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| Ingredient of the Week A featured discussion of one food and cooking ingredient timely to the season |
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Nowadays we call the multi-colored corn "Indian Corn." But it wasn't that way in colonial days.
Back then, all grains were colloquially called "corn." So when the settlers were introduced to maize by the Natives, they called it "Indian Corn" to differentiate it from wheat, rye, etc. There are still echoes of that in such recipes as Rye & Injun, a bread that uses both rye flour and cornmeal. Here's one version: Rye 'N Injun Bread 1 cup boiling water 2 envelopes yeast 1/2 cup pumpkin puree 2 cups rye flour 1/3 cup molasses 1 1/2 cups all purpose flour 5 tbls butter 1 tsp salt 1 cup yellow cornmeal Combine boiling water, pumpkin, molassas, butter and salt and stir in cornmeal. Let mixture stand. Proof yeast in 1/3 cup lukewarm water with a pinch of sugar for 10 minutes. Add to pumpkin mixture, stir in rye and all purpose flours, and combine well. Turn mixture out on surface sprinkled with 1/2 cup flour and knead it well, adding more flour if necessary, for 10 minutes. Put dough in greased bowl and let rise until double in bulk. Punch down, halve dough, and form each half into a ball. Put each ball in a greased 8-inch loaf tin and let rise until double in pulk. Cut a cross in the top of each loaf and bake in a hot (375F) oven for 15 minutes. Lower heat to 325F and bake an addtional 45 minutes to one hour, until loaves are brown and sound hollw. Alternative: Shape into balls about the size of handballs. Flatten into patties. Let rise until doubled, and bake. |
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1/4 cup butter
1 3/4 cups milk, heated 1/4 cup flour 3 cups corn kernels scraped from cobs; half whole half chopped 1/2 tsp salt 3 eggs, beaten until frothy 2 tbls sugar 2 tsp nutmeg Melt butter in saucepan. Stir in flour, salt, nutmeg & sugar. Cook until bubbly. Slowly add milk and cook until thick. Temper eggs and stir them in. Pour into well buttered 2 quart casserole and bake in a water bath at 350F for 45 minutes. |
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Corn was one of the tripods of Native American agriculture known as the Three Sacred Sisters. Corn was interplanted with beans and squash in a synergistic relationship that actually increased yields. Here is a soup that uses all three sisters:
1/2 lb dried baby limas 2 lb pumpkin, peeled and cubed (or 2 cups puree) 5 cups vegetable stock 1 onion, chopped fine 1 large leek, sliced 2 cups corn kernels 1 cup light cream 1/4 tsp white pepper Chopped chives Cook beans. Put the pumpkin, stock, onion, and leek in a kettle. Bring to boil, reduce heat, and simmer until pumpkin is soft. Puree vegetable mixture in blender or food processor, or mash by hand. Return to kettle. Add corn and beans, bring to boil, redcuce heat, and simmer five minutes. Add cream, salt and pepper. When very hot, but not boiling, serve. Sprinkle with chives. |
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I won't tread on Mama's turf and teach you how to make polenta. But here's a way to use any that's left over.
Pour the mush into a lightly greased pan. Let it set overnight. Unmold, cut into squares, and fry until browned on both sides. Serve with sauce of your choice; or cover with sauteed mushrooms. You can, btw, use grits the same way. Fried grits was a mainstay breakfast in the Appalachians. |
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Here is how I basically cook sweet corn on the grill.
Shuck each ear of corn, and tear out a sheet of foil for each one, enough to roll the ear a few times. Place ear on top of foil, add salt, pepper and two pats of butter on top of the ear. Roll the foil over the ear once until the butter is on the bottom. Press down to mush the butter on to the ear. Roll the rest of the way up making sure to close the corners. Roast on your grill on medium heat for about 10 -15 minutes. Done. |
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I love to get fresh corn on the cob from our local vegetable stands. The corn tastes better than store bought and also supports our local economy (i.e. local farmers).
I have also cooked the corn on the grill the way you described. I also have not shucked the ears and placed them on the grill away from the hot coals. This method works well since the natural husk prevents the corn from drying out while cooking. When not grilling I place the corn in briskly boiling water for 3-5 minutes. Make sure not to cook any longer else you will have mushy water logged corn on the cob. I like to use real butter and a little salt on my corn on the cob. I have also used Old Bay Butter on my corn on the cob...absolutely delicious. |
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I just recently moved back home after living in Alaska for 13 years. Many things grow very well in fertile Alaskan gardens but two things that are NOT among them are tomatos and corn. Being raised in the rich farm country of central Illinois, I grew up on July tomatoes and August sweet corn, and count the two among the world's finest delicasies! Once every Spring I would travel home to Illinois and send out invitations to several folks to attend a feast of Alaskan foods- salmon, halibut, king crab, and game meats such as moose & caribou... These gatherings were always popular and fun. The only hitch to being an invited guest was this: Every person who came had to promise to express mail me a shoebox filled with either ears of sweet corn still wrapped in their leaves and silk- or green tomatos- fresh from the garden. In remote far-flung regions of Alaska when it was chilly and rainy in late summer I was the envy of all around me- for I was feasting on Illinois vine-ripened tomatoes and succulent sweet corn!
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One of the things Chubby is leaving out is why those (and many other) crops grow so well in Illinois.
In his part of the world, farmers have about 15 feet of black dirt. Even now, after a century and a half of working the prairie, the loam is rich and deep. Add a little water, a little sunshine, and, voila! They used to say, about that region, that if you planted a nail at night, by morning you'd harvest a spike. And lord, do I miss that soil. Didn't appreciate what I had until moving to Kentucky and trying to grow a garden in a backyard made of pure clay. So pure you can, literally, dig it up and throw it on a potter's wheel. Only other place I know like that is Georgia. |
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Yep KYH is absolutely correct on the red clay of Georgia, but for some reason my garden is thriving (all except squash they are just blooming like crazy and then the small fruits rot and fall off, I have a few zucc. but no yellow it may be the carpet I used as a ground cover) but red clay is so hard to dig by hand Shew-wee it will tucker one out!
The other place in the USA that has delightful rich dark LOAM is near the Everglades in Florida they grow alot of sugar cane in the area, and oh my is the soil just black as tar, I wish I had dump truck loads of it to make a garden! And back to the subject of corn.... I love sweet corn from the field so much I eat it raw, and rarely have enought to cook if I am the one doing the picking! A-H-H it is heavenly fresh on the cob straight off the stalk!!! Last edited by Cook Chatty Cathy : 06-23-2008 at 12:18 PM. |