Panettone - Not Your Momma’s Fruitcake
December 24, 2009 – 1:08 pm | 12 Comments

Merry Christmas to all Mamaliga fans! Here’s another try at baking Panettone from The Bread Baker’s Apprentice book for the BBA Challenge. I didn’t blog about it initially since there were some things I wanted to tweak and adapt from his original formula. Quite a few changes.

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Welcome To Mamaliga!

Submitted by Gabi on September 3, 2008 – 1:54 pm11 Comments

MamaligaAs Wikipedia’s entry for mamaliga or Mămăligă (/mə.mə’li.gə/), states

Mămăligă Romanian: Mămăligă, Russian: Мамалыга, Polish: Mamałyga, cornmeal mush is a dish made out of yellow maize traditional for Romania and Moldova. It is better known to the rest of the world in its Italian form - polenta.”

the dish is by no means something that Romanians can appropriate more than just being a traditional food to Romania as well as to the whole Balkanic Peninsula. In fact, even if I am a Romanian (living in Chicago), I can’t point out a dish that strictly belongs to Romania due to the cultural influence of continuous Balkan occupations that ruled the small country during the history.

But what IS (or WAS) Mamaliga after all?

Mamaliga was simply a convenient food that was used by farmers or peasants as a staple food, a substitute for bread. Then it became part of the contemporary Romanian cuisine, (or rather Balkanic cuisine), as well as a creative dish in restaurants.

As simple and innocent it sounds, Mamaliga represents a whole identity concept Romanians refer to, a subject that can slide in the philosophy realm that I’ll restrain getting into it for now. I’ll rather keep Mamaliga what it is: food!

This Mamaliga blog is dedicated to my latest passion - cooking - Romanian cuisine with tangential subjects like culture, Romanian diaspora, music, cooking videos, recipes and such. Hope you’ll find it interesting!

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11 Comments »

  • Gabi, I look forward to learning more about Romanian cookery, history and culture!

  • admin says:

    Sam!

    What an honor! Same here! A pleasure to see your comment!

  • Mamaliga says:

    Hello,
    Great blog! I look forward to try some of this tasty recipes! Any chance you can post the one for ciorba da burta?
    Keep up the good work, I will read you often.
    Best regards,
    Ana

  • Gabi says:

    Thanks Ana!

    Hmm - as weird as it sounds, I detest “ciorba de burta”. I know, I am a renegade Romanian. What is wrong with me??
    I think I found the recipe here

    hope this helps:

    Gabi @ Mamaliga.com

  • Antony says:

    hey, can it be made with corn flour? What is corn meal? I tried it with corn flour but it does not taste the same i had tasted in Romania.

    Thank you so much!
    a.x

  • Gabi says:

    Anthony,

    It can although it might be too fine of a ground for it. The corn meal is basically the same but more coarsely ground. You need some texture to it.
    Hope it makes sense.

  • Virginia Selanik nee Corsatea says:

    Mamaliga much to my surprise appeared in the Scrabble dictionary and I almost flipped to see it because I don’t think it is in Webster’s dictionary…anyhow couldn’t find it on the net…my daughter suggested the author of the Scrabble dictionary must have been a Romanian.

  • Andrea says:

    Here’s a dish I make with mamaliga… called “feli” it was a dish that my mother brought over from Romania. The mamaliga is made as you say, and cut (I use dental floss) Layer the mamaliga, brick cheese, sour cream and grated romano cheese. Bake at 350 for approximately a half hour to fourty five minutes… Really wonderful, my entire family and friends just love it.

  • Gabi says:

    Virginia: Thanks for the comment! The Scrabble dictionary includes Mamaliga! Now that’s something! Frome pure humbleness to glory! No wonder you can find it in 5 star restaurants all over the world!

  • Gabi says:

    Andrea: I am suspecting ‘feli’ refers to the Romanian word for slice (felie or felii for plural).
    That’s a fabulous recipe, and I found a similar one in my DiMedici Italian cookbook, but there the layer had also diced tomatoes (of course, it’s Italian). I suspect the ‘brick cheese’ you mention was real Feta, right?
    Thanks for writing!

  • Andrea says:

    Brick cheese is more firm than Feta, and not crumbly. I live in Pennsylvania, and don’t know if it’s a more local cheese. The appearance is more like Havarti cheese, but tasts quite different, hard to explain.

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