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Wild Rice Polenta

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Parched wild rice polenta

Coarse ground parched wild rice. If you use black paddy rice you’ll need to sift and grind a second time to make sure the particles are more even.

Wild rice polenta. Breakfast, brunch, lunch, dinner, you name it. This stuff is great, and it cooks in a fraction of the time typical wild rice does. It started with a farmer that ran a CSA that would bring me goodies once and a while when dropping off his boxes of veggies: a couple sunchokes here, some wild mushrooms there.

I didn’t really take him seriously at first, since he once tried selling me the most old, woody, wormy chicken of the woods I’d ever laid eyes on, that would’ve made some unlucky person sick. One day, he brought polenta he’d made from Indian corn that he had grown, dried and ground himself, and that I liked.

hand ground polenta

The last 2 cups of my first batch of hand ground polenta.

 

I bought a gallon bag of cornmeal for 50$ It was mesmerizing. Instead of the typical mono-yellow, my gallon ziploc was flecked with maize jewels in red, orange, and yellow. And it cooked differently, too.

Hand ground polenta flint corn

The line cooks exclaimed at the amount of water it drank during cooking–much more, a ratio of 4 or 5 to 1, and it needed more attention than your average polenta. It needed slow, gentle cooking, and could cook for hours. I cooked a small portion on the stove that night during service, and, just like I suspected, it was the best polenta I’d ever had, and it completely changed how I think about polenta, grits, and things I make with corn.

The next week I bought his entire crop, (2 more bags I meted out for months) and tried to contract with him for the next year so I could get it all for myself. But it wasn’t to be.

Parched wild rice polenta

You want ground wild rice, but not complete flour/powder– a little texture is good too.

Eventually he ran out, and I only saw him a few more times before the restaurant closed, but you bet we squeezed every last ounce of magic out of that flint corn meal. Now that I’d tasted it though, I had flint corn fever, and I needed more. I started wondering If I could grind things myself and make similar dishes until the next year’s harvest came. And that was when I started grinding parched wild rice.

Any wild rice product will work in a pinch

Now, you can purchase wild rice flour, but it’s made from black commodity wild rice, not parched wild rice. Good for some things, but the flavor is different since the grains undergo fermentation during storage (this is why commodity wild rice is jet black and hard) instead of parching, and winnowing to remove chaff. Wild rice flour is also very fine, and for grits or polenta you want some texture. In a pinch though, any form of wild rice or wild rice flour will taste good cooked into polenta/grits, just be prepared to cook it longer if you use black paddy wild rice.

Parched wild rice polenta

Parched wild rice polenta
Print Recipe
5 from 1 vote

Parched Wild Rice Polenta

Yield: roughly 3 cups of polenta, enough to serve 4 people as part of an entree
Prep Time15 mins
Cook Time20 mins
Course: Appetizer, Side Dish
Cuisine: American
Keyword: Parched wild rice, Polenta, Wild Rice Flour

Ingredients

  • 1 cup high quality parched wild rice
  • 2.5 cups milk
  • 2.5 cups strong homemade chicken stock
  • Kosher salt to taste
  • 3 tablespoons unsalted butter
  • ¼ cup grated parmigiana reggiano or grana padano cheese or a domestic parmesan

Instructions

  • Using a grain mill, spice grinder or a highspeed blender, grind the wild rice until coarse/fine.
  • The mix shouldn’t be complete powder like wild rice flour, you want some chunks here and there, which will give some texture to the finished product. If you use black paddy rice though, prepare to cook for as long as an hour to soften up the chunks.
  • Bring the stock and milk to a simmer, then stir in the ground wild rice. Cook the rice on slow, gentle heat, stirring occasionally, until the liquid is absorbed and the mixture has thickened to the consistency of oatmeal. If the mixture seems wet, continue cooking until more liquid has evaporated. Taste and season the wild rice polenta. From here, it can be made ahead of time, cooled, and reheated if you like.
  • Add the parmesan and butter and stir to combine, then double check the seasoning and season to taste with salt, then taste again and adjust if needed-it's not going to season itself. Serve immediately.

Notes

The delicate, nutty flavor of parched wild rice in polenta form is a blank slate for savory and sweet recipes. Mix it with butter and parmesan it's the perfect bed for that roasted pork loin, braised beef or your favorite roast chicken. Make it with milk and fold in some soft herbs and it's a partner for that baked walleye. Cook it with milk, vanilla and cinnamon and it's a fantastic substitute for oatmeal with a little maple and butter of top.
The recipe and proportions here are easily scaled.

Related

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Alan Bergo
I made vegan fish sauce from ramp juice. You tak I made vegan fish sauce from ramp juice. 

You take the pure juice of the leaves, mix it with salt, Koji rice, and more chopped fresh ramp leaves, then ferment it for a bit. 

After the fermentation you put it into a dehydrator and cook it at 145-150 F for 30 days. 

The slow heat causes a Maillard/browning reaction over time. 

After 30 days you strain the liquid and bottle it. It’s the closest thing to plant-based fish sauce I’ve had yet. 

The potency of ramps is a pretty darn good approximation of the glutamates in meat. But you could prob make something similar with combinations of other alliums. 

The taste is crazy. I get toasted ramp, followed by mellow notes from the fermentation. Potent and delicate at the same time. 

I’ve been using it to make simple Japanese-style dipping sauces for tempura etc. 

Pics: 
2: Ramp juice 
3: Juicy leaf pulp 
4: Squeezing excess juice from the pulp
5: After 5 days at 145F 
6: After 30 days 
7: Straining through Muslin to finish

#ramps #veganfishsauce #experimentalfood #kojibuildscommunity #fermentation #foraging
Oeufs de Gaulle is a classic morel recipe Jacques Oeufs de Gaulle is a classic morel recipe Jacques Pepin used to make for French president Charles de Gaulle. 

You bake eggs in a ramekin with shrimp topped with creamy morel sauce and eat with toast points. 

Makes for a really special brunch or breakfast. Recipe’s on my site, but it’s even better to watch Jacques make it on you tube. 

#jacquespepin #morels #shrimp #morilles #brunchtime
Morels: the only wild mushroom I count by the each Morels: the only wild mushroom I count by the each instead of the pound. 

Good day today, although my Twin Cities spots seem a full two weeks behind from the late spring. 2 hours south they were almost all mature. 

76 for me and 152 for the group. Check your spots, and good luck! 

#morels #murkels #mollymoochers #drylandfish #spongemushroom #theprecious
The first time I’ve seen fungal guttation-a natu The first time I’ve seen fungal guttation-a natural secretion of water I typically see with plants. 

I understand it as an indicator that the mushrooms are growing rapidly, and a byproduct of their metabolism speeding up. If you have some clarifications, chime in. 

Most people know it from Hydnellum 
peckii-another polypore. I’ve never seen it on pheasant backs before.

Morels are coming soon too. Mine were 1 inch tall yesterday in the Twin Cities. 

#guttation #mushroomhunting #cerioporussquamosus #pheasantback #naturesbeauty
Rain and heat turned the flood plain forest into a Rain and heat turned the flood plain forest into a grocery store. 

#groceryshopping #sochan #rudbeckialaciniata #foraging
Italian wild food traditions are some of my favori Italian wild food traditions are some of my favorite. 

Case in point: preboggion, a mixture of wild plants, that, depending on the reference, should be made with 5-23 individual plants. 

Here’s a few mixtures I’ve made this spring, along with a reference from the Oxford companion to Italian food. 

The mixture should include some bitter greens (typically assorted asters) but the most important plant is probably borage. 

Making your own version is a good excercise. Here they’re wilted with garlic and oil, but there’s a bunch of traditional recipes the mixture is used in. 

Can you believe this got cut from my book?!

#preboggion #preboggiun #foraging #traditionalfoods
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