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Monday, September 9, 2013

Baked Corn on the Cob with Honey Butter:

Where I live, "knee-high by the 4th of July" does not represent our corn!!
Its late August, beginning of September till we are enjoying any corn on the cob around here!
There is really lots of ways to cook corn - we usually steam it, but we've also tried grilling it.
Corn roasts are also big around here, and to be honest, that's the best way to have corn!! Of course, it also involves the most work!!
I had been seeing recipes floating around the Internet for baking corn on the cob and decided to give it a try. Am I ever glad I did! Talk about easy and delicious!!! We made it twice in one week! It's a cross between steaming it and roasting it. Super yummy!!
 
And you can't have corn on the cob without butter! Make sure you try out the super easy recipe for Honey Butter! It's SO yummy on the corn (and would be good on lots of other things too!) 
I hope you give these two recipes a try!!
 
Honey butter
 
1/4 cup butter, softened to room temperature
1/4 cup honey
 
In a small bowl, beat together butter and honey with a hand mixer until well combined and light and fluffy. Place in a serving dish. Refrigerate until ready to use.
 
Baked Corn on the Cob
 
 
 
There is no ingredient list for the corn, except as many ears of corn as you want!
 
Leaving the husks on, pull or cut off the brown, fuzzy, silky part at the top of the ear of corn. Make sure you don't cut farther down than just the brown part, because you don't want the corn to be exposed - it needs to be thoroughly wrapped in the husks.
 
Place the corn right on the racks in your oven. If you have a convection oven, you can place corn on all three racks and it should get done evenly. If you do not have a convection oven, placing corn on all three racks, may result in the top rack getting done, and the other two racks needing more time.
 
Bake at 400 degrees for 30-45 minutes. Carefully remove from the oven to a serving plate with oven mitts, and/or tongs. To test for doneness, VERY carefully pull the husks down and if a fork goes into the kernels of corn easily, it's done.
 
Serve!!
 
Note:
-Be VERY cautious while pulling away the husks after baking. There is steam trapped inside, and it can burn you, if you don't open it carefully!   

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