CoinandRelicMan
Silver Member
- #1
Thread Owner
Yeah bum, we used to just drive a country road in WI until we found kids selling just-picked sweetcorn from their front yards. Great stuff!! We would soak the ears for a few hours and then put them on the grill, husks and all. Would also put a tall coffee can full of butter on the grill. When the corn was done you just peeled back the husks and dipped the ears in the butter. Husks made great handles. Yummy!
Believe it or not, another good way to cook it is in the microwave. You can still soak it in water for a few hours before. Leave it in the husks and microwave it for about 4 minutes. You can then remove it and peel down the husks and apply butter OR take a knife and cut the bottom of the ear off. Cut high enough on the ear so that you are cutting into the bottom row of corn or so. You can then grasp the husk and "pop" the ear out leaving all of the silks with the husk. Careful....cob will be hot.
Believe it or not, another good way to cook it is in the microwave. You can still soak it in water for a few hours before. Leave it in the husks and microwave it for about 4 minutes. You can then remove it and peel down the husks and apply butter OR take a knife and cut the bottom of the ear off. Cut high enough on the ear so that you are cutting into the bottom row of corn or so. You can then grasp the husk and "pop" the ear out leaving all of the silks with the husk. Careful....cob will be hot.
Yes! Olathe corn makes its way here! on the coast! I'm waiting!I just love fresh picked sweet corn. I grew up in Iowa and we'd just take a run to the closest road side vendor and pick some up for dinner. Sure is delicious. I now pick it up fresh when I'm over on the western side of Colorado for our states best sweet corn form the town of Olathe, Colorado this time of the year. It's pretty good from that part of the state. They do ship it over here on the front range and sell it in the stores also, but you need to get it quick as it flies of the counter when it's in. I grew some couple years back here in my yard and it wasn't all that tasty.
We creamed ours 3 weeks ago! Our season is over down here. We did approx 200 ears of silver queen and 100 ears of field corn (filler) yielding 6 gallons of liquid gold! Now I'm moving 700 miles away and have to figure out how to keep frozen for 12hrs.
That's all I've ever known it to be called. It's the corn that usually is left in the field until it's dried out and harvested with a combine for animal feed, but if harvested by hand earlier while it's still green it makes the sweet cream corn go a lot further since the field corn is much larger. By itself the field corn taste like sawdust compared to the silver queen when eaten on the cob!field corn?![]()
That's all I've ever known it to be called. It's the corn that usually is left in the field until it's dried out and harvested with a combine for animal feed, but if harvested by hand earlier while it's still green it makes the sweet cream corn go a lot further since the field corn is much larger. By itself the field corn taste like sawdust compared to the silver queen when eaten on the cob!