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This is a great time of
year. The weather cools off slightly and the harvest is in full swing.
One of the great things about growing up in New Jersey near a farm was fresh
corn. Iowa and Nebraska can use their corn for ethanol and baseball fields with
imaginary players. In the Garden State we just like it straight off the cob. In
Jersey the run of the mill golden variety is O.K., but what we crave is the
Silver Queen or white corn – sweeter and tenderer than the Midwestern
livestock-feed variety.
Contrary to popular belief, corn is not native to
North America but originated in Mexico and arrived here in North America about
8,000 years ago. People are forgiven for believing it is a Native American
Indian crop since it was such an important part of their life and diet. So
important that corn, along with squash and beans, were known as the Three
Sisters. Sisters that should be planted together and never be parted. Without
corn (and friendly native help) our European ancestors would not have survived
one winter. The Native Americans believed corn was of divine origin according to
legend “it was food of the gods that created the Earth.” The Indian word maize
derives from Mahis “source of Life.”
Corn featured prominently in the Colonial diet especially in
the Atlantic States and New England. Corn Bread – although I prefer the Southern
crackling style, rather than the sweet cake like Boston Brahmin version – corn
cakes, porridge, pudding, soups and “chowda’s.” Corn is a part of every
American region’s diet. In the South, without white hominy corn their would be
no grits and without grits their would be no South. Still viewed suspiciously
by most Yankees grits are a wonderful breakfast food and can be prepared in many
savory styles. The Pennsylvania Dutch have fried cornmeal mush, and without
cornmeal, Scrapple would not hold together.
Corn is versatile and comes in so many forms. Movies wouldn’t
be the same without popcorn, Brightly colored Indian corn tells us autumn is
here and winter is upon us.
Corn is a favorite in the culinary world. It adds texture
sweetness and color contrast to a dish. It pairs well with meat, game or fish or
can stand well on its own. It can be smoked, roasted, grilled, boiled, sautéed
or even (grade school lunch flashbacks) creamed (oh the horrors). It can be cut
off the cob or served au naturel.
Husking corn was always the kids’ job when growing up and one
I don’t mind even to this day. The sweet smell and scent when you tear back the
coarse green husks and sort through the golden silk to yield the prize within is
worth any amount of work. For different flavors of corn try this month’s recipes
for Louisiana Corn Maque Choux, Crackling Cheddar Corn Bread, Corn Bisque and
Grilled Steak with Char Roasted Corn and Poblano Chili Purée. As for me, while
your cooking those recipes, I am goanna enjoy some roasted white jersey corn
right off the cob. Until next month Bon Appétit.
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Corn Maque Choux
14 Ears corn scraped for kernels
4 Tablespoons butter
¼ Cup vegetable oil
1 Cup diced sweet onions
¼ Cup sugar
2 Cups vegetable stock or chicken
4 Tablespoons margarine or more butter if you have death wish
⅛ Teaspoon cayenne
½ Teaspoon granulated garlic
½ Teaspoon granulated onion
½ Teaspoon paprika
½ Teaspoon black pepper
½ Teaspoon thyme
1 Cup evaporated milk
2 EggsIn large skillet,
melt butter and oil together. Add corn, sugar, onions and seasonings. Cook over
high heat until corn is tender and crust begins to form (aprox. 12-14 minutes.)
Stir more often as crust thickens. Add one cup stock stirring to remove crust
from pan and incorporate into dish. Cook five minutes stirring occasionally. Add
margarine, stir. Add stock as necessary. Add remaining one cup stock. Cook 15
minutes. Stir frequently. Add ½ cup milk. Cook 10 minutes until almost dry.
Remove from heat. In separate bowl, whisk eggs and remaining milk. Whisk into
corn. Season to taste. Serve immediately. Enjoy 10-12 portions. Two Cajun
portions.
Corn and Poblano Chili Purée
6 Ears corn silk removed in husk
4 Poblanos oiled grilled skinned and chopped
6 Cloves garlic
2 Cups chicken stock
3 Tablespoons cilantro
1 Tablespoon lime juice
Salt and pepper to taste
Grill corn or roast at 375° for 35 minutes. Scrape kernels in sauce pan. Melt
two tablespoons butter. Sweat garlic and add ¼ cup onion. Add diced roasted
chilies. Stir and sweat three minutes. Add corn. Add stock. Bring to simmer.
Purée. Adjust season for smoky flavor and heat add one chipotle pepper. Purée.
Add cilantro. Season with salt and pepper. For extra richness, finish with one
tablespoon whole butter whisked in. Serve with medium rare steak.
Corn Bisque
1 Cup diced celery
1 Cup diced onion
6 Cups corn (save cobbs)
4 Cups milk
4 Cups chicken stock
2 Tablespoons fresh thyme
¼ Cup crisp bacon garnish
¼ Green onions garnish
¼ Cup flour
¼ Cup butter
2 Cups cream
In soup pot, melt butter, sweat
celery and onion. In separate pot, simmer three cloves garlic, three sprigs
thyme, two bay leaves, milk, cream and corn cobs. Do not boil. Strain.
Reserve: Add corn kernels to vegetables. Cook five minutes. Dust with flour. Add
stock. Simmer 10 minutes. Add milk. Simmer another 10 minutes. Purée. Strain through
cheesecloth for smoothest soup. Season. Finish with cream. If desired, garnish
with bacon and green onions. Yields
– eight portions. |
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