whb: Feta Chive Cornbread recipe
As the days shorten and temperatures take a nightly dive, my food cravings begin to turn towards fall's hearty soup and stew offerings. It's not that I am done with summer – there are still lots of tomatoes on the counter and the herb garden is bursting with late summer goodness – it's more that I feel the need to diversify a bit. Hedge my bets against the day the sun doesn't shine so brightly.
Maybe it goes with the simmering pot of blueberry habenero chutney, another sure sign of fall, or perhaps it's just absence making the heart grow fonder, but the other night I found myself pulling a container of someoneElse's chili out of the freezer.
A brief digression may be called for here. Around our place, there are several levels of heat in food: warm, hot, hot+, hot++, and georgeHot. The latter refers not to George Clooney but rather is named for a friend who likes really hot stuff – a high point of one of George's recent vacations was discovering a tourist shop in a small Washington town with a shelf full of one of his favorite hot sauces from New Zealand...on sale. someoneElse has been working on making something so hot that George is satisfied. Said satisfaction may involve post-tasting skin grafts on his tongue. I, unfortunately, get sideswiped by incorrectly labeled things on occasion. This chili said hot+, I swear.
Where was I? Oh yes, chili...freezer.
The plan was simple: chili, salad, bread. A quick and easy dinner that could expand to include the friend who called from the road and was invited to join us. I was a happy mage.
Except that the month of the broken oven (now over, thank the flying spaghetti monster!) left me with darned little in the way of bread in the house. Nothing, actually.
Checking the clock, I realized that all I had time for was some sort of quick bread. Chili...quick bread...it must be cornbread!
As the only part of the meal I could claim to have worked on, though, the cornbread had to be special. A peek in the refrigerator uncovered feta cheese. I can work with that.
Google "quick bread" + feta and I see this sentence: "Cornbread is a quick bread." Thinking, "Ah, cornbread, with a reference to feta somewhere - that must be a sign" I clicked on the link.
Kevin's Cheese Bread. Um, err, is that my site?
Is that a sign?
If so, it was off by one post, because I didn't have sour cream, which looks essential to the cheese bread recipe. What ended up catching my eye was Susan's Savory Cheese and Scallion scones, for which I didn't have cream cheese.
(Am I the only person who gets this phone call: "Hi, do you happen to have two and a half pounds of cream cheese in the refrigerator?" Seriously, that was an actual call from yesterday. It's sad that I didn't because there was cheesecake involved and I am sure I could have claimed a slice. note to self: stock up on cream cheese)
Taking my inspiration from Susan's scones and applying it to my original idea of cornbread, I came up with feta and chive cornbread (because I didn't have scallions either!). Baked in a preheated cast iron skillet, this came together in minutes and was ready to eat in under an hour. Which is about how long it takes to heat chili, make a salad and clean enough of the dining room that you can eat at the table.
Oh yes, the chili. The hot+ chili. I mean the georgeHot chili. It's enough to make a mage glad there was a lot of cornbread.
kitchenMage's Feta Chive Cornbread
|
Ingredient |
volume |
weight |
||
|
|
US |
Metric |
US |
Metric |
|
Flour |
1 1/2 cups |
355 ml |
6 3/4 oz |
190 gr |
|
Cornmeal |
1 1/3 cup |
295 ml |
6 3/4 oz |
190 gr |
|
Salt |
1 1/2 tsp |
8 ml |
1/4 oz |
7 gr |
|
Sugar |
2 tsp |
10 ml |
~1/2 oz |
14 gr |
|
Baking soda |
3/4 tsp |
4 ml |
1/8 oz |
3-4 gr |
|
Baking powder |
2 1/2 tsp |
13 ml |
3/8 oz |
11 gr |
|
Feta cheese,
crumbled |
1/2 cup |
20 ml |
3 oz |
85 gr |
|
Chives, fresh,
chopped |
1/4 cup |
60 ml |
1/2 oz |
14 gr |
|
Eggs |
3 |
|
|
|
|
Buttermilk |
1 1/2 cup |
355 ml |
12 oz |
335 gr |
|
Butter |
1/3 cup |
80 ml |
2 5/8 oz |
75 gr |
Preheat oven to 425°f. (220°c)
If you are making this cornbread in a cast iron skillet or similar heavy dish, and I do recommend it, place it in the oven while it preheats. Otherwise, grease a 10" round pan and set aside.
Place flour, cornmeal, salt, sugar, baking powder and baking soda in bowl and stir to combine. Add crumbled feta cheese and chopped chives and toss gently to coat.
Beat eggs lightly and combine with buttermilk. (If you don't have buttermilk, put 2 tsp of white vinegar in a measuring cup, add milk to the 1 1/2 cup mark and let sit in a warm place for 5-10 minutes before using.)
If you are NOT using a preheated baking pan, melt the butter, let cool a bit and add to liquid ingredients.
Add the liquid ingredients to the flour mixture and mix gently until just combined.
If you are using a preheated pan, cut the butter into
several pieces and toss them into the hot pan just before adding the batter.
Otherwise, just add batter to pan and place in preheated oven.
Bake at 450° for 25-30 minutes, until golden brown. Turn out onto rack to cool for a few minutes before serving.
What started as a whimsical answer to 




I'd fix the table spacing but I just imagine it would go badly.
Posted by: kitchenmage | September 08, 2007 at 05:23 PM
Ah yes, if I had even the slightest idea of how to make a table like that, once I posted it, I would never mess with it! Love the photo of the finished bread, just gorgeous! This sounds delicious of course, you had me at "feta."
Posted by: Kalyn | September 08, 2007 at 06:46 PM
I have the chives and the feta....I'm all set.
Ouch for the chili, though. We have a friend who likes super hot! I'm kind of a mild person, myself, wimp that I am!
Posted by: KatieZ | September 09, 2007 at 01:56 AM
Oh my, I can't tell you how much I love this bread. Thank you for sharing! I'll be making it soon.
Posted by: Anh | September 10, 2007 at 02:36 PM
I think George came into a chinese restaurant that I worked at a hundred years ago. We had to make it special extra hot for him! 5 alarm hot.
I love cornbread. I made it just the other day as well to go with yup, chili that I made even though it was dang hot outside. That is a great idea to add feta to cornbread or any other goat cheese would be nice.
Now the blueberry halapeno chuteny, that sounds up my alley, please tell me its as good as it sounds!
Posted by: Riana | September 12, 2007 at 05:13 AM
I think George came into a chinese restaurant that I worked at a hundred years ago. We had to make it special extra hot for him! 5 alarm hot.
I love cornbread. I made it just the other day as well to go with yup, chili that I made even though it was dang hot outside. That is a great idea to add feta to cornbread or any other goat cheese would be nice.
Now the blueberry halapeno chuteny, that sounds up my alley, please tell me its as good as it sounds!
Posted by: Riana | September 12, 2007 at 05:13 AM
Kalyn, we all have our magicks - one of mine is applications. I'd forgotten about your feta(ish) thing for feta.
That hot stuff is nice to a point, Katie2, but after it gets too painful, I'm with you.
Anh, I love people who love my recipes grin Let me know what you think when you bake some.
Riana, Blueberry Habanero Chutney - try it, it's awesome.
Posted by: kitchenmage | September 12, 2007 at 11:34 PM