Olympics but couldn’t be fussed to do the training and preferred to enjoy herself instead. Latchy met her late husband, Bruce, in Melbourne. Bruce being with the army, they started their life of travel together and extended their family. Their first child was born in Perth, their second in New Guinea and their third child, in Melbourne. They also lived in Newcastle, Sydney, and Singapore before settling in Brisbane. It was in Singapore that her love of cooking, sewing and craft began. Latchy broke military protocol for dining-in nights. Women were finally allowed to attend. One day, Bruce was watching a TV program about sailing around the world. On the program when the wife was told of this plan she said “No Way”, but Latchy said, “When are you going to start?” So, Bruce retired from the army to begin building a 54 foot steel ketch in the back yard, learning as he went. Latchy worked for many years until they finally set off around the world in 1987. They got as far as Malaysia and loved it so much they didn’t go any further. They loved the lifestyle, the people and the food and only came back when Bruce fell ill. After Bruce passed away, Latchy developed her talents, such as painting, and became involved with her family and grandchildren. About 7 years ago, she decided to make her life in Hervey Bay, a beach-side retirement town in Queensland, Australia. She loved the lifestyle, the people and became very involved in the community life. Latchy started volunteering with tax help, then the multicultural respite where she put her cooking skills to use and then with Legacy (an organization which supports the widows of servicemen and ex-servicemen). Latchy opened up a new world by learning about computers and the internet and she met her great friends, the Tipsy Tarts through the website Recipezaar. Latchy was a strong, independent, funny, straight forward and loving mother, grandmother and friend, and we will miss her greatly.”
 
View Full Profile
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Find More Recipes