Seriously Meatless: Polenta Triangles Stuffed With Spicy Greens and Cheese
Serious Eater Michael Natkin of the vegetarian blog Herbivoracious drops by every Wednesday to share a delicious recipe to expand our vegetarian repertoire.

[Photographs: Michael Natkin]
I typically serve polenta one of two ways—fresh from the pot or cooled, sliced, and grilled. But for today's dish, I pre-stuffed it with a mixture of spicy greens and Caciocavallo cheese so the oven and broiler could do the work of the grill. The beauty of this recipe is it can all be made ahead, and you can work on the greens while the polenta is simmering.
Italians rarely serve greens lightly sauteed. They tend to like them fully hammered. Here we cook them down with garlic, chili flakes, and red wine. The chard stems are sliced thin and thrown into the saute.
The mixture of beet greens and chardworks great, but feel free to substitute kale, collard greens, mustard greens or any other greens you fancy. I served the polenta with roasted beets, then made a sauce from the liquid left over from cooking the greens reduced with saba (also known as mosto cotto, or the cooked grape syrup rendered in the first step of balsamic vinegar production).
This recipe serves a crowd—you can easily cut it in half. To serve the polenta in neat triangles, you'll need a shallow pan of the appropriate dimension.
Polenta Stuffed with Spicy Greens and Cheese
- serves 8 -
Ingredients
11 cups water
2 2/3 cups coarse-ground cornmeal (polenta)
6 tablespoons olive oil, divided
1 onion, thinly sliced
3 cloves garlic, thinly sliced
1 bunch chard, triple washed, stems separated, stems thinly sliced and leaves sliced 1/2" wide
1 bunch beet greens, triple washed, stems discarded, leaves sliced 1/2" wide
1 cup red wine
2 teaspoons chili flakes or more to your taste
8 oz. caciocavallo + more for garnish (aged provolone is a good substitute, or try smoked mozzarella)
Salt
Procedure
1. Bring the water to a boil in a large soup pot and add 5 teaspoons of salt. Whisk in the cornmeal in a thin, slow stream. Stir continuously for 2 minutes. Cover and reduce heat to a lively simmer. Stir one minute out of every minutes for a total of forty minutes, then uncover and cook for five more minutes. It should be creamy and thick at this point. Keep it hot until you are ready to assemble the dish, otherwise it will set up.
2. Meanwhile, in a large skillet, heat 2 tablespoons of the olive oil over a medium high flame. Fry the onion and garlic for 1 minute. Add the thinly sliced chard stems and saute for 3 minutes. Add the leaves. It is ok if they are still wet. You may have to add them in batches to get them all in the pot, waiting til the first bunch "melts" a little. Add the chili flakes, red wine and 1 teaspoon of salt. Stir, cover, reduce heat to low and cook until they are fully tender. Taste and adjust salt and chili flakes.
3. Grease a 13" x 18" half-sheet pan (aka jelly roll pan). Pour in half of the polenta and spread it into an even layer. Top with the sauteed greens (leaving behind any excess liquid) and the Caciocavallo cheese, distributing them as evenly as possible. Cover with the remaining polenta and use a spatula to form an even layer.
4. Cover with plastic wrap and allow to chill until the polenta has set up firm, at least a couple of hours.
5. Preheat the oven to 400°F. Slice into squares and then triangles. Brush on the remaining olive oil. This will seem like a lot but we are trying to encourage the top to crisp up. Bake for 20 to 30 minutes until heated through (a thermometer should read at least 160°F.) Now turn on the broiler and cook until you've got nice brown spots all over the top, watching carefully to avoid burning.
Add a comment:
Previewing your comment:
HTML Hints
Some HTML is OK: <a href="URL">link</a>, <strong>strong</strong>, <em>em</em>
Comment Guidelines
Post whatever you want, just keep it seriously about eats, seriously. We reserve the right to delete off-topic or inflammatory comments. Learn more at our Comment Policy page.
If you see something not so nice, please, report an inappropriate comment.

3 Comments:
This looks fantastic and I will definitely give it a try. I love the idea of the slightly bitter greens, creamy cheese and moreish polenta. Great idea.
Joanne Roach at 4:02PM on 09/30/09
This looks great! Thanks for sharing it. I've recently gotten into cooking with polenta. My last attempt was grilled polenta with mushroom ragu: http://cucinadibella.typepad.com/cucina-dibella/2009/08/grilled-polenta.html. I love finding new ways to make polenta!
seditalia86 at 11:54AM on 10/01/09
These look absolutely fab. Such a good idea to sandwich the cheese and veggies right into the polents. I made these Parmesan Polenta Steaks and topped them with veggies, but it would have been such a good idea to stick them right inside before frying. Love that you baked them as well, I'm not sure if frying would work for the sandwich.
Thanks!
BigGirlPhoebz at 12:11PM on 10/02/09