Corn on the cob means summer to me. Of course you can buy it frozen but only in the summer can my neighbor hand me corn fresh picked from the garden. So sweet, no butter or salt are needed.
I was chomping away in my standard typewriter corn eating pattern and I wondered do others eat it this way? Then I realized that many today have no typewriter experience – the great sound of the keys clicking along the row and the satisfying ding of the carriage return. Just a moment in time shared with you. So how do you eat corn?
Although not of my “generation”, I have used a typewriter before (before my parents could afford to buy a computer), and I used to eat corn on the cob “typewriter style” when I was little.
LikeLike
Thanks for commenting. My dad had an old upright, I used to love to hear him typing away.
LikeLike
I cut it all off the cob though typewriter is more fun I only do it with floss handy !
LikeLike
Having floss is a serious need after eating corn on the cob. I only do it about once or twice a year.
LikeLike
Oh, roasted in the husk is my favorite. My son used mayonnaise and chlie powder on his!
LikeLike
Chili powder – that new to me on corn. Maybe I’ll give it a try. Thanks for commenting.
LikeLike
love corn on the cob. It tastes best boiled in a big pot outdoors! smother it with butter and salt – it’s actually the only thing I put salt on – and i each it, typewriter fashion sometimes, and starting at one end, going around other times. I’m just open to change like that!
LikeLike
Open to change- good for you. Corn is also the only thing I put salt on. I read a book called “Keeping your brain alive” and among the things they suggested was brushing your teeth with the other hand- I was surprised how hard it was- keep changing it up.
LikeLike
I love to soak my corn in the husk for a few hours and then put it on the charcoal BBQ Grill. When it is cooked, I shuck it and smother it with butter, salt, and pepper. Yum!! 🙂
LikeLike
I was around when typewriters were starting to go out of service and computers were more becoming more mainstream. My grandma had an old one I used to play with when I went to her house. I love corn on the cob! I eat it the typewriter way too. With a little butter and a touch of salt.
LikeLike
I can almost hear the ding at the end of each row!
LikeLike
I either steam it on the stove and eat in typewriter fashion or soak ears with husks on for a couple of hours and then throw on grill. Delicious!
LikeLike
I’m a typewriter eater too…I learned to type on one of those old machines 🙂 The ding resounds in my head at the end of each row…
LikeLike
Gave such a sense of accomplishment though, didn’t it? (But talk about an ear worm – it’s been stuck in my head all day; that and that darned song; )
Does anybody else know the one I mean? (I really NEED to know):P
LikeLike
I usually eat it with butter and salt but it’s delicious without it too. I don’t eat across like a typewriter, though–I start at the left side and eat in circles, turning the cob up as I eat until one band of corn has been eaten all the way around. Then I move to the right, to start the next band.
Now I want corn.
LikeLike
I bet you have corn for dinner.
LikeLike
Close! I’m buying some tomorrow — I’ve already planned the whole dinner out. I’ve been thinking about it since I read your post!
LikeLike
We eat it slightly steamed with butter rubbed on – we stick a fork in each end (for the kids mainly) and they eat it like you’ve described (the kids know what a typewriter is because we went to a historical museum where they had one out for kids to play on and hear that classical sound – OFG loved the “ding” it made at the end of the page so he kept going for ages….the husband told TFG it was the first ever lap top!)
LikeLike
It was the first lap top- i love that. My first computer had a feature that made it sound like a typewriter. Thanks for replying.
LikeLike
I cut it off the cob and enjoy its simple sweetness!
LikeLike
My daughter taught me yesterday how to make real creamed corn off the cob. Actually I don’t know a bad way to eat corn- yum.
LikeLike
I agree.
LikeLike
I’m with you on the typewriter thing – matter of fact now I’ve got that old (Bug’s Bunny?) soundtrack running through my head… You know, the one clackety, clackety (key sounds)… Whiz (return), Ding! (bell at the end;)
But seriously though? The best corn I’ve ever had was at a (very chilly) fall cornroast. Cobs were put whole into a pillowcase, which was then (kilt) pinned shut and cooked in an ancient cauldron of boiling water o’er a bonfire. The sack of cobs was then plunged into a bucket of cold water to cool. Nothing has ever felt as good as shucking those lovely warm cobs on that cool September night and I’ve never tasted better corn… Ever: )
LikeLike
I learned a new way to cook corn! The cool air and the warm corn makes for a lovely combination. The air seems to have just a touch of fall in it here. August is starting cooler than july- odd but true.
LikeLike
Yes, something about it feels later… We’ve had an Aster in bloom here for several days already and noticed ragweed just loaded with pollen at a construction site in town earlier today):
LikeLike
Just like you! LOL! (But with a little butter on it. 😉 )
LikeLike
I buy it cheap from the market and then grill it and the sweetness of the corn comes out and you eat it – you don’t even need butter to enjoy it.
LikeLike
I butter the cob and then take a knife and cut all the corn off in stages like a lathe. I have always eaten it this way, must be my highly retentive nature! ROTFL! 😀
LikeLike