It’s that time of year, time for sweet corn. You know, knee
high by the Fourth of July and all that. If you aren’t from a corn-growing
state, you might not be familiar with that general rule of thumb that suggests
planted corn should be knee high by early July.
Ohio had an excessively wet spring this year, so corn
growers were late in planting their fields; and in May, they were nervously
calculating the millions of dollars they might be losing this season with each
passing week. In early June, they were finally granted weather grace, and they
scrambled to plant corn.
I can see a corn field from my living room window, and I
remember watching the farmer of that field planting at night by the light of
his plow’s headlamps. This is the same field where goose hunters gather in the
winter to shoot geese. Early on Sunday mornings, I can hear gunshots, and I
know to look out and watch for their honking targets to fall from
the sky. This field offers me a seasonal view of nature in action.
Anyway, corn is plentiful now, although I have no idea how
much the farmers lost this season, if anything. And sweet corn, in particular,
is pretty tasty. I have been buying it a few ears at a time because Husband and
I don’t eat more than three ears or so per meal, and I don't can or freeze anything for winter. When I shuck the corn, I remember how my mother taught me to rip the
husks and twist off the silks with minimal motion. And I remember how my father
scolded me for making a mess. “Why don’t you work over the newspaper?!” he’d whine
because I scattered debris all over the kitchen counter. He said this when I pealed potatoes, too.
I also remember my mother’s fried corn, which is really more
like sautéed corn, but in old-school Southern cooking, everything is fried, and if it isn’t, you
called it fried. There is no written recipe for this technique of cooking
corn—it goes like this: stand a clean ear of corn in a deep bowl and slice off
a layer of kernels, rotating the ear as you work around it and avoiding getting too close to the cob. You don't want whole kernels here. Go back for another
cut and work closer to the cob. Then from bottom to top, scrape the cob with the edge of the knife to release
the “milk.” In a skillet, melt a ton of butter. Really, I don’t think you can
have too much—I made this for a dinner party the other night, and I used a
stick and a half for ten ears of corn. Add all the corn from the bowl and stir in
salt and plenty of freshly ground pepper. Simmer it all over medium to low
heat, stirring frequently, for at least 20 minutes until the corn is tender.
After the dinner party, I had a lot of corn left over, so
last night, I used it to make sweet corn pudding, modifying a recipe from
epicurious.com. It was great—as Husband said, it tasted just like candy. Here’s
how it goes:
4 cups leftover sauteed corn (or frozen corn, but yuck)
4 large eggs
1 cup whipping cream
1/2 cup whole milk
6 tablespoons sugar
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter, room temperature
2 tablespoons all purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
4 large eggs
1 cup whipping cream
1/2 cup whole milk
6 tablespoons sugar
1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter, room temperature
2 tablespoons all purpose flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
Preheat oven to 350°F. Butter 8x8x2-inch glass baking dish. In
a large bowl, whisk together all ingredients but the corn, then stir in the
corn. Pour mixture into prepared dish. Bake pudding until brown and center is
just set, about 45 minutes.
Comments
Yummy!