Polenta ‘Pizza’ With Pancetta and Spinach

- Total Time
- 45 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
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Ingredients
- ¼cup extra virgin olive oil, more for pan
- ½cup milk, preferably whole
- Salt
- 1cup coarse cornmeal
- Freshly ground black pepper
- 1small onion, chopped
- ½cup (about 4 ounces) chopped pancetta
- 1pound spinach, washed, trimmed and dried
- 1 to 1½cups Gorgonzola cheese, crumbled
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat oven to 450 degrees; brush a layer of olive oil on a pizza pan or cookie sheet. In a medium saucepan over medium-high heat, combine milk with 2½ cups water and a large pinch of salt. Bring just about to a boil, reduce heat to medium, and add cornmeal in a steady stream, whisking all the while to prevent lumps from forming. Turn heat to low and simmer, whisking frequently, until thick, 10 or 15 minutes. If mixture becomes too thick, whisk in a bit more water; you want a consistency approaching thick oatmeal.
- Step 2
Stir 1 tablespoon oil into cooked cornmeal (polenta). Spoon it onto prepared pan, working quickly so polenta does not stiffen; spread it evenly to a thickness of about ½ inch all over. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, cover baking sheet with plastic wrap and put it in refrigerator until it is firm, an hour or more (you can refrigerate polenta overnight if you prefer).
- Step 3
Put polenta in oven and bake for 25 to 30 minutes, or until it begins to brown and crisp on edges. Meanwhile, put two tablespoons oil in a large skillet over medium heat. Add onion and pancetta and cook, stirring occasionally, until onion is soft and pancetta is nicely browned, about 10 minutes. Use a slotted spoon to take onion and pancetta out of pan; set aside. Add spinach to skillet and sauté until it releases its water and pan becomes dry; sprinkle with salt and lots of pepper.
- Step 4
Take polenta out of oven, sprinkle with Gorgonzola, then spread onion-pancetta mixture and spinach evenly on top of cheese; drizzle with another tablespoon olive oil. Put pizza back in oven for two minutes, or until cheese begins to melt and pancetta and vegetables are warmed through. Cut into slices and serve hot or at room temperature.
- Variation: Before you put polenta in oven, top it with thin slices of fresh mozzarella, two or three thinly sliced Roma tomatoes or a bit of tomato sauce, and a handful of fresh basil leaves.
Private Notes
Comments
Spray cooking parchment paper lightly with oil, then put the polenta, so no sticking when done. You can cut into wedges with kitchen scissors and freeze for later.
Very good! Being vegetarian, I substituted garbanzos dressed with olive oil, chile powder and salt and roasted in the oven until crisp.
This recipe doesn't entirely make sense. It tells you to preheat the oven to 450, and then make the polenta and let it sit in the refrigerator for at least an hour. Also, I had bad sticking problems.
Love all the hacks and suggestions. The crust turned out great on a nonstick cookie sheet. I caramelized 1 pound of onions (patience…Took an hour!) and added tons of minced garlic at the end. too good to describe. I cooked down the spinach separately then made sure all the moisture was out and chopped it. Then I cooked the pancetta (and by the way 4 ounces is not enough after the fat cooks down) and added a bit of deli diced ham. Mixed the meat with the onions. Put some of the drippings in the spinach. I can’t stand moldy cheese, so I’m going to use ricotta along the lines of another times recipe for caramelized onions, mushrooms, pizza with ricotta. Everything is on hold as I am going to construct and finish in a few hours. Can’t see how this could go wrong.
As others point out, the preheat time doesn’t make sense. Also, it says 45 minutes to make, but the instructions ask you to chill for an hour. Someone at NYT is not paying attention.
I skipped the first several steps and just sliced a polenta tube into small rounds to make mini pizzas. Way quicker and the kids loved the novelty of the size!