> I associate it most strongy with grilling it in the husk in > several backyards on the Colorado western slope one summer. I spent most of my early life in Nebraska and Kansas, and so for me the best experience of the stuff has always been summer harvests of sweetcorn, ideally prepared shortly after picking by shucking, washing the silks off in cold water, & boiling for 7-10 minutes in a big pot. Serve with butter and salt (butter usually to be applied by rolling the ear of corn lengthwise on the stick, though I had an uncle who preferred to apply butter to bread first and then roll the corn on the bread). I remember a lot of meals consisting of essentially nothing but sweetcorn, half a dozen ears or so to a person. I suppose this wasn't super healthy, but there's nothing quite like the texture and flavor of really fresh corn on the cob, and very little that can be done to genuinely improve upon it. Then too, I live in front range Colorado now, and have spent time on the western slope. It always seems to me that the local sweetcorn chauvinism is innocent enough, but a little inexperienced. By the time it hits grocery stores and farm stands, it's usually tough as nails. I guess what I'm really saying is: If you live in a climate that supports it, plant sweetcorn. There's no substitute for fresh. I am often sad that Colorado doesn't seem to be a place where I'm capable of growing decent corn (see also: tomatoes, carrots which don't taste like dirt, basically anything that isn't some kind of kale). * Not that grilling it in the husk is bad. Nice change of pace. Great for camping. I had this really bad experience one time at a party where I got yelled at by the older, richer, much more employed host for putting out a flaming corn cob in his new swimming pool. The less said about that, the better, probably. (What can I say; I was like 22 and probably kind of drunk. It was humiliating.) * We used to grow a _lot_ of corn, by garden plot standards, and we'd usually have more than we could realistically eat while fresh. My parents often still do. My mom's canned it before, but the handiest way to preserve it seems to be to boil as usual and then cut off in strips and freeze in plastic bags. Assuming you've got the freezer space, this works out great for soups, casseroles, pizza, you name it. They also make a lot of creamed corn. It's really good, and I'll have to see if I can get the recipe, though I'll bet it's just a variation of something they got from Alton Brown. They are way into Alton Brown. -- bpb