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POLENTA DINNERS

Thursday and Friday, October 22 - 23, 2009

We frequently get the request to repeat a special dinner we offered in 2006 to celebrate polenta. Just last month, we harvested Trentino Red Flint corn grown here in California, which definitely merits a whole new polenta celebration.

Polenta is a meal meant to be eaten communally. Traditionally, corn porridge was cooked on the fire in a paiolo (copper pot), poured out onto a wood board, formed into a firm, rounded cake and set in the middle of the table. La Polenta is served with simple to exalted ingredients that run the gamut from saucy meats, poultry and wild game, vegetables, mushrooms, fish stew, to olive oil and cheese. Following in the tradition, we will offer wooden boards with a round of polenta for each table sufficient for the size of the party, with a variety of accompaniments from which to choose.


Menu For Polenta Dinners
~ 2009
~


Antipasti
Insalata di carne cruda of Watson Farm lamb loin,
Chanterelle mushrooms, and Parmesan cheese

Salad of fall fruit: apples, pears, figs, grapes, and
pomegranates with walnuts and aceto balsamico

Last-of-the season Dirty Girl Farm dry-farmed Early Girl
tomatoes, green olives, pine nuts, and thyme

Shaved salad of Brussels sprouts, Regina olive oil,
Pecorino Romano cheese, and black pepper

Oliveto salumi

Garden lettuces vinaigrette

Polenta Offerings
served on wooden boards for the table

'Floriani Red Flint' (Rominger Brothers, Joseph's Best)

Yellow Dent (Joseph's Best and Central Mill)

Polenta di noccioli (Yellow Dent and hazelnut flour)

Polenta torta with either FontinaVal d'Aosta or Crescenza cheese

Polenta Accompaniments

Lepre in civet alla Piemontese: juniper-braised wild hare
finished with chocolate and Cognac

Charcoal-grilled spiedini of Paine Farm pigeon and
Hoffman Farm quail with red wine giblet sauce

Jones Farm rabbit braised with Cipolline onions and vin santo
Spezzatino of Watson Farm lamb alla cacciatora with anchovies and rosemary

Stew of spicy Willis pork, wild fennel, and farro sausages
with pork skin rolatine

Arrosto morto of Bill Niman Ranch turkey
with sunchokes and aged aceto balsamico

Scaloppine of Magruder Ranch milk- and grass-fed vitellone
with Valdostana cheese fondue

Sauté of Morrow Bay spot prawns, Oliveto smoked salt cod,
and Mediterranean mussels alla siciliana

Liberty duck leg confit alla veneziana with fresh shelling beans

Braised artichokes with tomato, garlic, and parsley

Roasted Corno di Toro peppers bagna cauda with walnuts

Romanesco broccoli and cauliflower with Castelmagno cheese

Ragoût of roasted Red Kuri squash and wild mushrooms

Plates

Polentina with green vegetables

Polenta pasticciata with wild boar ragù and cavolo nero

Gnocchi di polenta taragna with Savoy cabbage,
pancetta, sage, and Taleggio cheese

Stradette: Piedmontese cornmeal pasta with
roast Hoffman Farm hen, pancetta, and sage


In the 1970s, most regional corn varieties in Italy were lost as more people turned to an industrial raised corn. This Italian Red Flint corn, we call Trentino, came from a family garden in Trento and was discovered by our friend William Rubel, a food historian. We think this particular Red Flint corn originated in the Caribbean.

Anson Mills in South Carolina grew out the first crop in 2006. It was milled fresh, kept cold, and air expressed to Oliveto for our first Polenta Dinners. Our relationships William Rubel and Glenn Roberts of Anson Mills, along with this initial foray into growing and milling corn, quickly evolved into our first meeting at Oliveto to explore the possibility of establishing a grain economy here in Northern California. This year's batch of corn, grown for us in Woodland, CA by the Rominger Brothers, is from seed provided by William. It was harvested on September 15, 2009.

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