Advertisement

Polenta Practice

Share

Perhaps I can help you on a couple of points regarding your article on cooking polenta (“Polenta: A Stirring Tale,” Jan. 13). My family is from Trentino in northern Italy, where I have spent an enjoyable portion of my life. Polenta is our basic food. We eat a great deal of risotto also, some pasta, but from fall through spring, the mainstay is polenta.

We also have a modern house, but in the kitchen is the requisite wooden stove for cooking polenta (it also heats the kitchen nicely on snowy nights). Polenta is always cooked in a deep copper pot, which I also use here, although the stove is gas. Newlyweds are generally given a new trisa , or faggio as it is called in Alba, which is a sturdy stick made out of beechwood with which to stir the polenta. Rarely would anyone use a spoon for the stirring.

Mixing the grain into the boiling water is always a problem, but one which our area does not experience. That is because we mix the grain with a small amount of cold water first so that it is wet before it goes into the pot. The result is that it will not clot into lumps. Try it sometime.

Advertisement

I completely agree that instant polenta does not work. I have tried many of the types now sold in Italy, and they have no flavor or character. Besides, I enjoy setting my guests around a platter of cheese and a bottle of wine in the kitchen while I do the stirring. It is a good place for conversation.

MICHAEL MASE

Signal Hill

Advertisement