Showing posts with label Polenta. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Polenta. Show all posts

Monday, May 23, 2016

Bread stuffed cabbage leaves, step by step



Cabbages are cheap and healthy, and when I buy one I can cook with it for a family of four for three days! Usually I start with cabbage rolls, to use the larger leaves, and these can be done in a zillion ways! There is another  good Vegan recipe here, but today for the filling I used stale bread. But first thing first:

Wash the cabbage leaves (the bigger outer leaves, about 15, and steam or boil until soft but not too soft! In the meantime put one onion, one carrot, two celery sticks with leaves and a little parsley in the food processor and mince.


Heat two tbsp of olive oil in a pan and sauté the vegetables, stirring often, for 10 minutes.


Soak some old bread in water, doesn't matter what kind of bread, I had two white bread rolls and some seed sourdough, so I used those. 


Squeeze the water out of the bread and crumble it into the pot with the cooking vegetables. Add a little vegetable stock if necessary and cook everything for about 15 minutes. Stir often and make sure that the mixture is quite thick and not too watery or runny. Adjust with salt and pepper (I quite like to use smoked salt here).


Spread the cooked cabbage leaves on clean tea towels.


Divide the vegetable and bread mixture between the leaves.


Roll up the leaves.


They look so pretty!!


In a capable pan heat some olive oil (about 3-4 tbsp) and sizzle a couple of garlic cloves and 1 heap tbsp of tomato puree.


Pack the cabbage rolls in the pot tightly,


 if there is not enough space put some on top, during cooking they will 'reduce' and you will be able to move them down into a single layer.


Add about half a litre of vegetable stock, cover and simmer on low for about 40 minutes.


Serve hot (I had mine on polenta!)


The leftovers rolls and sauce I wrapped in filo pastry and made a pie for the second day, and on the third day I still had the centre of the cabbage to use (quite a lot in fact, I had it after a few days though, for variety) for a Vegan Cabbage Bolognese Sauce.

Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Tuesday, October 6, 2015

Polenta and Italian lentils - Polenta e lenticchie


 This dish is vegan and gluten free, for the polenta recipe I just use polenta flour, water and salt and follow the packet instructions (real polenta takes about 45 minutes, the instant takes 5!). Usually I make soft polenta, thus adding a bit more water, but packet instructions tend to be for the 'harder' type, the one that you pour onto a wooden chopping board and then cut into slices. My nonna (Grandmother) used to make the hard one, and then she cut it with a string attached to the chopping board: no knife needed and even the youngest kids can do it!

For the lentils, wash the brown lentils with water and then soak for a little. Soaking is not really necessary but I like to do it so then I can give them another rinse and get rid off possible dirt that 'escaped' in the first wash. In the meantime sauté a finely chop carrot, celery stick with leaves and garlic (or onion) with two tbsp of olive oil, add the lentils and cover with vegetable stock. You can also add a tbsp of tomato paste, or some herbs, but this time I just added some chopped parsley at the end of cooking. Simmer the lentils as long as you can, stirring often and adding more water if necessary. Adjust with salt and pepper (and parsley) at the end, add another drizzle of extra virgin olive oil and save hot, with slices of hot polenta.


Nothing to do with the recipe.. just showing off my little pumpkins :-)

Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Monday, September 10, 2012

Polenta cut with a string, like Grandma used to make









Usually I make soft polenta, I always preferred the soft type that you spoon into a plate and cover with a thick wild mushroom sauce or a stew, but memories are coming back of the type of polenta my Grandmother used to make in the North of Veneto: it was dense and stirred with a thick wooden stick in a gigantic pot over a wood fire, and then she pour the hot golden mass on a big wooden tray where it set hard in no time. She kept the polenta in the drawer of the kitchen table so you could get a slice at any time, and attached to the wooden tray there was a piece of string used to slice the polenta, so you didn't even need a knife.


Cutting polenta with a string




Of course I attached a string to my chopping board: I wanted to do the same as Grandma, and I hope that you will like the idea too. Serve the slices with your favorite casserole, or when the polenta is cold just grill the slices or fry them, or cut them really thin and use them instead of pasta for a gluten free lasagna.


Photos and Recipes  by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Polenta with mushrooms



Ingredients for the sauce:
Ingredients

300g frozen mixed mushrooms (or fresh, if you can forage them)
30g dried porcini mushrooms,
a few garlic cloves
olive oil
1 cup tomato passata
salt


The dried porcini mushrooms need to be soaked for a an hour or so.
Sauté the garlic with the olive oil, add the frozen mushrooms, and after five minutes the porcini mushrooms and their soaking water. Add the tomato passata and simmer for 30 minutes. Stir often and add water if necessary. Add salt to taste.

Make the polenta according to packet instructions (instant polenta takes about 5 minutes, standard polenta about 45 minutes).

Serve the polenta hot with the mushroom sauce.



Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Fried Polenta Sushi



Photos and Recipes by Alessandra Zecchini ©

This is easy! Use leftover polenta and roll it up in a sheet of nori seaweed using a sushi mat...just like when making norimaki. Cut into pieces and deep-fry until the polenta is golden. Sprinkle with a little salt and serve.