Hard Polenta Cakes
- 1 cup milk
- 2 cups water
- Pinch cayenne pepper
- 1 bay leaf
- Kosher salt
- 1 cup polenta
- 4 sage leaves, finely chopped
- 1/4 cup mascarpone
- Extra-virgin olive oil
- 4 tablespoons grated Parmigiano
- In a saucepan combine the milk, water, bay and cayenne.
- Bring the mixture to a boil over low heat and season generously with salt.
- Take the seasoning to the edge of too salty.
- To do this you MUST taste as you go.
- Polenta acts as a salt eraser, if you don't season abundantly here you will never recover from it.
- Once the liquid is at a boil and is seasoned appropriately, sprinkle in the polenta whisking constantly.
- Once the polenta is combined switch over to a wooden spoon and stir frequently until the polenta has become thick.
- Taste the polenta to see if it has cooked through.
- If it still feels mealy and grainy, add some more milk or water and cook it to a thick consistency.
- Repeat this process, as needed, until the polenta feels smooth on your tongue, about 30 minutes.
- Remove the bay leaf and stir in the chopped sage and mascarpone.
- Line a 7 by 7-inch square pan with plastic wrap.
- Pour the polenta into the prepared pan.
- Cover the top with more plastic smoothed onto the surface of the polenta.
- Chill in the refrigerator until needed.
- (All of this can totally be done ahead of time, like yesterday!
- Cool!)
- When ready to use, remove the polenta from the pan and cut into desired shapes.
- Coat a nonstick saute pan with olive oil and bring to medium-high heat.
- Once the pan is hot and starting to smoke just a little, add the polenta shapes.
- Cook the polenta on both sides and finish by sprinkling with a little bit grated Parmigiano.
- Transfer to a serving platter and serve while hot.
- What a corncake!!!
- !
milk, water, cayenne pepper, bay leaf, kosher salt, polenta, sage, mascarpone, extravirgin olive oil
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/anne-burrell/hard-polenta-cakes-recipe.html (may not work)