Pressure Cooker Polenta Recipe In 5 Minutes – GardenFork Cooks


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Best Polenta Recipe hands down. Cook Polenta fast in your pressure cooker. I double this recipe so you can have polenta for dinner, and then let it set in a loaf …

25 replies
  1. Larry Early
    Larry Early says:

    I came up with my own recipe for the microwave and now I want to try it in the pressure cooker. I've always known this as mush and used to make this for my brother and sister. He' deceased now but I still like it once in a while myself. I like the looks of this recipe and I'm looking forward to making this in the cooker.

    Reply
  2. Susan Kelland
    Susan Kelland says:

    Thank you, that was really well explained. Some years ago I found a recipe which was great too. You added crystallized ginger to the mix before frying it just roughly chopped. I have never found it again, but it was fabulous! Have you heard of it?

    Reply
  3. Lawrence Hallman
    Lawrence Hallman says:

    I have some friends from up your way who come down for a visit on occasions.  If you serve them "grits," they gag, but if you sprinkle a little grated cheese on the grits and call it "polenta," they cannot get enough of it.  It is all in you mind.  Dried raw grits (correctly called grist mill corn) that is not pre cooked needs to be soaked overnight like you do dried peas.  If you do that, they will cook the next day in about 15 minutes.

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  4. Lawrence Hallman
    Lawrence Hallman says:

    Eric, please take the time to look at this website: http://www.ansonmills.com/biographies.  Polenta and grits are about the same.  There are two different kinds of corn that are used for either.  Polenta is a little coarse while grits go down a little like oat meal.  Basically, they are the same thing.  It was so funny watching you "discover" polenta!  Try making cheese grits with garlic, salt, pepper and butter!  I think you might take to it.  Keep in mind that this is all a secret best kept in the South!  So do not go spreading the secret around! 

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  5. Scott Hauser
    Scott Hauser says:

    Let's do Duck (s) in a caja china. I have one, but have also built two.
    Have done 12 ducks at a time—resembles Peking Duck–GREAT !
    You are accomplished at carpentry and producing great videos.
    You can do this—-or borrow mine.

    Reply
  6. joesph zappadianlo
    joesph zappadianlo says:

    Hey Erick have not wrote to u in a wile this is Joe I use to live in Brooklyn  a long time ago so you might know who I am ok Polenta I remember it very well My parents are from Italy and my mother made this lots of time I  gave it a name being she made it so much I called it dynamite cake cause after a wile it sits in your tummy  like oatmeal  she did the frying bit also put  sauce on top and Grated cheese  but the cheese is the best to put  take care hope you was able to dig your self out after the storm …. Joe I now live in Missouri

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  7. Jill Madigan
    Jill Madigan says:

    Why does the PC method take an extra cup of water 4-1/2 c as opposed to 3-1/2 c. for both stove top and microwave methods.  I have a really cool polenta pan that just might beat the PC on my stove,

    Reply
  8. Teresa H
    Teresa H says:

    "What snow.? I don't have snow on my nose." The labs are too cute. Yeah, I'm from south Mississippi and was thinking the same thing, you need some eggs over easy, some ham with ham gravy, pat of butter and some good old southern biscuits. Don't even need to eat for breakfast, good for supper too. Great video. God Bless.

    Reply
  9. Katie Cooks and Crafts
    Katie Cooks and Crafts says:

    I have only made polenta on the stove top and it turns out much thicker than that, I would think it would scorch but using 4.5 cups of water for a thinner consistency looks like it works perfectly in the pressure cooker.  Always love good pressure cooker recipes/videos.  Thanks!

    Reply

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