Semolina Flour in Cornbread

I like my own savory, cheesy cornbread and use baking mix in place of all-purpose flour - then I don't have to worry about whether my baking powder is good. I recently acquired a small bag of semolina flour and wanted to know if I could use it in place of regular flour, or whether I'd have to use a mixture of regular flour and semolina, or if this is just a bad idea to use semolina to make cornbread.
 

We have an old Italian bakery in town that uses it to make bread. The bread has a yellowish color to it and a slightly dry texture.

I would add 1/4 cup semolina flour to 3/4 cup of AP flour for every cup of flour called for in the recipe and use it up a little at a time. I would not use it as a substitute for the cornmeal in the recipe.

Good luck!
 
Deb, flour is not needed. Your choice, use it or not. Google some recipes

You said you usually used a "mix" ;you said it relieved you from worrying if your baking powder was fresh. So, we can assume baking powder was already in the "mix", correct?

Well now you're not using the "mix", instead you will use your semolina (flour) together with your cornmeal.

What's missing? Baking powder! Maybe salt and whatever else was in that "mix".

IMHO, the semolina flour you acquired will give you tough cornbread. But let us know.
 
I made a basic batter for cornbread with 1 cup of yellow cornmeal, and 1/2 cup of all-purpose flour and 1/2 cup of semolina flour, 2 tsp of baking power, 1/2 tsp baking soda. Wet ingredients are 1 egg, 1 cup of buttermilk (or milk with a tablespoon of white vinegar added), 1/2 cup veg oil and 1/2 cup olive oil. It came out okay (by my standards). I don't like "sweet" cornbread - too much like cake. I spice it up with other seasonings I have on hand. I am not adverse to using curry powder, cayenne pepper, cumin, coriander and almost any spicy spice in any combo. I have also used flax seeds and pumpkin seeds in the batter. I also usually add some shredded cheddar cheese. Not to everyone's liking, but I know what I like.
 
Sounds good. Sounds like using AP flour works instead of self-rising flour or the addition of baking powder. I don't like cornbread sweet either. Your other spices sound nice. I like it with cheese onion and peppers.
 
I made a basic batter for cornbread with 1 cup of yellow cornmeal, and 1/2 cup of all-purpose flour and 1/2 cup of semolina flour, 2 tsp of baking power, 1/2 tsp baking soda. Wet ingredients are 1 egg, 1 cup of buttermilk (or milk with a tablespoon of white vinegar added), 1/2 cup veg oil and 1/2 cup olive oil. It came out okay (by my standards). I don't like "sweet" cornbread - too much like cake. I spice it up with other seasonings I have on hand. I am not adverse to using curry powder, cayenne pepper, cumin, coriander and almost any spicy spice in any combo. I have also used flax seeds and pumpkin seeds in the batter. I also usually add some shredded cheddar cheese. Not to everyone's liking, but I know what I like.

A cup of fat? Wow.
 
Here's a recipe for a nice southern cornbread. No flour, and the only added fat (2 Tbsp.) goes into the cast iron skillet.

http://www.food.com/recipe/good-eats-creamed-corn-cornbread-alton-brown-265601
We don't use the corn unless we are making Mexican cornbread. A real southern cornbread has no flour and just a tbl of hot oil as the rest is in the bottom of the hot cast iron skillet. My mother used no sugar but did use buttermilk. We also use this cornbread to make old fashioned dressing at Christmas and Thanksgiving.
 
I use Jiffy when I'm cooking for one.

Corn_Muffin_Mix.jpg

I place a 6" cast iron frying pan, with a tablespoon of oil, butter or bacon fat, in the oven set at 400F. Pour the Jiffy mix into a bowl, add 1 egg, a 1/3 cup of milk and stir to form a lumpy batter. I pull the skillet out of the oven and pour the hot fat into the batter, give it a quick stir and pour the batter into the hot pan. The pan goes back into the oven for about 18 minutes, give or take a minute. It's not exactly a pan of cornbread but it's not bad considering the price and the effort involved.
 


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