Admittedly, it’s been a few (several?, o.k., many) days since my last post, but fear not faithful readers – I have been furiously cooking.
This past weekend, our tomato vines bore another 67 plump and ripe tomatoes (that’s a total of 147 for the season, for those keeping score), two more jalapeños, and 5 bell peppers. The vastness of vegetation kept us cooking all weekend –- a few impromptu pizzas, another batch of tomato soup, a pan of eggplant parmesan (eggplant grown by a neighbor down the way), and some killer salsa. But, what I thought I’d share today is this (surprisingly) fabulous attempt at polenta stuffed peppers (peppers from our garden, by the way).
Before I get there, though, I have to tell this story to set the stage…
A week or so ago, Rick, a super friend and faithful reader (a big heido-ho to all 5 of you, by the way!) was pondering the potential pleasures of polenta. His first foray into the world of this creamy corn concoction was fruitful, although (self-admittedly) a little lumpy. Not deterred by a few corny clumps (there’s no use crying over lumpy polenta, now is there? [[ side note –- picture it: Madonna (or Eva Perón, your choice) stepping out upon the balcony of Argentine Presidential Palace, hands raised to the heavens, singing to the onlookers gathered in the Plaza de Mayo, “Don’t cry ov-er lum-py po-len-ta…” ]]), he picked up his whisk, and pledged to take another ride on the Polenta Express. (Sorry, I’m getting a little corny [[ha, ha – polenta, corny, polenta… corn… nevermind.]] ).
We exchanged several e-mails that week… discussing several “polential” possibilities for his sophomore endeavor:
Rachel Ray’s Pumpkin Polenta with Chorizo and Black Beans ?
Martha Stewart’s Parmesan Polenta Wedges ?
Heidi Swanson’s Polenta Fries or Breakfast Polenta ?
I hope Rick will respond to this post with a narrative (and a picture!) of his most recent polenta pursuit. In hopes of providing some inspiration, I attempted this recipe from Food Network [dot] com, with a few minor (and meatier) modification. Here’s what I did:
Polenta Stuffed Peppers
I started by slicing 4 bell peppers (plucked from my garden [[did I already say that?]]) from stem to stamen, and removed the ribs and seeds. I placed the half-bells in a small baking pan that had been lubed with a dose of olive oil (a few tablespoons).
Now is when I probably should have preheated the oven to 350°F (I always forget that part).
I sided three scallions, whites and greens (no need to segregate), and minced three cloves of garlic, two jalapeños, and chopped a handful of cilantro (the more the merrier – about 1/2c). Now this is where I started to diverge from the above prescription… I cut three slices of bacon into quarter-sized pieces, and fried them up in my Calphalin Tri-ply Chef’s pan… curved sides… better for whisking… but any ol’ pan will do. Once the big bacon bits were crispy, I removed them and all but 1T of grease from the pan. [[There really isn’t a pleasant word for grease, is there?]] To the (cringe) grease (end cringe) I added 1T butter. Once the butter had melted and began to bubble, I threw in the jalapeños for a few minutes, then added the minced garlic for another minute or two.
When everything started smelling pretty potent, I added 1c of polenta to the pan, and stirred to coat every finely ground grain with the buttery (cringe) grease (end cringe). Whisk in hand, I added 2 1/2 c chicken broth and 1/2 c milk to the pan of stinky, spicy, greasy crushed corn kernels. [[I’m not a well trained or highly experienced polenta maker, but I have to say… I like this method of starting with the polenta in the pan before adding the cooking liquid (as opposed to steadily streaming the corn meal into the bubbling liquid). I think this contributed to the clump-free consistency of the final dish]].
Whisk. Whisk. Whisk. (love those curved sides!)
As the polenta began to thicken [[the suspense keeping me at the edge of my seat]], I added the following to the pan: the chopped cilantro, scallions, an 8.5oz can of creamed corn (which is why I reduced the prescribed cooking liquid by 1 c), 1/2 c parmesan cheese, and the bacon bits. (If you’re checking against the recipe, I didn’t add the basil or Gruyere cheese, exchanged the cream for milk, and onion for scallions).
Once the polenta had thickened, about 7-10 minutes, I removed the pan from the stove, added salt and pepper to please, and spooned the silky mixture into the prepared peppers. I placed the pan of peppers in the preheated oven and paced the kitchen for 30 minutes, while the peppers percolated (o.k., I know, “percolated” was a stretch).
Pure polenta perfection!
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