Corn aficionados tells stories about bringing camp stoves into the cornfield and bending an unpicked ear into the pot. Perhaps that's taking things to extremes, but -- even
more than other vegetables -- corn is truly best eaten the day it's
picked. When it's fresh, you don't really even need to cook corn: Just
heat it 'n' eat it, as one of our local farmers market characters likes
to say. Look for plump ears (there's no need to peel them; gently squeeze the tassel end to make sure it's full of mature kernels) and a still-damp stem.
I always make a point to eat the first few ears with nothing more than a little salted butter and fresh black pepper. But then, weeks into the season, the inevitable gilding of the lily sets in. Will it be the sinfully rich pasta with corn, sage, and pancetta from the Zuni Cafe cookbook, a silky corn custard with mushroom sauce, a savory corn chowder, a refreshing corn-and-avocado salad? Or perhaps even dessert: Sweet corn ice cream or corn cupcakes with brown-butter frosting, anyone?
And in case you need an excuse for another gadget in your life, check out the adorable Kuhn-Rikon Corn Zipper, or the less-cute (but equally useful) Oxo Good Grips Corn Stripper. Sure, you could just use a knife, but these little gizmos make getting corn off the cob an entertaining summer task.
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