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What's the Difference? Blue Corn Meal vs. Harinilla

2008_06_18-CornmealHarinilla.jpgThanks for all the excellent blue cornmeal recipe suggestions, everyone! We think we'll save it for something fun for the Fourth of July--stay tuned...

As we were reading over the tortilla recipe on our bag of cornmeal, we noticed that the recipe called the flour "harinilla."

At first, we assumed that this was a Spanish term for blue cornmeal, but when we were looking up recipes, we learned that there's actually a significant difference!

 
 

Both blue cornmeal and harinilla are both made from the same variety of blue corn. Blue cornmeal is simply blue corn that has been dried and ground, but there's an extra step to make harinilla.

The dried corn is soaked in a lime-juice mixture before being ground into meal. This makes the corn kernels swell while the outer husk loosens and separates from the kernel.

Harinilla also tends to be ground to a finer texture than regular cornmeal.

Harinilla is cousin to masa harina, which follows the same manufacturing process but uses white or yellow corn kernels.

Does anyone know if there's a flavor difference between regular cornmeal and harinilla or harina?

Related: What's the Difference? TexMex vs. Mexican

(Image Credit: Emma Christensen for the Kitchn)

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Ingredients - Pantry, Noodles, Pasta and Grains, cornmeal, blue cornmeal, harinilla, blue corn meal, corn meal, harina, masa

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Comments (8)

i don't know if there is an official flavor difference, but since cornmeal and masa harina are used so differently, in my experience the cooking method makes the end product taste very different. seems like things made with masa harina get a lot toastier, whereas things made with cornmeal are...cornier? does that make sense? :) and sweeter, maybe. but i generally wouldn't substitute one for the other - the finer grind makes masa harina more appropriate for some things and less for others.

posted by akostalas on June 18th 2008 at 9:25am
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ooh, but this sounds insanely good:

http://www.chow.com/recipes/11286

posted by akostalas on June 18th 2008 at 9:27am
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This sounds like the difference between grits and cornmeal to me. For grits the husk would be removed before grinding, I'm not sure if this is what they do to harina.

posted by Kevin from Montreal on June 18th 2008 at 10:07am
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They're not soaked in lime-the-citrus-fruit, but lime-as-in-calcium-hydroxide.

According to Mr. Harold McGee (my favorite food scientist ever), "During the steeping, the alkalinity softens the hull and cell walls throughout, causes the storage proteins to bond to each other, and breaks apart some of the corn oil into excellent emulsifiers (mono and diglycerides)."

I only have a vague understanding of what that means, but I know that you can't make corn tortillas out of cornmeal -- they fall apart and never develop that "doughy" quality. I always think that masa tastes much toastier (roastier?) than cornmeal.

posted by leenwebb on June 18th 2008 at 11:05am
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In my experience, it's hard to compare because the texture is so different, and I've never had both the meal and the harinilla cooked the same way to compare. I wonder if the corn bits left in the cornmeal add a nutty taste. I tried to make corn tortillas out of corn meal once--didn't work at all. It did, however, make a great polenta! Maybe the best comparison I can offer to answer what you're asking is to ask you trying to make a cake out of wheat germ (I can't think of a closer approximation to corn meal) instead of flour (the masa harinilla). I'm not sure if protein development factors in at all the way it does with flour, though.

posted by OneWallKitchen on June 18th 2008 at 12:28pm
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Once I did a little experiment while making fried calamari. One batch was coated in seasoned corn flour (like cornmeal, except ground to the consistency of AP flour), and another with seasoned masa harina, which I had leftover from making tortillas. The batch with masa browned much more quickly, and had a much stronger flavor. This was not so great with calamari, since I was going for a relatively light flavor and crisp texture, but it could work for other things. It follows that It would probably produce a cornbread with a browner crust and more intense flavor. I'm not sure how it would affect the texture.

posted by Nicholas on June 18th 2008 at 8:02pm
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leenwebb is right; it's a process called "nixtamalization," and transforms the corn into a complete protein. More here.

posted by mabisa on June 21st 2008 at 8:41am
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Lime JUICE?!? I can't believe how far off the mark this article is.

posted by hardycook on June 21st 2008 at 5:56pm
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