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Can I make popcorn with any corn?


Cooking dried cornWhere can I buy corn kernel for making popcorn?Would ground “popcorn meal” differ from regular corn meal?Where can I buy corn kernel for making popcorn?How to minimize the impact of unpopped kernels and kernel shards in popcorn?How do you make popcorn with “indian corn”How to make round popcorn?Does the airflow pattern in a hot air popcorn popper matter? / What should I look for in a popper?Can “cream-style” corn substitute for creamed corn in cornbread?Did I poison myself by eating popcorn made in a steel pot with olive oil?Can I make ciabatta with corn flour?Make popcorn: Cover fully or not?






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








18















Up until today I only knew about one type of corn for popcorn. Searching for Peruvian food I found out that in Peru there are different "popcorn" varieties.



So that made me think: is it possible to make popcorn with just any variety of corn? If not, what properties do these corn varieties have that allow then to be popped and not any others?










share|improve this question






















  • related : cooking.stackexchange.com/q/17692/67

    – Joe
    yesterday











  • I think it's different enough to not be considered a duplicate.

    – Jordan Reiter
    yesterday






  • 1





    not duplicate, because I know where I can get corn for popcorn, I want to know what makes it different from the other types of corn.

    – Luciano
    yesterday






  • 1





    @JordanReiter : just trying to track related stuff. But I seem to remember there being a question from someone who lived on a farm who was trying to make popcorn from it, which is closer, but I couldn't find it. There's this one, though : cooking.stackexchange.com/a/24747/67

    – Joe
    yesterday


















18















Up until today I only knew about one type of corn for popcorn. Searching for Peruvian food I found out that in Peru there are different "popcorn" varieties.



So that made me think: is it possible to make popcorn with just any variety of corn? If not, what properties do these corn varieties have that allow then to be popped and not any others?










share|improve this question






















  • related : cooking.stackexchange.com/q/17692/67

    – Joe
    yesterday











  • I think it's different enough to not be considered a duplicate.

    – Jordan Reiter
    yesterday






  • 1





    not duplicate, because I know where I can get corn for popcorn, I want to know what makes it different from the other types of corn.

    – Luciano
    yesterday






  • 1





    @JordanReiter : just trying to track related stuff. But I seem to remember there being a question from someone who lived on a farm who was trying to make popcorn from it, which is closer, but I couldn't find it. There's this one, though : cooking.stackexchange.com/a/24747/67

    – Joe
    yesterday














18












18








18








Up until today I only knew about one type of corn for popcorn. Searching for Peruvian food I found out that in Peru there are different "popcorn" varieties.



So that made me think: is it possible to make popcorn with just any variety of corn? If not, what properties do these corn varieties have that allow then to be popped and not any others?










share|improve this question














Up until today I only knew about one type of corn for popcorn. Searching for Peruvian food I found out that in Peru there are different "popcorn" varieties.



So that made me think: is it possible to make popcorn with just any variety of corn? If not, what properties do these corn varieties have that allow then to be popped and not any others?







ingredient-selection corn popcorn






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked yesterday









LucianoLuciano

1,2631823




1,2631823












  • related : cooking.stackexchange.com/q/17692/67

    – Joe
    yesterday











  • I think it's different enough to not be considered a duplicate.

    – Jordan Reiter
    yesterday






  • 1





    not duplicate, because I know where I can get corn for popcorn, I want to know what makes it different from the other types of corn.

    – Luciano
    yesterday






  • 1





    @JordanReiter : just trying to track related stuff. But I seem to remember there being a question from someone who lived on a farm who was trying to make popcorn from it, which is closer, but I couldn't find it. There's this one, though : cooking.stackexchange.com/a/24747/67

    – Joe
    yesterday


















  • related : cooking.stackexchange.com/q/17692/67

    – Joe
    yesterday











  • I think it's different enough to not be considered a duplicate.

    – Jordan Reiter
    yesterday






  • 1





    not duplicate, because I know where I can get corn for popcorn, I want to know what makes it different from the other types of corn.

    – Luciano
    yesterday






  • 1





    @JordanReiter : just trying to track related stuff. But I seem to remember there being a question from someone who lived on a farm who was trying to make popcorn from it, which is closer, but I couldn't find it. There's this one, though : cooking.stackexchange.com/a/24747/67

    – Joe
    yesterday

















related : cooking.stackexchange.com/q/17692/67

– Joe
yesterday





related : cooking.stackexchange.com/q/17692/67

– Joe
yesterday













I think it's different enough to not be considered a duplicate.

– Jordan Reiter
yesterday





I think it's different enough to not be considered a duplicate.

– Jordan Reiter
yesterday




1




1





not duplicate, because I know where I can get corn for popcorn, I want to know what makes it different from the other types of corn.

– Luciano
yesterday





not duplicate, because I know where I can get corn for popcorn, I want to know what makes it different from the other types of corn.

– Luciano
yesterday




1




1





@JordanReiter : just trying to track related stuff. But I seem to remember there being a question from someone who lived on a farm who was trying to make popcorn from it, which is closer, but I couldn't find it. There's this one, though : cooking.stackexchange.com/a/24747/67

– Joe
yesterday






@JordanReiter : just trying to track related stuff. But I seem to remember there being a question from someone who lived on a farm who was trying to make popcorn from it, which is closer, but I couldn't find it. There's this one, though : cooking.stackexchange.com/a/24747/67

– Joe
yesterday











5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















18














The answer it seems is - no, you can't just use any variety of corn. It seems that you need in particular a hard shell around the kernel that is not present in sweetcorn varieties.



I also suspect that it is harder to make than one might imagine, you need a specific percentage of water in the kernel to get it to pop - this is why you can't store unpopped popcorn in the open and once opened needs to be used within a few months, as the water will evaporate and eventually the percentage will become too low to effectively pop.






share|improve this answer


















  • 11





    You should know that if your popcorn dries out, you can put it in a large glass jar, add a few teaspoons of water, shake it around, and place it in the fridge for a while. The popcorn will eventually absorb all the water and can make decent (although not as good as fresh) popcorn again.

    – Jordan Reiter
    yesterday






  • 3





    Nice, I've never heard of doing that. I'll have to try it some time.

    – bob1
    yesterday






  • 4





    I learned it from The Popcorn Book. :) My parents read it to me when I was a kid and it stuck in my head. When I had a kid I got the book to read to him. It's really a very satisfying book.

    – Jordan Reiter
    yesterday






  • 2





    I'll have to look it up. Tomie de Paola is a favorite in our house too, as is popcorn.

    – bob1
    yesterday






  • 5





    @David Richerby, yes but the percentage of poppable corn decreases over time, especially with repeated openings of containers. I guess it depends on the relative humidity too; in dry climates they'll not last as long as in more humid climates. It'll also depend on the volume - a big bag will be more poppable for longer as there is more corn to dry out.

    – bob1
    yesterday



















14














It's a children's book, but The Popcorn Book by Tomie de Paola is actually a very comprehensive summary on the history and science of popcorn.



Popcorn pops because the kernels contain small amounts of moisture which, when heated, cook the starches inside the popcorn, causing them to rapidly expand and exploding out the kernel. (This is my basic understanding; I'm sure food scientist will have a more comprehensive explanation).



What this means is that popcorn has to have a few specific features:



  • it must have some internal moisture

  • it must have a hard outer shell holding in that moisture

  • it must not be too moist

I imagine all varieties of "sweet corn", the type used for corn on the cob, would probably not work very well. I don't think it would dry very well, and I think the shell would be weak (a feature when marketing it as something for humans to consume)



Dent corn, the variety used for animal feed, would also probably not work very well. It is a tough kernel and I don't think it would have enough moisture to explode.



I very well could be wrong about this, but I doubt that popping these other types (and I'm sure there are many more) would make for good popcorn.



Interestingly, there are other grains which also pop very well, including sorghum and amaranth.






share|improve this answer




















  • 3





    Good answer. I really must try the other grains some time too.

    – bob1
    yesterday






  • 3





    and from what I read on Peruvian food you can also pop quinoa

    – Luciano
    yesterday






  • 3





    It's steam from the moisture boiling (rather than the starches) that cause the pop.

    – David Richerby
    yesterday






  • 2





    Popped millet is popular in some countries.

    – Tim Nevins
    yesterday






  • 1





    If you read the full article about "other grains which pop ..." the author says that they don't really pop like popcorn, they just "puff up a little". I think I'll stick with popcorn.

    – John Pankowicz
    12 hours ago


















10














No, you need popping corn. Popcorn works because



  • it contains the right kind of starch;

  • it has a hard husk that is quite waterproof;

  • it contains the right amount of moisture (14–20%, according to Wikipedia).

When you cook the corn, the water turns to steam, and the husk stops the steam escaping until the pressure builds up enough to make the kernel explode and the starch turn to a solid foam.



The other kinds of corn (dent, flint, flour, pod and sweet corns) don't have the right combinations of starch, husk and moisture to pop properly. For example, sweet corn has a soft husk and is picked while it still contains a relatively large amount of sugar that hasn't been converted to starch. Dent and flour corns have lots of starch but it's the wrong kind.






share|improve this answer






























    6














    My grandparents were Western Nebraska farmers who grew corn (and other things.) Most was "field corn" which is suitable only for livestock feed. Some was sweet corn, which is for humans. Grandma used to make what she called "parched corn." Sweet corn was dried out by pulling the husks back and hanging the ears down by tacking the husks to the side of the shed. When the kernels were shriveled, she shelled them (that is, pulled them off the cob) and treated them like popcorn.



    She popped pop corn by heating oil in cast iron skillet and stirring. So she did the same thing to the dried sweet corn. It didn't pop, per se, but the kernels became spherical and crunchy. With a little salt, it was a great snack.



    So, while you can't pop any kind of corn, you can still try, and what you get is still a treat. I've always meant to try to reproduce this, but I've never gotten around to trying. So YMMV.






    share|improve this answer








    New contributor




    B. Goddard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.



























      4














      In Bolivia we have this kind of giant popcorn, called "Pasankalla":



      enter image description here



      I do not know what type of corn is used to create it, but obviously is not the same one used to create ordinary popcorn.



      Bon appetit!






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      ebasconp is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.















      • 5





        Pasankalla IS the type of corn

        – Aethenosity
        yesterday











      Your Answer








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      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes








      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      18














      The answer it seems is - no, you can't just use any variety of corn. It seems that you need in particular a hard shell around the kernel that is not present in sweetcorn varieties.



      I also suspect that it is harder to make than one might imagine, you need a specific percentage of water in the kernel to get it to pop - this is why you can't store unpopped popcorn in the open and once opened needs to be used within a few months, as the water will evaporate and eventually the percentage will become too low to effectively pop.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 11





        You should know that if your popcorn dries out, you can put it in a large glass jar, add a few teaspoons of water, shake it around, and place it in the fridge for a while. The popcorn will eventually absorb all the water and can make decent (although not as good as fresh) popcorn again.

        – Jordan Reiter
        yesterday






      • 3





        Nice, I've never heard of doing that. I'll have to try it some time.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 4





        I learned it from The Popcorn Book. :) My parents read it to me when I was a kid and it stuck in my head. When I had a kid I got the book to read to him. It's really a very satisfying book.

        – Jordan Reiter
        yesterday






      • 2





        I'll have to look it up. Tomie de Paola is a favorite in our house too, as is popcorn.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 5





        @David Richerby, yes but the percentage of poppable corn decreases over time, especially with repeated openings of containers. I guess it depends on the relative humidity too; in dry climates they'll not last as long as in more humid climates. It'll also depend on the volume - a big bag will be more poppable for longer as there is more corn to dry out.

        – bob1
        yesterday
















      18














      The answer it seems is - no, you can't just use any variety of corn. It seems that you need in particular a hard shell around the kernel that is not present in sweetcorn varieties.



      I also suspect that it is harder to make than one might imagine, you need a specific percentage of water in the kernel to get it to pop - this is why you can't store unpopped popcorn in the open and once opened needs to be used within a few months, as the water will evaporate and eventually the percentage will become too low to effectively pop.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 11





        You should know that if your popcorn dries out, you can put it in a large glass jar, add a few teaspoons of water, shake it around, and place it in the fridge for a while. The popcorn will eventually absorb all the water and can make decent (although not as good as fresh) popcorn again.

        – Jordan Reiter
        yesterday






      • 3





        Nice, I've never heard of doing that. I'll have to try it some time.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 4





        I learned it from The Popcorn Book. :) My parents read it to me when I was a kid and it stuck in my head. When I had a kid I got the book to read to him. It's really a very satisfying book.

        – Jordan Reiter
        yesterday






      • 2





        I'll have to look it up. Tomie de Paola is a favorite in our house too, as is popcorn.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 5





        @David Richerby, yes but the percentage of poppable corn decreases over time, especially with repeated openings of containers. I guess it depends on the relative humidity too; in dry climates they'll not last as long as in more humid climates. It'll also depend on the volume - a big bag will be more poppable for longer as there is more corn to dry out.

        – bob1
        yesterday














      18












      18








      18







      The answer it seems is - no, you can't just use any variety of corn. It seems that you need in particular a hard shell around the kernel that is not present in sweetcorn varieties.



      I also suspect that it is harder to make than one might imagine, you need a specific percentage of water in the kernel to get it to pop - this is why you can't store unpopped popcorn in the open and once opened needs to be used within a few months, as the water will evaporate and eventually the percentage will become too low to effectively pop.






      share|improve this answer













      The answer it seems is - no, you can't just use any variety of corn. It seems that you need in particular a hard shell around the kernel that is not present in sweetcorn varieties.



      I also suspect that it is harder to make than one might imagine, you need a specific percentage of water in the kernel to get it to pop - this is why you can't store unpopped popcorn in the open and once opened needs to be used within a few months, as the water will evaporate and eventually the percentage will become too low to effectively pop.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered yesterday









      bob1bob1

      1,20811




      1,20811







      • 11





        You should know that if your popcorn dries out, you can put it in a large glass jar, add a few teaspoons of water, shake it around, and place it in the fridge for a while. The popcorn will eventually absorb all the water and can make decent (although not as good as fresh) popcorn again.

        – Jordan Reiter
        yesterday






      • 3





        Nice, I've never heard of doing that. I'll have to try it some time.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 4





        I learned it from The Popcorn Book. :) My parents read it to me when I was a kid and it stuck in my head. When I had a kid I got the book to read to him. It's really a very satisfying book.

        – Jordan Reiter
        yesterday






      • 2





        I'll have to look it up. Tomie de Paola is a favorite in our house too, as is popcorn.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 5





        @David Richerby, yes but the percentage of poppable corn decreases over time, especially with repeated openings of containers. I guess it depends on the relative humidity too; in dry climates they'll not last as long as in more humid climates. It'll also depend on the volume - a big bag will be more poppable for longer as there is more corn to dry out.

        – bob1
        yesterday













      • 11





        You should know that if your popcorn dries out, you can put it in a large glass jar, add a few teaspoons of water, shake it around, and place it in the fridge for a while. The popcorn will eventually absorb all the water and can make decent (although not as good as fresh) popcorn again.

        – Jordan Reiter
        yesterday






      • 3





        Nice, I've never heard of doing that. I'll have to try it some time.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 4





        I learned it from The Popcorn Book. :) My parents read it to me when I was a kid and it stuck in my head. When I had a kid I got the book to read to him. It's really a very satisfying book.

        – Jordan Reiter
        yesterday






      • 2





        I'll have to look it up. Tomie de Paola is a favorite in our house too, as is popcorn.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 5





        @David Richerby, yes but the percentage of poppable corn decreases over time, especially with repeated openings of containers. I guess it depends on the relative humidity too; in dry climates they'll not last as long as in more humid climates. It'll also depend on the volume - a big bag will be more poppable for longer as there is more corn to dry out.

        – bob1
        yesterday








      11




      11





      You should know that if your popcorn dries out, you can put it in a large glass jar, add a few teaspoons of water, shake it around, and place it in the fridge for a while. The popcorn will eventually absorb all the water and can make decent (although not as good as fresh) popcorn again.

      – Jordan Reiter
      yesterday





      You should know that if your popcorn dries out, you can put it in a large glass jar, add a few teaspoons of water, shake it around, and place it in the fridge for a while. The popcorn will eventually absorb all the water and can make decent (although not as good as fresh) popcorn again.

      – Jordan Reiter
      yesterday




      3




      3





      Nice, I've never heard of doing that. I'll have to try it some time.

      – bob1
      yesterday





      Nice, I've never heard of doing that. I'll have to try it some time.

      – bob1
      yesterday




      4




      4





      I learned it from The Popcorn Book. :) My parents read it to me when I was a kid and it stuck in my head. When I had a kid I got the book to read to him. It's really a very satisfying book.

      – Jordan Reiter
      yesterday





      I learned it from The Popcorn Book. :) My parents read it to me when I was a kid and it stuck in my head. When I had a kid I got the book to read to him. It's really a very satisfying book.

      – Jordan Reiter
      yesterday




      2




      2





      I'll have to look it up. Tomie de Paola is a favorite in our house too, as is popcorn.

      – bob1
      yesterday





      I'll have to look it up. Tomie de Paola is a favorite in our house too, as is popcorn.

      – bob1
      yesterday




      5




      5





      @David Richerby, yes but the percentage of poppable corn decreases over time, especially with repeated openings of containers. I guess it depends on the relative humidity too; in dry climates they'll not last as long as in more humid climates. It'll also depend on the volume - a big bag will be more poppable for longer as there is more corn to dry out.

      – bob1
      yesterday






      @David Richerby, yes but the percentage of poppable corn decreases over time, especially with repeated openings of containers. I guess it depends on the relative humidity too; in dry climates they'll not last as long as in more humid climates. It'll also depend on the volume - a big bag will be more poppable for longer as there is more corn to dry out.

      – bob1
      yesterday














      14














      It's a children's book, but The Popcorn Book by Tomie de Paola is actually a very comprehensive summary on the history and science of popcorn.



      Popcorn pops because the kernels contain small amounts of moisture which, when heated, cook the starches inside the popcorn, causing them to rapidly expand and exploding out the kernel. (This is my basic understanding; I'm sure food scientist will have a more comprehensive explanation).



      What this means is that popcorn has to have a few specific features:



      • it must have some internal moisture

      • it must have a hard outer shell holding in that moisture

      • it must not be too moist

      I imagine all varieties of "sweet corn", the type used for corn on the cob, would probably not work very well. I don't think it would dry very well, and I think the shell would be weak (a feature when marketing it as something for humans to consume)



      Dent corn, the variety used for animal feed, would also probably not work very well. It is a tough kernel and I don't think it would have enough moisture to explode.



      I very well could be wrong about this, but I doubt that popping these other types (and I'm sure there are many more) would make for good popcorn.



      Interestingly, there are other grains which also pop very well, including sorghum and amaranth.






      share|improve this answer




















      • 3





        Good answer. I really must try the other grains some time too.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 3





        and from what I read on Peruvian food you can also pop quinoa

        – Luciano
        yesterday






      • 3





        It's steam from the moisture boiling (rather than the starches) that cause the pop.

        – David Richerby
        yesterday






      • 2





        Popped millet is popular in some countries.

        – Tim Nevins
        yesterday






      • 1





        If you read the full article about "other grains which pop ..." the author says that they don't really pop like popcorn, they just "puff up a little". I think I'll stick with popcorn.

        – John Pankowicz
        12 hours ago















      14














      It's a children's book, but The Popcorn Book by Tomie de Paola is actually a very comprehensive summary on the history and science of popcorn.



      Popcorn pops because the kernels contain small amounts of moisture which, when heated, cook the starches inside the popcorn, causing them to rapidly expand and exploding out the kernel. (This is my basic understanding; I'm sure food scientist will have a more comprehensive explanation).



      What this means is that popcorn has to have a few specific features:



      • it must have some internal moisture

      • it must have a hard outer shell holding in that moisture

      • it must not be too moist

      I imagine all varieties of "sweet corn", the type used for corn on the cob, would probably not work very well. I don't think it would dry very well, and I think the shell would be weak (a feature when marketing it as something for humans to consume)



      Dent corn, the variety used for animal feed, would also probably not work very well. It is a tough kernel and I don't think it would have enough moisture to explode.



      I very well could be wrong about this, but I doubt that popping these other types (and I'm sure there are many more) would make for good popcorn.



      Interestingly, there are other grains which also pop very well, including sorghum and amaranth.






      share|improve this answer




















      • 3





        Good answer. I really must try the other grains some time too.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 3





        and from what I read on Peruvian food you can also pop quinoa

        – Luciano
        yesterday






      • 3





        It's steam from the moisture boiling (rather than the starches) that cause the pop.

        – David Richerby
        yesterday






      • 2





        Popped millet is popular in some countries.

        – Tim Nevins
        yesterday






      • 1





        If you read the full article about "other grains which pop ..." the author says that they don't really pop like popcorn, they just "puff up a little". I think I'll stick with popcorn.

        – John Pankowicz
        12 hours ago













      14












      14








      14







      It's a children's book, but The Popcorn Book by Tomie de Paola is actually a very comprehensive summary on the history and science of popcorn.



      Popcorn pops because the kernels contain small amounts of moisture which, when heated, cook the starches inside the popcorn, causing them to rapidly expand and exploding out the kernel. (This is my basic understanding; I'm sure food scientist will have a more comprehensive explanation).



      What this means is that popcorn has to have a few specific features:



      • it must have some internal moisture

      • it must have a hard outer shell holding in that moisture

      • it must not be too moist

      I imagine all varieties of "sweet corn", the type used for corn on the cob, would probably not work very well. I don't think it would dry very well, and I think the shell would be weak (a feature when marketing it as something for humans to consume)



      Dent corn, the variety used for animal feed, would also probably not work very well. It is a tough kernel and I don't think it would have enough moisture to explode.



      I very well could be wrong about this, but I doubt that popping these other types (and I'm sure there are many more) would make for good popcorn.



      Interestingly, there are other grains which also pop very well, including sorghum and amaranth.






      share|improve this answer















      It's a children's book, but The Popcorn Book by Tomie de Paola is actually a very comprehensive summary on the history and science of popcorn.



      Popcorn pops because the kernels contain small amounts of moisture which, when heated, cook the starches inside the popcorn, causing them to rapidly expand and exploding out the kernel. (This is my basic understanding; I'm sure food scientist will have a more comprehensive explanation).



      What this means is that popcorn has to have a few specific features:



      • it must have some internal moisture

      • it must have a hard outer shell holding in that moisture

      • it must not be too moist

      I imagine all varieties of "sweet corn", the type used for corn on the cob, would probably not work very well. I don't think it would dry very well, and I think the shell would be weak (a feature when marketing it as something for humans to consume)



      Dent corn, the variety used for animal feed, would also probably not work very well. It is a tough kernel and I don't think it would have enough moisture to explode.



      I very well could be wrong about this, but I doubt that popping these other types (and I'm sure there are many more) would make for good popcorn.



      Interestingly, there are other grains which also pop very well, including sorghum and amaranth.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited yesterday

























      answered yesterday









      Jordan ReiterJordan Reiter

      30818




      30818







      • 3





        Good answer. I really must try the other grains some time too.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 3





        and from what I read on Peruvian food you can also pop quinoa

        – Luciano
        yesterday






      • 3





        It's steam from the moisture boiling (rather than the starches) that cause the pop.

        – David Richerby
        yesterday






      • 2





        Popped millet is popular in some countries.

        – Tim Nevins
        yesterday






      • 1





        If you read the full article about "other grains which pop ..." the author says that they don't really pop like popcorn, they just "puff up a little". I think I'll stick with popcorn.

        – John Pankowicz
        12 hours ago












      • 3





        Good answer. I really must try the other grains some time too.

        – bob1
        yesterday






      • 3





        and from what I read on Peruvian food you can also pop quinoa

        – Luciano
        yesterday






      • 3





        It's steam from the moisture boiling (rather than the starches) that cause the pop.

        – David Richerby
        yesterday






      • 2





        Popped millet is popular in some countries.

        – Tim Nevins
        yesterday






      • 1





        If you read the full article about "other grains which pop ..." the author says that they don't really pop like popcorn, they just "puff up a little". I think I'll stick with popcorn.

        – John Pankowicz
        12 hours ago







      3




      3





      Good answer. I really must try the other grains some time too.

      – bob1
      yesterday





      Good answer. I really must try the other grains some time too.

      – bob1
      yesterday




      3




      3





      and from what I read on Peruvian food you can also pop quinoa

      – Luciano
      yesterday





      and from what I read on Peruvian food you can also pop quinoa

      – Luciano
      yesterday




      3




      3





      It's steam from the moisture boiling (rather than the starches) that cause the pop.

      – David Richerby
      yesterday





      It's steam from the moisture boiling (rather than the starches) that cause the pop.

      – David Richerby
      yesterday




      2




      2





      Popped millet is popular in some countries.

      – Tim Nevins
      yesterday





      Popped millet is popular in some countries.

      – Tim Nevins
      yesterday




      1




      1





      If you read the full article about "other grains which pop ..." the author says that they don't really pop like popcorn, they just "puff up a little". I think I'll stick with popcorn.

      – John Pankowicz
      12 hours ago





      If you read the full article about "other grains which pop ..." the author says that they don't really pop like popcorn, they just "puff up a little". I think I'll stick with popcorn.

      – John Pankowicz
      12 hours ago











      10














      No, you need popping corn. Popcorn works because



      • it contains the right kind of starch;

      • it has a hard husk that is quite waterproof;

      • it contains the right amount of moisture (14–20%, according to Wikipedia).

      When you cook the corn, the water turns to steam, and the husk stops the steam escaping until the pressure builds up enough to make the kernel explode and the starch turn to a solid foam.



      The other kinds of corn (dent, flint, flour, pod and sweet corns) don't have the right combinations of starch, husk and moisture to pop properly. For example, sweet corn has a soft husk and is picked while it still contains a relatively large amount of sugar that hasn't been converted to starch. Dent and flour corns have lots of starch but it's the wrong kind.






      share|improve this answer



























        10














        No, you need popping corn. Popcorn works because



        • it contains the right kind of starch;

        • it has a hard husk that is quite waterproof;

        • it contains the right amount of moisture (14–20%, according to Wikipedia).

        When you cook the corn, the water turns to steam, and the husk stops the steam escaping until the pressure builds up enough to make the kernel explode and the starch turn to a solid foam.



        The other kinds of corn (dent, flint, flour, pod and sweet corns) don't have the right combinations of starch, husk and moisture to pop properly. For example, sweet corn has a soft husk and is picked while it still contains a relatively large amount of sugar that hasn't been converted to starch. Dent and flour corns have lots of starch but it's the wrong kind.






        share|improve this answer

























          10












          10








          10







          No, you need popping corn. Popcorn works because



          • it contains the right kind of starch;

          • it has a hard husk that is quite waterproof;

          • it contains the right amount of moisture (14–20%, according to Wikipedia).

          When you cook the corn, the water turns to steam, and the husk stops the steam escaping until the pressure builds up enough to make the kernel explode and the starch turn to a solid foam.



          The other kinds of corn (dent, flint, flour, pod and sweet corns) don't have the right combinations of starch, husk and moisture to pop properly. For example, sweet corn has a soft husk and is picked while it still contains a relatively large amount of sugar that hasn't been converted to starch. Dent and flour corns have lots of starch but it's the wrong kind.






          share|improve this answer













          No, you need popping corn. Popcorn works because



          • it contains the right kind of starch;

          • it has a hard husk that is quite waterproof;

          • it contains the right amount of moisture (14–20%, according to Wikipedia).

          When you cook the corn, the water turns to steam, and the husk stops the steam escaping until the pressure builds up enough to make the kernel explode and the starch turn to a solid foam.



          The other kinds of corn (dent, flint, flour, pod and sweet corns) don't have the right combinations of starch, husk and moisture to pop properly. For example, sweet corn has a soft husk and is picked while it still contains a relatively large amount of sugar that hasn't been converted to starch. Dent and flour corns have lots of starch but it's the wrong kind.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered yesterday









          David RicherbyDavid Richerby

          2,8971628




          2,8971628





















              6














              My grandparents were Western Nebraska farmers who grew corn (and other things.) Most was "field corn" which is suitable only for livestock feed. Some was sweet corn, which is for humans. Grandma used to make what she called "parched corn." Sweet corn was dried out by pulling the husks back and hanging the ears down by tacking the husks to the side of the shed. When the kernels were shriveled, she shelled them (that is, pulled them off the cob) and treated them like popcorn.



              She popped pop corn by heating oil in cast iron skillet and stirring. So she did the same thing to the dried sweet corn. It didn't pop, per se, but the kernels became spherical and crunchy. With a little salt, it was a great snack.



              So, while you can't pop any kind of corn, you can still try, and what you get is still a treat. I've always meant to try to reproduce this, but I've never gotten around to trying. So YMMV.






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              B. Goddard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.
























                6














                My grandparents were Western Nebraska farmers who grew corn (and other things.) Most was "field corn" which is suitable only for livestock feed. Some was sweet corn, which is for humans. Grandma used to make what she called "parched corn." Sweet corn was dried out by pulling the husks back and hanging the ears down by tacking the husks to the side of the shed. When the kernels were shriveled, she shelled them (that is, pulled them off the cob) and treated them like popcorn.



                She popped pop corn by heating oil in cast iron skillet and stirring. So she did the same thing to the dried sweet corn. It didn't pop, per se, but the kernels became spherical and crunchy. With a little salt, it was a great snack.



                So, while you can't pop any kind of corn, you can still try, and what you get is still a treat. I've always meant to try to reproduce this, but I've never gotten around to trying. So YMMV.






                share|improve this answer








                New contributor




                B. Goddard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.






















                  6












                  6








                  6







                  My grandparents were Western Nebraska farmers who grew corn (and other things.) Most was "field corn" which is suitable only for livestock feed. Some was sweet corn, which is for humans. Grandma used to make what she called "parched corn." Sweet corn was dried out by pulling the husks back and hanging the ears down by tacking the husks to the side of the shed. When the kernels were shriveled, she shelled them (that is, pulled them off the cob) and treated them like popcorn.



                  She popped pop corn by heating oil in cast iron skillet and stirring. So she did the same thing to the dried sweet corn. It didn't pop, per se, but the kernels became spherical and crunchy. With a little salt, it was a great snack.



                  So, while you can't pop any kind of corn, you can still try, and what you get is still a treat. I've always meant to try to reproduce this, but I've never gotten around to trying. So YMMV.






                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  B. Goddard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.










                  My grandparents were Western Nebraska farmers who grew corn (and other things.) Most was "field corn" which is suitable only for livestock feed. Some was sweet corn, which is for humans. Grandma used to make what she called "parched corn." Sweet corn was dried out by pulling the husks back and hanging the ears down by tacking the husks to the side of the shed. When the kernels were shriveled, she shelled them (that is, pulled them off the cob) and treated them like popcorn.



                  She popped pop corn by heating oil in cast iron skillet and stirring. So she did the same thing to the dried sweet corn. It didn't pop, per se, but the kernels became spherical and crunchy. With a little salt, it was a great snack.



                  So, while you can't pop any kind of corn, you can still try, and what you get is still a treat. I've always meant to try to reproduce this, but I've never gotten around to trying. So YMMV.







                  share|improve this answer








                  New contributor




                  B. Goddard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer






                  New contributor




                  B. Goddard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  answered yesterday









                  B. GoddardB. Goddard

                  1611




                  1611




                  New contributor




                  B. Goddard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.





                  New contributor





                  B. Goddard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






                  B. Goddard is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.





















                      4














                      In Bolivia we have this kind of giant popcorn, called "Pasankalla":



                      enter image description here



                      I do not know what type of corn is used to create it, but obviously is not the same one used to create ordinary popcorn.



                      Bon appetit!






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      ebasconp is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.















                      • 5





                        Pasankalla IS the type of corn

                        – Aethenosity
                        yesterday















                      4














                      In Bolivia we have this kind of giant popcorn, called "Pasankalla":



                      enter image description here



                      I do not know what type of corn is used to create it, but obviously is not the same one used to create ordinary popcorn.



                      Bon appetit!






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      ebasconp is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.















                      • 5





                        Pasankalla IS the type of corn

                        – Aethenosity
                        yesterday













                      4












                      4








                      4







                      In Bolivia we have this kind of giant popcorn, called "Pasankalla":



                      enter image description here



                      I do not know what type of corn is used to create it, but obviously is not the same one used to create ordinary popcorn.



                      Bon appetit!






                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      ebasconp is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.










                      In Bolivia we have this kind of giant popcorn, called "Pasankalla":



                      enter image description here



                      I do not know what type of corn is used to create it, but obviously is not the same one used to create ordinary popcorn.



                      Bon appetit!







                      share|improve this answer








                      New contributor




                      ebasconp is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.









                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer






                      New contributor




                      ebasconp is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.









                      answered yesterday









                      ebasconpebasconp

                      1411




                      1411




                      New contributor




                      ebasconp is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.





                      New contributor





                      ebasconp is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.






                      ebasconp is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                      Check out our Code of Conduct.







                      • 5





                        Pasankalla IS the type of corn

                        – Aethenosity
                        yesterday












                      • 5





                        Pasankalla IS the type of corn

                        – Aethenosity
                        yesterday







                      5




                      5





                      Pasankalla IS the type of corn

                      – Aethenosity
                      yesterday





                      Pasankalla IS the type of corn

                      – Aethenosity
                      yesterday

















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