What is Green Corn?

green cornI occasionally see recipes that call for “green corn” in hundred-year-old cookbooks. Over the years, I’ve always skipped over those recipes because I was not sure what green corn was. Well, now I know. It’s corn on the cob (sweet corn). Here’s what it said in a 1925 home economics textbook:

GREEN CORN

In selecting corn for cooking, choose those ears that are filled with well-developed kernels, from which milky juice flows when pressed with the thumb. Cook as soon as possible after gathering.

To boil green cornΒ remove silk and husk from the corn, place the ears in boiling water. Cook the corn until no juice flows from the kernels when pressed (usually from 12 to 20 minutes). Serve whole on a platter. The platter may be covered with a folded napkin.

To bake green cornΒ select 6 ears. Remove the corn from the cob as follows: Cut through the center of each row of grains, slice off the tops of the kernels, and then scrape the pulp thoroughly from the cob. Put in a baking dish, add:

3/4 cup milk

1 tablespoonful butter or substitute

1 teaspoonful salt

pepper

Bake in a hot oven (400Β° F.) 45 minutes. Serve hot.

School and Home Cooking (1925) by Carlotta C. Greer

33 thoughts on “What is Green Corn?

  1. I guess that is how they differentiated it from field corn. The corn we had in Texas was so bad, I thought we were eating field corn. I couldn’t wait to get to PA every year for really good PA sweet corn.

        1. Did it transport okay? I always try to eat corn as soon as possible after harvesting, and am never sure how long it will remain tender and tasty.

    1. As you noted, it’s sort of the same. Freshly harvested corn is green corn – as compared to canned corn (or today, frozen corn), which is not considered green corn.

  2. I’ve never heard of the term green corn.

    And boiling for 12-20 minutes? I boil freshly picked corn on the cob for about four minutes and eat it without any butter, salt, or pepper – delicious!

    1. I’m with you. Like you, I only boil freshly harvested corn for a few minutes. 12-20 minutes seems way too long – though they seemed to boil all vegetables a long time a hundred years ago.

    1. That makes sense. I hadn’t thought about how corn has changed over the years. Many vegetables are quite different today than what they once were.

  3. I’ve never heard of ‘green corn’ either. It does make sense, though, with its ‘green’ covering. I do love corn raw (or fresh). No cooking needed. Just bite into the kernels and let the ‘milk’ drizzle down the chin. Oops…

Leave a reply to bcparkison Cancel reply