jaykellogg
Absent Comrade
I grew up thinking that when you buy Corn on the cob you look for several immature rows at the silk end. The thinking is, if it is mature to the very end it will be less sweet and more starchy. When I lived in PA, the farmers would pick corn in the morning at dawn and by 2:00 they would take the unsold corn and feed it to the pigs. Now I live in the south. The thinking apparently is different here. I don't live near any farms that raise corn, so I buy it at the supermarket. Goodness knows how old it is. Also apparently the farmers here pick it fully mature. My son says when he boils corn on the cob he adds 2 TBS. of sugar to the water. I tried it and it works! The corn is sweeter.
When I lived in PA I had a moderate sized garden and I raised sweetcorn. The (ex)wife would put water on to boil and I would walk into the garden, pick a few ears, and husk it there. When I got back to the kitchen the corn went into the boiling water, man that tasted good! For good sweet corn it is hard to beat Jersey Silver Queen. Good sweet corn goes really well with seafood.
When I lived in PA I had a moderate sized garden and I raised sweetcorn. The (ex)wife would put water on to boil and I would walk into the garden, pick a few ears, and husk it there. When I got back to the kitchen the corn went into the boiling water, man that tasted good! For good sweet corn it is hard to beat Jersey Silver Queen. Good sweet corn goes really well with seafood.