Thursday, July 22, 2010

coated and fried polenta


This is quite good. I think I'm on to something here. The remainder of the chilled polenta is dusted with flour, drenched in egg with milk, dredged in seasoned ground corn with flour. Shallow-fried at 350℉ / 175℃ until golden. 

This polenta is heavily seasoned and includes a small can of diced jalapeƱos including the juice. It's hot. The inside is exceeding and surprisingly soft, the outside  is delicately crispy. The honey is very light from orange blossoms. The combination of sweet with hot is very nice. 

It's nice but it's not incredible. But it's not quite there. I intend to keep at it, next time I'll include masa harina, the stuff tamales are made of, a type of ground husked de-germed corn treated with alkali. Masa harina possesses a distinct characteristic aroma and flavor that immediately puts one in mind of Mexico. It's very easy to work with and combines well with other flours. Combining with my own ground corn meal would be combining two types of corn, one corn meal germ-less and processed with alkali, and the other corn meal full grain, husk and grain ground right up in there. The idea would be to capture the best of both corn worlds, along with the tendency to set up when chilled that polenta does,  enabling it to be handled as a solid, if a very soft tofu-like solid. I will persist with the chiles, because they're excellent,  and increase the quotient of Mexican spices, coriander and cumin specifically, plus onion and garlic. 

I do this -- go through phases -- working out the kinks until either I land on something spectacular or abandon the whole thing. I sense something phenomenal on the immediate horizon.  

[If you've seen masa harina on the grocery shelves but were reticent  to try it, I urge you to toss a sack in your cart and then once at home follow the simple instructions on the side of the package fora fast dough. Uses for it will come to mind immediately. A very nice tamale-like casserole is made by layering Masa dough  (masa=mass, dough  / harina=flour, meal) with nearly anything, chicken with sauce, pork stew, beef, ostrich, alligator, craw fish whatever. Cheese or cheese sauce are both excellent with masa. It's hard to go wrong. It can even be the crust and top for pie. It's also incredibly inexpensive so even if you decide you hate it, ha scant chance at that, there'll be no loss in tossing it. Whatever you do, resist an impulse to use cream of mushroom soup if you get such impulses-- that's just admitting defeat before even beginning.]

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