Items needed:
Bundt pan
electric knife (try to get one with a bottom squeeze trigger if you can. Thumb triggers will tire you faster)
stock pot
Jelly roll pan
Ziplock freezer bags (I use pint sized)
Tongs
1 cup measure
Big bowl
Ingredients:
Butter (optional)
Salt (optional)
Pepper (optional)
30 ears of summer sweet corn
Directions:
Preparation
Fill stock pot 2/3 full of water and boil on high. It will take twenty minutes or more for this much water to reach a boiling point, so you have plenty of time to husk your corn cobs while you wait. Remove all leaves and as much silk as you can. I like to stack my cobs on a jelly roll sheet so they are easy to move from the prep area to the cooking area.
Boil
My stock pot fit 15 ears of corn in each batch. You may get more or less depending on the size of your pot. Using your tongs (carefully!) place the ears in the pot. Leave a good three inches of headspace between the water level and the top of your pan so you don't over boil. The corn will drop the temperature of the water so you will have to wait a bit before it returns to a rolling boil. As soon as it does, set your timer for 6 minutes.
Blanche
Fill a clean sink with cold water and ice cubes. When the boiling time is up move the corn from the pot to the sink and let soak until they are cool enough to handle. The cold water stops the cooking process and helps seal in the color and nutrients.
Cut
This is the fun part. Place the tip of the corn cob in the center of the bundt pan. Hold the corn vertical with one hand and with the other hand slice down the sides of the corn with your electric knife. Try to stop before you reach the the end, or you will nick your pan and dull your knife (obviously I learned the hard way. Poor little pan!) When your pan fills up, dump it out in your collection bowl. Also, don't cut too deep, or you will get tough chewy stuff in your corn.
Season
I prefer to leave my corn plain and season it when I serve it, but if you know that you will always want butter on your corn, this is the time to do it. Melt your butter in your microwave. I'd do one cube per thirty ears but you can do more or less depending on how buttery you like your corn, and maybe a tablespoon of salt and and a tablespoon of pepper, but it is really up to your discretion. Coat evenly.
Measure
I used three cups per bag, because that's an ideal serving size for my family. 30 ears of corn gave me nine bags, but it will be different every time based on the size of the cobs you find.
Seal
Squeeze out as much air as you can and seal tightly. A food vacuum would be ideal for this, but I've had freezer corn last in regular ziplocks for an entire year without freezer burn.
Freeze
I like to stack my bags flat on a cookie sheet so they freeze in manageable shapes. As soon as they are frozen you can stack them them on their ends to make more space in your freezer.
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