Vegetarian sweet corn recipes please?
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1 | Pak 'N Save practically giving them away yesterday & they're so fresh, bought around 10 & I'm the only one who likes them. Tough bikkies for rest of family, they're seasonal & cheap end of story. Has anyone suggestions apart from fritters/salad/buttery cobs please that might appeal? Thanks hezwez - 2018-01-23 20:06:00 |
2 | Chilli con carne,with corn instead of beans,yum. lilyfield - 2018-01-23 21:30:00 |
3 | You could blanch them and freeze them if you have the room in your freezer cottagerose - 2018-01-23 21:51:00 |
4 | Thanks both of you. hezwez - 2018-01-24 09:57:00 |
5 | I used to make a delicious recipe years ago calle d Summer Stew by Deborah Madison. When I stopped eating dairy I replaced the cream in it with coconut cream. It has red pepper, tomato, corn, courgette, basil is what I remember and it is served on penne or other small pasta. It is absolutely yummy. Must have it again soon. frances1266 - 2018-01-24 10:10:00 |
6 | Ummm - sweet corn is vegetarian. Cook it, add butter and salt and there you go. If no-one else eats it then cook it, take the kernels off and freeze it in small portions to add to soups, stews, make fritters or a big corn frittata (uses eggs of course) Or you could check out "Bite" - our own homegrown recipe site: uli - 2018-01-24 18:38:00 |
7 | cottagerose wrote:
I just remove the kernals, package and pop into the freezer, no blanching. They kept well too, no freezer burn. nauru - 2018-01-24 18:49:00 |
8 | An oldie. Kiwi Quiche Edited by linette1 at 7:03 pm, Wed 24 Jan linette1 - 2018-01-24 19:03:00 |
9 | Thanks guys. Some delicious clever ideas there. Might need to go and buy some more! hezwez - 2018-01-24 20:46:00 |
10 | Ottolenghi sweetcorn polenta recipe is really good. https://www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle/2008/sep/20/vegetar ruby19 - 2018-01-24 20:47:00 |
11 | nauru wrote: uli - 2018-01-25 11:22:00 |
12 | ruby19 wrote: uli - 2018-01-25 11:27:00 |
13 | Google helps: Polenta venditor - 2018-01-25 11:34:00 |
14 | Thanks venditor. Looks scrummy. hezwez - 2018-01-25 11:53:00 |
15 | Nice ehen corn is young and fresh. fifie - 2019-01-08 13:31:00 |
16 | Did anyone catch Matt Preston the other day showing an easy way to cook corn cobs and - the best part! - how to take off both the leaves AND the silk in one simple move? I don't know when I saw it (day or night, or if it was a re-run, or what), but tried his method, and OMG! Makes it all soooo easy! * Roll each cob in a swirl of gladwrap (after soaking in water for an hour, if they're a little dry... oh, that's my tip). * Microwave 2 cobs for 3.5 - 4 mins (depends on the power of your microwave). * When cooked, remove with clean folded teatowel (to save burns). * Lay on wooden board and, with very sharp knife, cut right through the base, just about the bottom row of kernels. * Pick up each cob, again with the folded teatowel, squeeze down from the top end of the cob (twisting slightly if needed) and the whole cob - sans leaves and silk - will just pop out onto the board! * Leave leaves/gladwrap to cool, discard gladwrap, and pop leaves into compost or worm farm (mine's doing brilliantly..). * That's the no-mess way to do it, Mabel...... :) Edited by autumnwinds at 1:08 am, Fri 11 Jan autumnwinds - 2019-01-11 01:07:00 |
17 | Freeze as it is, if it is still in the husk. No need to blanch. When you want it just zap it int he microwave then take the husk off and eat, use tec. jan2242 - 2019-01-11 09:12:00 |
18 | Why do you need the glad wrap Autumnwinds? gilligee - 2019-01-11 13:04:00 |
19 | gilligee wrote:
yep that's what we do, put in microware 3 minutes, as it comes from the garden eg leaves, the cut through the fat end just leaving a bit of leaves not cut and lift it, it comes off slimgym - 2019-01-11 13:59:00 |
20 | gilligee wrote: The theory is that it holds any moisture in, steaming and cooking the corn more quickly.... Here's the Sweetcorn fritter recipe I'm using lately. With a son with major nausea problems from kidney issues, he'll happily gobble these...... With a slice or two of bacon, and some tomatoes cut in half and fried/baked in a large rectangular electric frypan, it's a quick and easy meal. The recipe may seem complicated, but has a real "corn" flavour, using the cooked and uncooked cobs - and less salt than boiling them, or using canned corn. Fresh Sweet Corn Fritters Cut the kernels off the fresh uncooked cob, then scrape with back of knife, as above. Put 2/3 of those kernels (uncooked) into small wizz with yolk of eggs, and cream, blitz, then add to rest of corn. Fold in flour. Quickly beat egg whites in small bowl until stiff, then fold them into the flour/corn mix using the edge of a spatula, folding lightly. Cook bacon (if using), remove and keep warm, then spray the base of frypan, make fritters from 2 tablespoons of mix, and cook, turning once, until cooked through. Serve. These are lovely light fritters, with excellent corn flavour. Also nice cold. autumnwinds - 2019-01-14 22:19:00 |
21 | bump bev00 - 2020-01-13 22:37:00 |