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    Home • Recipes • Mediterranean Food

    Creamy Corn Polenta with Parmesan

    Published: Feb 28, 2026 by Jill Colonna4 Comments · This post may contain affiliate links. Read our disclosure policy

    Jump to Recipe

    Creamy corn polenta is one of the quickest side dishes you can make. In Corsican kitchens, where Italian heritage still shapes the cooking, it's served soft and buttery alongside slow-simmered stews.

    This simple version, enriched with Parmesan and butter, is a naturally gluten-free dish and makes a lighter alternative to pasta or rice.

    bowl of creamy corn polenta made with Parmesan cheese and butter and topped with a Corsican veal stew

    Why Corn Polenta Has a Place in Corsican Cooking

    Corsica is French today, but for centuries it was ruled by Pisa and later Genoa. That Italian influence still shapes the island's mountain cooking - especially inland, around villages near Corte, where my husband's family comes from.

    When people think of Corsican polenta, they often mean with chestnut flour. Chestnut trees, often called the "Bread Tree" (l'arbre à pain), thrives in areas where wheat struggles to grow and so once sustained entire communities. See the Chestnut Guide.

    However, maize polenta is also firmly rooted in Corsican kitchens. In La Bonne Cuisine Corse by Christiane Schapira, the only polenta recipe listed is Polenta de farine de maïs (Pulenta de farin' di granonu) - baked simply and topped with tomato sauce and cheese.

    Many Corsican families still prepare polenta in different forms, depending on region and season. On my husband's side of the family (the Colonna clan), they make corn polenta - and serve it creamy alongside hearty winter stews.

    Recently, my belle-maman (I love how Mother-in-law has a much better name in French!) brought us a packet of pre-cooked maize semolina from Savoie. We made it creamy rather than baked, skipped the tomato and served it with my Corsican veal stew with olives. The natural sweetness of the corn balanced the salty sauce beautifully. I finish it with chopped parsley, as we love our greens!

    It's simple food from the mountains; de la terre.

    bowl of plain corn polenta, looking creamy and glossy with cheese, butter and parsley

    What is Corn Polenta?

    Corn polenta is made from ground maize, also called cornmeal. In Italy, "polenta" also refers to the finished dish. In shops you may see it labelled as cornmeal, maize semolina, or semoule de maïs. Best to choose one actually labelled as 'Polenta'.

    The grind determines the texture - finer grinds produce a pasty result, while coarser grains are more rustic. I go for medium, in between.

    If you enjoy corn-based dishes, you might also like my cheesy cornbread with roasted vegetables - also made without sugar.

    What is the Secret to Creamy Polenta?

    quick, easy recipe steps showing stirring cornmeal into boiling water and stirring for 5 minutes until thick polenta, then stirring in Parmesan cheese, butter, parsley, salt and pepper

    For a creamy polenta, the key to the recipe is balance:

    • Use enough liquid (around 1 part polenta to 5 parts liquid).
    • Stir constantly while it cooks.
    • Finish with butter and cheese.

    If your polenta isn't creamy, it usually needs a splash more liquid - and a bit more stirring.

    stirring a creamy corn polenta with a wooden spoon to incorporate cheese and butter

    What Part of Italy Eats Polenta?

    Polenta is traditional in northern Italy - particularly Lombardy, Veneto and the Alpine regions. It's also widely eaten in Corsica, where Italian culinary heritage meets French influence.

    Because Corsica was historically linked to Genoa, polenta also became part of the island's mountain cooking. It remains common in rural villages and family kitchens.

    golden creamy polenta with corn served in bowls topped with a meat stew and vegetables

    What's Best Served with Corn Polenta?

    Creamy corn polenta pairs beautifully with dishes with saucy dishes or slightly sticky roasted vegetables. The extra butter and cheese pair especially well with meat dishes, such as:

    • Slow-cooked stews such as Corsican veal stew. Also good with Boeuf Bourguignon, Coq au vin or a pork roast with apples for something different.
    • Braised meats and sausages
    • Tomato sauce
    • Roasted vegetables - lovely vegetarian dish with a French Tian de légumes, roasted asparagus or sautéd mushrooms.

    It's particularly good with Corsican-style dishes or Italian stews, where savoury sauces benefit from something cheesy and buttery to absorb them.

    bowl of creamy corn polenta with cheese and topped with veal stew and crispy greens
    Stirring a pot of corn polenta made creamy with butter and Parmesan cheese

    Creamy Corn Polenta with Parmesan

    Jill Colonna
    Creamy corn polenta recipe made with medium or coarse cornmeal, butter and Parmesan. A quick, gluten-free alternative to pasta or rice, inspired by Corsican mountain cooking. Ready in minutes and perfect with hearty stews.
    5 from 1 vote
    Print Recipe Pin Recipe
    Prep Time 10 minutes mins
    Cook Time 10 minutes mins
    Total Time 20 minutes mins
    Course Side Dish
    Cuisine Corsican, French, Italian
    Servings 4 people
    Calories 380 kcal

    Equipment

    • Wooden spoon
    • Box grater

    Ingredients
     

    • 200 g (7 oz / 1 ⅓ cups cornmeal Precooked, coarse (see NOTES)
    • 1 litre (1¾ pints/ 4¼ cups) water
    • 100 g (3½oz/ 1 cup) Parmesan cheese (Reggiano) grated from a block
    • 50 g (2oz / 3½ tbsp) butter
    • ¼ teaspoon sea salt and black pepper to taste
    • 1 tablespoon fresh parsley leaves finely chopped
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    Instructions
     

    • Bring the water to a gentle boil in a heavy saucepan with salt and pepper. Rain in the polenta while stirring constantly to prevent lumps.
    • Reduce the heat and stir for 5-10 minutes until thick and creamy (best to follow your packet instructions as cooking times can slightly vary). The polenta is ready when it pulls slightly away from the sides of the pan.
    • Remove from the heat and stir in the butter and Parmesan until smooth and glossy. Season more to your taste, stir in chopped parsley and serve immediately while soft and creamy.

    Notes

    To serve: Best served immediately in bowls with hearty meat stews such as my Corsican Veal Stew with Peppers and Olives. Polenta thickens quickly as it cools.
    Cornmeal: Use medium or coarse precooked cornmeal (best labelled polenta). In France, look for semoule de maïs précuite or farine de maïs. Avoid fine corn flour or cornstarch, which will give a pasty texture. Cooking time may vary depending on grind.
    Gluten-free Recipe: Corn Polenta is naturally gluten-free. Always check packaging for cross-contamination if cooking for coeliacs.
    Baked Polenta: For a more traditional Corsican-style finish, spread the cooked polenta into a dish, top with tomato sauce and grated cheese, and heat briefly in the oven until melted.
    Serves 4 hearty portions or 6 smaller side portions.
    Tried it? Rate itTap the stars above & add a quick comment - it helps other readers

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    Portrait of Jill Colonna, French cookbook author in Paris

    Bonjour - I'm Jill

    Author and home cook in Paris. Scottish and French, I've spent 30+ years in Paris sharing lighter, flavourful recipes with less sugar. No fancy techniques - just real food we eat at home. Plus take away my travel tips to taste France like a local.

    Meet Jill

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      5 from 1 vote

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    1. Joanna T.

      March 07, 2026 at 5:29 pm

      5 stars
      Why did I think polenta was a difficult dish? Thanks to you, now I know better and so happy I tried it. It's so comforting and delicious even on its own--thank you, Jill!

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        March 07, 2026 at 5:41 pm

        So happy you tried this polenta dish, Joanna. Thanks so much for your feedback. It's good on its own but I have to admit I prefer it topped with roasted vegetables or a comforting stew.

        Reply
    2. David Scott Allen

      March 01, 2026 at 3:59 pm

      I didn't know about chestnut flour being used for polenta. How is that? I do love corn polenta and, in fact, we are having roasted mushrooms on polenta this week for dinner and I will use your recipe. Like you, I go for the medium grind; I like a little texture but not too much or too little -- like Goldilocks! Thanks for sharing.

      Reply
      • Jill Colonna

        March 01, 2026 at 5:24 pm

        That's hilarious, David, as I was swithering to say I was Mummy bear on the post that I like it just in between! Yes, chestnut flour is used so much in Corsica and the polenta with it is slightly sweet, just like the corn. I love how you've already planned your dinner this week around it - so thrilled you'll be making this! Love to Mark x

        Reply

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    Portrait of Jill Colonna, French cookbook author in Paris
    Welcome

    Bonjour - I'm Jill

    Author and home cook in Paris. Scottish and French, I've spent 30+ years in Paris sharing lighter, flavourful recipes with less sugar. No fancy techniques - just real food we eat at home. Plus take away my travel tips to taste France like a local.

    Meet Jill

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