Cheesy Baked Polenta in Tomato Sauce Recipe (2024)

By Yotam Ottolenghi

Cheesy Baked Polenta in Tomato Sauce Recipe (1)

Total Time
1½ hours, plus chilling
Rating
4(608)
Notes
Read community notes

This recipe is quite forgiving in that there’s plenty of wiggle room to play. Use whatever herbs and cheeses you have on hand, for example, adjust the spice levels as preferred, and opt for fresh tomatoes if they’re in season, or chopped canned tomatoes instead of whole. You can also veganize the dish entirely by using a nondairy milk and vegan cheese, adding some nutritional yeast if you like. This hearty main needs nothing more than some lightly cooked greens to eat alongside.

Featured in: In Favor of a More Casual, More Forgiving Polenta

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Ingredients

Yield:4 servings

    For the Polenta

    • cups/660 milliliters whole milk
    • 3garlic cloves, minced
    • tablespoons olive oil
    • Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper
    • 1⅓cups/200 grams instant polenta
    • cup/60 grams roughly grated Parmesan

    For the Sauce

    • ¼cup/60 milliliters olive oil
    • 2small yellow onions, peeled and finely chopped (about 2½ cups/360 grams)
    • 6garlic cloves, minced
    • 1teaspoon red-pepper flakes
    • packed cup/10 grams fresh oregano leaves
    • 2(14-ounce/410-gram) cans (tins) plum tomatoes, roughly crushed by hand
    • 1teaspoon granulated sugar
    • 7ounces/200 grams fontina cheese or buffalo mozzarella, very thinly sliced

    For the Topping

    • cup/30 grams finely grated Parmesan
    • 2scant tablespoons/5 grams finely chopped fresh parsley
    • teaspoon red-pepper flakes

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (4 servings)

890 calories; 54 grams fat; 20 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 26 grams monounsaturated fat; 5 grams polyunsaturated fat; 71 grams carbohydrates; 7 grams dietary fiber; 20 grams sugars; 33 grams protein; 1442 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Cheesy Baked Polenta in Tomato Sauce Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Cut out a piece of parchment paper about 16-by-12 inches/40-by-30 centimeters in size and lay onto a clean work surface.

  2. Step

    2

    Prepare the polenta: Add the milk, garlic, 1½ tablespoons oil, 1 teaspoon salt and a good grind of pepper to a medium saucepan. Bring to a bare simmer, stirring occasionally, over medium-high heat. Turn the heat to medium-low and slowly pour in the polenta, whisking continuously, until completely incorporated and there are no lumps. Cook for 2 to 3 minutes, stirring all the while with a spatula. When cooked, the mixture should pull away from the sides of the pan and be quite thick.

  3. Add the Parmesan, stirring for another 30 seconds to melt. Remove from the heat and transfer the mixture to the parchment paper. Use your hands to quickly shape the polenta into a large cylindrical shape, about 13-inches/32-centimeters long. Use the parchment paper to help you tighten the cylinder and then gently roll the whole thing in the paper, tightening as you go, then twisting in opposite directions at both ends. Refrigerate to set for about 1 hour, or longer if time allows.

  4. Step

    4

    Meanwhile, make the sauce: Add the olive oil to a large, ovenproof cast-iron pan that is roughly 11-inches/28-centimeters wide, and heat over medium-high. Once hot, add the onions and cook, stirring occasionally, for 6 minutes, or until softened and lightly colored.

  5. Step

    5

    Stir in the garlic, red-pepper flakes and oregano, and cook until fragrant, about 1 minute. Add the tomatoes and their juices, sugar, a scant ½ cup/100 milliliters water, ¾ teaspoon salt and a good grind of pepper. Bring to a simmer over medium-high. Turn the heat down to medium and cook, stirring occasionally, for 20 minutes or until the sauce has thickened slightly. Set aside until needed.

  6. Step

    6

    Heat oven to 450 degrees Fahrenheit/230 degrees Celsius.

  7. Step

    7

    Gently unwrap the chilled polenta and transfer to a cutting board. Trim about 1 inch/2 to 3 centimeters off the ends and then cut the polenta into 24 (1-centimeter-thick) slices.

  8. Step

    8

    Top the tomato sauce evenly with the sliced fontina, then fan out the polenta slices, overlapping slightly, so that they’re spiraled to cover the top, leaving a 1-centimeter gap from the edge of the pan. Drizzle the polenta with the remaining 2 tablespoons oil and bake for 30 to 35 minutes, or until polenta is golden in places and the sauce is bubbling. Remove from oven and let sit for 10 minutes to settle.

  9. Step

    9

    While the polenta cools, in a small bowl combine all the topping ingredients. Sprinkle a handful of the topping over the polenta and serve the remaining in a bowl alongside. Serve warm.

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608

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

sarah

Skip to #4 and just buy polenta already in tube form.

Harvey in Oakland

I pour out polenta to cool in a parchment lined sheet pan. It's much easier and less fussy than the roll up hot goop method. When cool cut into squares, or if you must, circles with a cookie cutter. Any leftover scraps are easily reconstituted in a sauce pan over medium heat with mashing, stirring motion.

Denis Pelletier

Canned vs fresh tomatoesI find that out of prime local fresh tomato season (11 months out of 12), good canned tomatoes (San Marzano certainly) are much better than fresh ones. They are simply richer tasting. San Marzano tomatoes are one of the great canned goods. Somewhat like apricots : good quality nectar is always better than the fresh fruit. Can't remember tasting a good fresh apricot. Maybe if you live in apricot country....

Prakash Nadkarni

@Denis: Jacques Pepin agrees with you on the virtues of canned tomatoes. However, you don't have to seek out San Marzanos: store-brand tomatoes, with a little sugar (as in this recipe) and, for those who don't believe it will kill them, 1/4 tsp MSG for 28 oz tomatoes, will do equally well. (Glutamate makes tomatoes savory.) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Marzano_tomato notes that Roma tomatoes, popularized by the USDA, were originally bred from San Marzano stock.

Sue Denim

My preferred method is to pour the polenta into a glass loaf pan and chill, then turn it out and slice. I cut the squares in half, into attractive triangles. You can also use a cookie cutter to press out other shapes. So much easier than rolling up hot mush in paper.

Jennifer

I live in apricot country (the hot eastern edge of the SF Bay Area) and have a Blenheim apricot tree in my back yard. It's 40 years old and has only a couple of major limbs remaining due to brown rot, but it was covered with blossoms earlier this month and will provide us another beautiful crop this summer. They taste sublime but travel very poorly, which is why you haven't had a good one. As will all fruits, the backyard varieties are infinitely better than the commercial ones.

Mary from Terry, MS

Polenta is known as grits where I live. Same exact thing. We southerners giggle when people denounce grits but rave about polenta. Old fashioned traditional stoneground grits is much better than quick-grits and should be cooked for at least 30 minutes for creaminess. BTW, the name "grits" originated with the British who were introduced by Native Americans to ground corn porridge. The word is a derivation of "grist" as in "grist mills".

Warren

Add a side of rave sauteed with garlic and olive oil and you have a delicious meal, though I will use yellow cornmeal which becomes finished polenta in 20 minutes as far as I'm concerned.

Dana

I've been making something similar to this for years, but this looks like a great upgrade. I recommend adding sauteed mushrooms and/or Italian sausage too.

Warren

Ahhh, spell check. That should be rabe, rappini, whatever you want to call it.

Maddie

I was wondering the same thing. I found an article by America's Test Kitchen that tried cooking highly acidic foods like tomato sauce in a cast iron pan, and they found that if you cook it for any longer than 30 minutes, you'll start to detect a metallic taste and it can damage the seasoning on the pan. So for this recipe, I'd go with an ovenproof pan that is not cast iron.

Jane N

I'm surprised you make the sauce in a cast iron pan. I thought it was sacrilege to cook acidic foods in cast iron lest they ruin the pan's seasoning.

Patrice

My family has been making a variation of this polenta recipe which has been passed on to least 4 generations. Our version is much simpler...make a pot of polenta...pour half into a baking dish, place thin slices of fontina and add remaining polenta on top of cheese layer. Laddie whatever sauce (tomato/herbs, butter/sage etc) has been prepared over polenta and bake until sauce bubbling and cheese melted.

Mary from Terry, MS

Grits a/k/a polenta tastes wonderfully creamy when cooked in half milk and half water. Complete it by stirring in a little heavy cream.

Laura

Why trim an inch off each end of the rolled polenta???

Laura

If you have leftover polenta, as I did, this is a quick and easy weeknight recipe. My polenta wasn’t as pretty as in the photo but it came together quickly. I used what I had on hand - crushed tomatoes and little mozzarella balls cut in half. A great dish for a cold winter night.

Elizabeth

Delicious. I didn’t have instant polenta, so went the old school way. Having made it once, I think polenta in a tube would be nearly as good. I followed advice in the comments and spread the polenta on a baking sheet, then popped it in the freezer while I made the sauce. I used a cup to cut out circles. The sauce was quite spicy and I skimped a bit on the red pepper. Next time I will serve that separately, because I am not brave about heat!

Cynthia D

I made the sauce more substantial by adding a pound of bulk chicken Italian sausage. I cooked the sausage first, set it aside until the sauce was done, then stirred it in. I also used tube polenta out of sheer laziness. I followed the rest of the recipe exactly. We loved it. Even picky spouse declared it "a keeper."

Paul

I bake the polenta at 350 on a rimmed baking pan (wet ingredients about 1/4 deep) for about 30 to 40 minutes. Cooled it can be used as lasagna noodles too. I season the polenta with herbs and sometimes with a couple of tablespoons of sauce (gravy in my Italian house).

Robin

Amazing recipe, the polenta bit was perfection and I had a large block of Fontina to use so added a bit extra! Also to up the protein and nutrition as a full meal I added some shiitake mushrooms and beluga lentils to the tomato sauce. Served with a green leaf salad and the Parmesan sprinkle is fantastic!

Sharanya

Added in chipotle peppers chopped as per Amy's suggestion (sorta) and it made the dish much more interesting and did indeed cut through the otherwise bland flavors!

Amy

Made this again tonight. I highly recommend either replacing or mixing half and half this tomato sauce with the smoky tomato sauce in Ottolenghi’s NYTimes recipe for tagliatelle and chickpeas. The combination is divine and the chipotle cuts through the richness of all the dairy in this recipe.

JP

Delicious, although somewhat insubstantial. Next time, I would bolster the tomato sauce with additional vegetables and/or legumes.

rmalak

Made this tonight with garden picked San Marzano tomatoes, phooey on canned being better. Doubled the sauce recipe, gave it a few seconds with the immersion blender and it was divine. Never tried instant polenta, felt a little Nona guilt but got over it.The balance of the sauce will get a second showing in Jamie Oliver’s eggplant Parmesan tomorrow night. The eggplant will be fresh from the garden too. Fresh veggies are a reason to love hot summers in Sacramento.

Janis

As is, this recipe has the prospect of its flavor not quite living up to its good looks. I sautéed a bunch of chopped greens and added those to the tomato sauce with some Great Northern beans I had cooked in chicken broth. I prepped the greens while the polenta cooked “pot-in-pot” in my Instant Pot (hands-free and so easy). This recipe provided ideas for future improvisations, but I probably won’t bother trying to shape polenta this way again.

Laura

If you use instant polenta, the recipe amount is about half the called for liquid. However, if you don’t realize this until your food is cooking and you are furiously adding a little liquid at a time, you’ll have a firm polenta ready to turn out and roll up easily in the parchment paper.

Gary M

This turned out great , I made these changes as others suggested: Polenta poured into a parchment lined pan, cut into squares then triangles , I don't use instant polenta, 1 cup organic polenta to 4 cups water used the listed adds. On the sauce , added 4 sliced mushrooms, half a red bell pepper diced and 2 T of tomato pasted instead of sugar.

Angela O

Veganized this recipe and it was wonderfully delcious. Used almond milk in place of cow milk. Added 2 fresh tomatoes, celery and red pepper to sauce . Did not use parmesan . Should have use nutritional instead. For melting I used vegan sliced cheddar becuse it was all I had . Served it with side of garlic stir fried rapini

Leah R

I added a bag of frozen (thawed and drained) spinach to the sauce to add some nutrition and served it with link sausage on the side and really enjoyed the flavors and textures. Definitely use Fontina because it adds a tang that fresh mozzarella doesn't have.

CJM

This was good, but will cut 1/4 olive oil in the sauce to 2 tablespoons next time We had to skim off about 2 tablespoons of oil before it could be served.

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Cheesy Baked Polenta in Tomato Sauce Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to making polenta? ›

All it requires is a little forethought. The trick is to presoak the polenta in its liquid for several hours before cooking it. This step helps fully hydrate the cornmeal before you even start cooking it, which in turn drastically cuts down on the cooking time.

Is polenta better with milk or water? ›

In Italian cooking, polenta is made with water. Some more Americanized recipes will prompt you to start with milk or stock, but (in my opinion) they are wrong. Hydrating your polenta with water will allow the flavor of the corn to shine, and it will allow each individual grain to absorb salt more readily.

What sauce is good on polenta? ›

Polenta is the perfect side, thanks to its unique texture and golden color. This recipe focuses on the rich flavors of the tomatoes themselves, which pair quite naturally with polenta.

What do Italians do with polenta? ›

In Italy, polenta is often eaten family-style from a large platter or wooden board, allowing guests to serve themselves at the table. Polenta, slow simmered ground corn, is eaten in many ways, as a main or side dish. It can be served simply, with just butter and cheese, or topped with sauce.

Is polenta good for the bowels? ›

Polenta contains both protein and fiber to help a person feel full. Fiber is also recommended to keep the digestive system functioning properly, to feed healthy gut bacteria, and to prevent constipation.

Is polenta more healthy than pasta? ›

Polenta is often used to substitute grains like pasta and rice, as it's lower in calories and is a source of complex carbohydrates. Because complex carbohydrates aren't broken down as quickly as simple carbohydrates, it's ideal for individuals watching their blood sugar levels.

Is polenta healthier than mashed potatoes? ›

Polenta is high in protein and fiber, but compared to rice, pasta, or potatoes, it's much lower in calories and fat, yet still provides a source of complex carbs that are much-needed for energy. So, why not to try polenta out for your next meal?

How do you make polenta taste better? ›

Cooked veggies are the perfect way to add hearty texture, richness, and flavor to creamy polenta. Try pairing it with roasted broccoli, Brussels sprouts, tomatoes, butternut squash, or cauliflower, with grilled mixed vegetables or zucchini, or with sautéed mushrooms.

What to serve with cheesy polenta? ›

The best side dishes to serve with polenta are sautéed mushrooms, roasted vegetables, pulled pork, beef steak, caramelized onion, chicken salad, pest pork chops, Italian sausage, braised greens, tomato and basil salad, grilled chicken, caponata, and shrimp scampi.

How do you make Martha Stewart polenta? ›

In a large, deep saucepan, bring 5 cups of water to a boil. While whisking constantly, add polenta in a slow, steady stream. Reduce heat to medium, cook until thickened, stirring occasionally with a wooden spoon, about 15 minutes. Remove pan from heat and stir in cheese, heavy cream, and butter.

Is polenta the same as grits? ›

Grits are either stone-ground (aka old-fashioned grits), which are ground with the germ intact and have a coarse texture, or quick cooking, which are more finely milled. Polenta is typically made from medium- to coarsely-ground flint corn and tends to have a flakier texture than grits.

Do you have to stir polenta constantly? ›

Instead of constant stirring, a quick, vigorous initial stir—always with a whisk, not a spoon—quickly releases enough starch from the corn that little stirring is needed after that. Then the grains should cook low and slow—no supervision needed.

Can you overcook polenta? ›

Can you overcook polenta? Yes, you can overcook polenta but the good news is that it is easy to correct. You can adjust the texture again with more liquid until your ratio is perfect.

How to make polenta more flavorful? ›

Polenta is usually made with water or milk, which results in a more neutral flavor. Next time you make it, try using a liquid with a little more personality: stock, either vegetable or otherwise, and coconut milk will both add depth to the final dish.

What makes the best polenta? ›

In Italy, you'll find polenta made from yellow cornmeal or white cornmeal, though yellow is more common. The best polenta is made from stone ground corn, which comes in a coarse, medium, or fine grind. Cornmeal labeled polenta is usually a coarse-grind, but you can make the dish with a medium or fine-grind.

How to stop polenta from going lumpy? ›

Gradually Add Polenta to Boiling Liquid: Start with the liquid (usually water or broth) at a gentle boil. Slowly whisk or stir in the polenta, a little at a time, in a steady stream. Whisk continuously as you add the polenta to prevent lumps from forming.

Why does my polenta fall apart? ›

After placing the polenta into the pan, don't touch it until a crust has formed. When the crust forms it will release from the pan. If you play with it, you won't get a crust to form and it'll come apart.

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