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See below ingredients and instructions of the recipe
8 oz Polenta 3 oz Stoned olives (optional)
----------------------------FOR THE TOMATO SAUCE----------------------------
1 1/4 lb (generous) canned tomatoes Garlic, bay, rosemary, thyme
1 lg Onion -- (or herbs of your choice)
1 tb Olive oil
Bring 1-3/4 pints salted water to the boil. Reduce the heat to low and add
the grain as though you were making porridge: let the polenta trickle
slowly through your fingers and stir the contents of the pan very
vigorously all the time to prevent lumps forming. Cook over the gentlest
possible heat for about 20 minutes, stirring more or less continuously -
like porridge and semolina, polenta is a great sticker. The mixture is
ready when it begins to come away from the sides of the pan, is perfectly
smooth and so thick that your wrist aches from stirring. Away from the
heat beat in 1 tablespoon oil, the stoned olives if using them, and some
salt and pepper. Use the remaining 1 tablespoon oil to grease the interior
of an 11-12 inch frying pan. Turn the polenta into the frying pan, pack it
down smoothly and level the top with an oiled spoon. Set aside for a
couple of hours until the polenta is cold and solid. Loosen it with a
palette knife, turn it out of the pan and cut into 6-8 wedges.
To make the sauce, chop the onion finely and sweat it in the oil for 10-12
minutes. Add the roughly chopped tomatoes and their juices, several cloves
of finely chopped garlic and a little bouquet of rosemary, bay and thyme,
or plenty of well-flavoured herbs of your choice. Let the mixture bubble
away gently for 40 minutes or so, just stirring occasionally, until reduced
to a rich and fragrant sauce. Remove the bouquet of herbs, season with
salt and pepper and add extra fresh chopped herbs to taste.
Fry the wedges of polenta in very hot olive oil or unsalted butter, or a
mixture of the two, for 4-5 minutes on each side until lightly crusted and
heated right through. Serve piping hot with the garlicky tomato sauce, and
with a bowl of olives or grated Parmesan if you wish. In the Veneto
polenta sometimes accompanies small silvery fried fish, or a dish of
Fergato alla Veneziana. Quail or other tiny game birds threaded on to
skewers and cooked on a spit, or a saute of chicken livers, and grilled
sausages, are other good choices but polenta can be served on its own just
as well.
Source: Philippa Davenport in "Country Living" (British), February 1988.
Typed for you by Karen Mintzias
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