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Porridge
Porridge is a dish of stewed grains.

Though porridge can be made from any grain, oats are the most commonly used. Whenever someone just says "porridge" in the West, you can assume she or he means "oatmeal porridge" unless otherwise specified. In Africa, porridges are made from pearl millet or sorghum, or from cassava or yam starch.

A famous variety of porridge that doesn't even use a grain is "pease porridge." Polenta is also a version of porridge. Romans ate Polenta, though not made with the New World food of corn, of course. They called it "puls." Mamaliga in Eastern Europe is another version of porridge, and close to polenta.

In Scandinavia, Porridge is more likely to be made of finely-ground grains, even flours, or if whole grain, barley.

Porridge is also very popular in, of all places, Jamaica. Street vendors there even sell it by the cup. Sometimes in place of regular milk being used to garnish it, though, coconut milk is used.

The Scottish preference for oatmeal porridge is the one that dominated in English speaking countries, to the extent that in America, the word "oatmeal" is often used interchangeably with "porridge."

To make Porridge, the grain has to be hulled or broken first, then cooked in a liquid until soft. A wooden implement called a "Spurtle" was traditionally used in Scotland to stir it.

Oatmeal porridge today is usually made with rolled oats, because oats other than rolled oats have to be cooked longer. Some Porridge fans, though, prefer steel-cut oats, which gives a chewier texture. Opinions vary as to whether the oats should be added to the water all at once at the beginning, or a little at a time.

Toppings can get quite imaginative: sliced banana, toasted walnuts, and fancy sugars. Everyone has his or her own preference as to how s/he likes it.

Porridge can be allowed to cool, moulded and then cut up for eating. Many a child, though, has been turned off it by being served by their grandmother bowls of porridge which were too thick, too cold and lumpy to boot.

An award called "The Golden Spurtle" is given annually in Carrbridge, Scotland to the person deemed to be that year's World Porridge Making Champion.

Literature & Lore
One superstition in Scotland held that if you stirred the porridge counter-clockwise, you would call up the devil.

Also called: Bouillie (French) Gachas (Spanish)


Other entries for Porridge
Cream of Wheat, Hasty Pudding, Mamaliga, Nsima, Pease Porridge, Polenta Taragna, Polenta, Sour Cream Porridge, Tartan-Purry, Uppuma, Wheatena

Other entries for Savoury Dishes
Alfredo Sauce, Béaltaine Caudle, Bouchées à la Bénédictine, Bouchées à la Périgourdine, Chop Suey, Curry, Darioles, Favetta, Fondue, French Fries, Koromo, Pancakes, Pies & Tarts, Pizza, Relish Trays, Sandwiches, Soups, Spring Rolls, Sushi, Tenkas, Teriyaki, Timbales, TV Dinners, Yakimono, Zakuska

Other entries for Dishes
Desserts, Dumplings, Ozoni, Salads, Savoury Dishes, Zoni



Related Recipes

Quick Porridge
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