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    Broccoli Rabe Polenta Lasagna


    Source of Recipe


    Internet

    List of Ingredients




    2 medium size potatoes (any type is fine)
    4 cups cold water (to cook polenta)
    1 cups polenta meal
    1 bunch broccoli rabe
    salt, pepper and freshly grated nutmeg

    Recipe



    Boil the potatoes in a large quantity of water until done. Remove them from the water and cool slightly. Put the cooked potatoes through a mouli (coarse blade) or ricer.
    Heat 4 cups of water and add riced potatoes. Add the broccoli rabe. Cook about 15 minutes.

    To the same pot containing riced potatoes and broccoli rabe, slowly start adding the pre-measured polenta meal. Stir it constantly with a whisk to prevent the polenta from clumping. The broccoli rabe will start to break down into very small bits through continuous stirring as the polenta cooks.

    Continue to stir with whisk or wooden spoon until the polenta is done (about 25 minutes). It will be done when it starts to pull away easily from the sides of the pan.

    When the polenta is done, season it with salt, pepper and freshly grated nutmeg.

    Have ready three 9" round pans lightly coated with olive oil.

    Spread the cooked polenta equally and evenly into each of the pans. It should form no more than a " layer in each pan. Let them cool.

    Sauce:
    1- 28 oz tin of imported whole Italian tomatoes
    1- 26 oz tetra pack of Pomi chopped tomatoes
    1 large clove garlic
    small handful of parsley (chopped)
    1/2 handful of fresh basil leaves (chopped)
    1/2 tsp of hot dry pepper flakes (or to taste)

    Remove all seeds from the tinned tomatoes.
    Add all of the ingredients to a large saucepan and cook uncovered over a low flame until the sauce is reduced by 2/3's. This will take about 1 hour.

    Between the polenta layers:
    4 Gingrass Spicy Pork and Fennel Sausages: sautéed, cooled and thinly sliced
    6-8 large brown mushrooms: sliced and sautéed with olive oil and tsp of lemon juice (too keep the mushrooms from turning gray-brown.

    Assembly :
    Oil the bottom and sides of a 9" round, 4 " deep soufflé dish or other suitable deep container which is the same shape and size as polenta layers you made.

    Place one layer of the cooled polenta as the bottom layer, cover it with a generous layer of tomato sauce, add a layer of the sliced sausages and mushrooms and top with a few thin slices of asiago cheese. Place the second polenta layer on top of the cheese and continue layering as before. Add the third layer of polenta and cover it with the remaining tomato sauce. Sprinkle a few thin slices of cheese on top. Lay a sheet of foil loosely over the top and bake in a 350 deg oven for 40 minutes.

    Serving:
    Remove from oven and let sit 10 minutes before serving.
    Cut into cake-like wedges. If you have any extra sauce, pass it separately in a bowl.
    A tossed green salad with a garlic flavored olive oil dressing could be served on the same plate.

    Notes:
    Potatoes: When using potatoes to make riced or mashed potatoes, I generally don't peel them. I just scrub the skin thoroughly with a vegetable brush to remove all the dirt. According to Harold McGee's "On Food and Cooking", the "peel contains a disproportionate amount of nutrients considering its share of the weight" so I try to cook potatoes with the skins on as much as possible. The skin of the potato will mostly disappear when it is riced or mashed.

    Polenta: After reading Gary Nabhan's book "Songbirds, Truffles and Wolves" about how polenta caused people to go crazy in the late 1700's and even early into the 1900's, I've served less polenta in our house. Polenta is simply ground, dried corn kernels. Unlike, the American Indian treatment of corn, Italians did not uses any ash, calcium carbonate or other mineral salts to process their corn. They simply grind it which does not release its niacin, the most nutritious part of the corn. If polenta is eaten in large quantities as your staple diet, as it was for Italians for these two centuries, missing out on the niacin can cause a disease called pellagra. This disease eventually causes people to go crazy, hence the phrase il pozzo di polenta (the "man who went crazy from polenta").
    Broccoli Rabe: Use only the top 1/3 of each stalk and pluck off most of the older outer leaves. These parts are stringy and will give the polenta an odd stringy texture if not trimmed off.

    Round pans: To make 3 layers of equal size, I used 3 separate tart pans with removable bottoms. But you could also use a cake ring on top of a cookie sheet. The most important aspect is to use 3 round pans, the same diameter as your deep dish. Alternatively, you could spread the polenta onto one large cookie sheet and trim it down to the right size after it has cooled. The biggest disadvantage of using this method is the amount of wasted polenta. It's best to make each layer as one solid piece rather than patching a layer together so it will stay together nicely when cut into wedges for serving.

    Freshly grated nutmeg: In previous recipes, I have talked about the importance of using freshly grated nutmeg. There is such a difference between the pungent flavor of freshly grated nutmeg and the bottled powder, it is really worth the effort to grate it yourself.

 

 

 


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