Wood Ash Corn Nixtamalization

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  • Опубліковано 10 лют 2025
  • Have you are wondered what to do with all of that beautiful heirloom field corn you grew? In this video I show you how to take it from the kernel, all the way to tortillas, with wood ash nixtamalization. This is some OG technique. Like prehistoric. Try this recipe, and you'll redefine what a corn tortilla should taste like.
    My article about this process, and a great tamale recipe can be found here:
    www.radicalgas...
    Traditionally, this corn is ground with two rocks know as a mano and metate. Like this. (I receive a small commission from these Amazon links):
    amzn.to/31HITXW
    I use a Kitchen Aid mixer like this:
    amzn.to/2L1Fywr
    And the meat grinder:
    amzn.to/2KzYaEp
    And here is the tortilla press:
    amzn.to/31Ko0M2
    Thank you for watching!

КОМЕНТАРІ • 308

  • @tonyescobar4501
    @tonyescobar4501 4 роки тому +70

    Add a little fat / lard aka manteca to the masa to get it to ply rather than just water. That’s best for tamale masa. Tortillas can be fried or you could stone bake them. I’m Apache and learned our cousins -the Navajo used stone “ovens” to bake the corn masa.

    • @debtizzano3066
      @debtizzano3066 Рік тому +2

      Render pure lard ,not store stuff. ❤

    • @kevinwhite4079
      @kevinwhite4079 Рік тому +1

      @@debtizzano3066 Deb is right. Believe it or not, home rendered pork fat is a lot more heart healthy.

  • @petiesabala1077
    @petiesabala1077 5 років тому +67

    You’re the first when I come across to use the wood ash method thank you for all your hard work

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  5 років тому +4

      Petie Sabala Well thanks! I’m glad to be helpful.

    • @MarioPerez-nz8xf
      @MarioPerez-nz8xf 2 роки тому +1

      Hello beautiful I wouldn't put water I would put bacon Grease or traditional lard

    • @alfredfabulous3640
      @alfredfabulous3640 Рік тому +1

      @@MarioPerez-nz8xf results in heart attacks!

    • @MarianLuca-rz5kk
      @MarianLuca-rz5kk 3 місяці тому

      ​@@radicalgastronomy
      Isn't the corn impregnated with the potassium carbonate from the ash? Is that healthy? Can we nixtamalize more gently with sodium bicarbonate ?

  • @81peyote
    @81peyote 4 роки тому +12

    As a former chef turned Mississippian archaeologist I gotta say, brother you are tearing it up in this video. Excellent job!

  • @dannunyas5642
    @dannunyas5642 2 роки тому +10

    I have a couple five gallon buckets of Cherokee gourdseed corn I grew in my garden. Tried this method and it's incredible the change in flavor. Lot of people going to revert to the old ways with food skyrocketing. Love your videos.

    • @MarianLuca-rz5kk
      @MarianLuca-rz5kk 3 місяці тому

      Isn't the corn impregnated with the potassium carbonate from the ash? Is that healthy? Can we nixtamalize more gently with sodium bicarbonate ?

  • @drjwebber619
    @drjwebber619 4 роки тому +6

    Now THAT is what I call farm to table. "From scratch" doesn't even begin to describe this. Well done!

  • @paulmcwhorter
    @paulmcwhorter 3 роки тому +22

    Thanks for the video. Growing up, the Mexicans on our ranch would make the hominy outside in large pots over a fire. They would mix equal parts corn, ash and water in a large pot. Like 5 gallons corn, 5 gallons water and 5 gallons ash in a big huge pot, and then cook over a fire all day. Then lots of rinsing. Really was delicious hominy. What are your thoughts of having the corn and ash together like that, all in the same pot?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому +7

      Hey, if it works, it works. I like it.

    • @paulousley6042
      @paulousley6042 2 роки тому +5

      Can you dry the corn after Nixtamalization to make flour to store or is this just a process if you want it fresh?

    • @ExtremePrepper
      @ExtremePrepper 2 роки тому +7

      @@paulousley6042 Absolutely. If you dry the corn after Nixtamalization, and do a course grind on the dry corn you have 'Grits'. You see 'Grits' sold by Quaker in the grocery store. Those are ground, dried Nixtamalized corn. If you grind the dry Nixtamalized corn finely, you have 'Masa' also sold in the grocery store. Masa is what tortillas, corn chips, and Hot Tamales are made out of. So, you can see the Mexicans really had it figured out. Most mexican dishes are made from Nixtamalized corn.

    • @paulousley6042
      @paulousley6042 2 роки тому +3

      @@ExtremePrepper okay cool, been making tortillas for a while wanted to try my hand at growing corn and making my own Masa. Couldn't find an answer on the steps to make the flour after Nixtamalization, if letting the corn dry retained the nutrients from that process

    • @paulmcwhorter
      @paulmcwhorter 2 роки тому +9

      @@paulousley6042 Here is the thing. If you are making tortillas, you make them directly from the wet nxtamalized corn. While it is still wet, just smash it up. Add a little salt, flatten it out in a tortilla press and throw it on the griddle. That 100% is the authentic honest to goodness Mexican way of doing it. You can dry it, then grind it fine, and then add the water back, but you are just adding steps. I will guarantee you this . . . it will be the best tortilla you ever had. Funny thing is I live in Africa, and 80% of the diet here is corn, yet they never adopted Nixtamalization. Sad, as it is really needed.

  • @estapley2680
    @estapley2680 4 роки тому +11

    Wow what a process! I will never take a corn tortilla for granted again :-) nice video thanks!

  • @RRaucina
    @RRaucina 6 місяців тому +3

    Since the Indians did not have copper pots, they were boiling water in tightly woven baskets sealed with pine resin. They would add rocks from the fire covered in ash and also some used limestone rocks, thus inadvertently bringing on the nixtamalization process. Pellagra wasn't a problem for them, but when it went to Europe, people were dying on a corn heavy diet. 1% calcium is enough and easy to use. The wood ashes are fine but be sure no one is burning garbage and plastic in the wood stove.

    • @MarianLuca-rz5kk
      @MarianLuca-rz5kk 3 місяці тому

      Isn't the corn impregnated with the potassium carbonate from the ash? Is that healthy? Can we nixtamalize more gently with sodium bicarbonate ?

  • @michellepierce6757
    @michellepierce6757 23 дні тому

    Good for you - freedom is never as simple as we think, but it is worth it.

  • @allenemersonn1227
    @allenemersonn1227 4 роки тому +8

    I continue to find it remarkable that people have forgotten that mixing dry wood ash into dried grains and legumes was used for millennia as a method of preservation against insects, molds and fungi. My grandfather spoke of this method being used in his childhood home on the Kansas plains at the beginning of the 20th century. Any kind of pure, light gray ash from wood or corn stalks was used. The ash could easily be washed away into a container when the grain was needed, and re-used in, say, soap making. Some grain, stored in wood ash, became wet at some point and we got nixtamalization.

  • @peterswatton7400
    @peterswatton7400 2 роки тому +3

    I've got rainwater, ash from the wood range and corn from the hen feed and even the old family cast iron hand grinder so I'll give it a go here in New Zealand and look for some better corn to plant next season. I enjoyed the video.

  • @wisconsingoldrush8270
    @wisconsingoldrush8270 3 роки тому +2

    I like doing things the old school way out in the woods. This is an awesome thing to know

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому

      Always good to know how to do things if the “store” isn’t an option. Glad you like it!

  • @joecrafted
    @joecrafted 4 роки тому +4

    As a former archaeologist, I was aware of the wood ash nixtamalization technique, but most everyone showing this process now uses the slaked lime or cal. I'll have to try this out, as I have plenty of wood ash from our wood stove.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      joecrafted Give it a shot, and let me know how it goes. To me, this method yields a tastier result.

    • @morgensellier7816
      @morgensellier7816 4 роки тому

      I think the Navajo still use a version of the wood ash: www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2017/08/21/544191316/to-get-calcium-navajos-burn-juniper-branches-to-eat-the-ash

  • @OvGraphics
    @OvGraphics 2 роки тому +1

    RG. You didn't pop up in my feed. I went looking for you. Found you too! Looks to me like your grind was a little coarse. But what do I know? I've never tried ANY of this. Zip. Nada. So I've been doing my earnest SHTF research on this and that with corn products being a priority. I have the pickling lime but then the question..what about when that runs out? Your video is EXACTLY what I was looking for. No nonsense, step by step prehistoric wood ash conversion. I'm as tickled as a speckled pup that I ran across you. And you're a GREAT video shooter too. Wish I was as good. I have or will have access to everything I need by harvest. Got the Indian feed corn seed on the way this early spring. You also cleared up my grits question. You did good for me RG. Took notes all through the presentation. Really appreciated!! Liked and subscribed!
    Norm

  • @debtizzano3066
    @debtizzano3066 Рік тому

    Thank you this is what I’m talking about. Yes, past heritage ways intrigue me too.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  Рік тому

      Right on. This method is so much more flavorful than the cal nixtamal!

  • @randycantu1
    @randycantu1 4 роки тому +3

    Thank you....today I've learned something new. As a Mexican/American, I thought I knew everything about tortillas, but you taught me something fascinating! Thank you again....

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +1

      Randy Cantu Awesome! Let me know how it comes out, if you try it. 😉👍

  • @magnumsalyer
    @magnumsalyer 2 роки тому +1

    I did it with borehole water (well water) and it worked fine. Thanks for the recipe!

  • @memowilliam9889
    @memowilliam9889 5 років тому +22

    Cook the tortilla until almost done then put into a basket with a thick towel.
    This is not just to keep them warm.
    This causes them to steam and finish cooking but giving you a softer texture than if you toasted entirely.

  • @melissaallenmainegardener4574
    @melissaallenmainegardener4574 2 роки тому +1

    This video is worth millions thank you,

  • @josephbrazelton5879
    @josephbrazelton5879 2 роки тому +3

    Wonderful video showing the how too as well as some of the experimentation you used. Learning to use wood ash instead of cal was fantastic, keep up the great work!

    • @kevinwhite4079
      @kevinwhite4079 Рік тому

      Does it affect the flavor, one way or another? This is amazing indigenous science.

  • @tycer7
    @tycer7 4 роки тому +2

    We did the side by side comparison with CAL vs Ash Tamales. The ash definitely had a richer flavor. The textures were the same. It was easy enough to do the ash vs the cal. Will definitely keep a jar of ash handy. We used Hickory Cane (not king) corn. Thanks again for the vid.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      Great! Yeah, I prefer the flavor of the wood ash process.

  • @wojomojo
    @wojomojo 3 роки тому +6

    The theory I've heard had the Mesoamericans cooking corn in containers carved of limestone, which is local to Southern Mexico and surrounding areas. Over time they realized the benefits of the lime interacting with the corn. Either way, chance probably has a lot to do with it! Glad I found your channel, subscribed.

  • @larryrobertson3310
    @larryrobertson3310 4 роки тому +3

    I have 800 pounds of dent corn and had been wondering how to make hominy , good instructions !! will be making grits !! mmmm

  • @xiraoit9342
    @xiraoit9342 7 місяців тому +1

    I do the same thing as you,
    but I use corn for chickens / a special type of corn for flour instead of dent corn/horse tooth corn.
    And when I baked it, it didn't bubble like the tortilla making videos spread on UA-cam.

  • @kimnenninger7226
    @kimnenninger7226 2 роки тому +1

    Great video. I needed to learn how to do this. Thank you for sharing.

  • @dennislock3415
    @dennislock3415 2 роки тому

    Was just speaking about wanting to learn this this very morning.Appreciate it.

  • @chilepeulla
    @chilepeulla 4 роки тому +4

    Hey man, this was a very thorough video and I highly appreciate this information. I have this process down with cal but I’d also like to master it with wood ash, more tools under your belt is always a good thing. My only advice here would be for you to get a hand cracked grain mill, a Corona or Victoria one. The thing with leaving your masa too coarse is that your chances of getting the tortillas to puff are highly reduced. When the tortilla puffs it cooks so much better on the inside and the pliability increases dramatically, it seems like a small thing but at least in my opinion that’s what takes a tortilla made from scratch from good to espectacular. With the grain mill I pass the dough twice through it, the first grind not too tight and the second grind very tight, with a little bit of water to help it go through and that gets you a very smooth masa that will have very good chances of puffing. Keep up the good work

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      Good tips! Have you ever tried using a kitchen aide grain mill for masa?

    • @chilepeulla
      @chilepeulla 4 роки тому

      I didn’t even know it existed! Haha. I looked into it a little bit and some people say it’s only meant for dry grains, so this application might be good for it

    • @thewintergardener
      @thewintergardener 2 роки тому

      @Diego Silva i've been using the victoria hand crank grain mill (well, I've been making my 7th graders to the labor) and we let it dry a bit between the 1st and 2nd grind. thanks for sharing your process, I'm going to try a loose first grind then the 2nd grind with more water and a closer plate setting.

    • @chilepeulla
      @chilepeulla 2 роки тому +1

      @@thewintergardener after many more attempts all I can say is that you can produce decent tortillas with a hand cranked grain mill, but it’s a little hit and miss. I had the chance to go to Mexico and have a Mexican grandmother show and explain her process to me, she had her masa ground for her in the local mill and there’s just no comparison in the texture that you get, her masa was smooth as silk, that’s a texture I will never be able to produce with the Victoria mill and her tortillas puffed like balloons. I’m really tempted to get a Molinito, look into it, it’s a semi industrial grinder for masa at a somewhat reasonable price

  • @algreen266
    @algreen266 2 роки тому

    Excellent, first your title speaks for itself, secondly your explanation to step by step is unmatched by any of these idiots on this internet, at least that shows if there is world hunger, you can still preserve a gourmet dish.Thank you

  • @jenncrossman7845
    @jenncrossman7845 5 років тому +4

    I love seeing this process! I first read about it in Little House in the Big Woods. It's interesting, though, to follow the story of the Ingalls family, and see how, in some ways, how they left some of the old processes and value judgements behind as they followed the "progress" of their time. I wonder if that contributed to almost the whole family dying of diabetes-related issues...

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  5 років тому +2

      Jenn Crossman fascinating. I haven’t read the books. There’s probably a great case study, in there. I have heaps of mustard to thresh, so there will be a “soil up” Dijon video, soon!

  • @thewintergardener
    @thewintergardener 2 роки тому

    great video. i'm working with my 7th grade agriculture students to study corn and we're going through this process. thanks!

  • @petiesabala1077
    @petiesabala1077 5 років тому +4

    I have been watching your videos like crazy I myself grow a lot of my own food dehydrate food and it was until last year I grew blue dent corn
    And I have been working on my Chemical process and doing lotta research on dent corn
    But I haven’t tried the wood ash process yet and in your video it explains everything so I thank you for that little bit of knowledge

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  5 років тому +3

      Petie Sabala Awesome. I have great new videos coming soon. Working on a whole hog series from the live animal to everything from bacon to lard and pate.

    • @alfredfabulous3640
      @alfredfabulous3640 Рік тому

      Poor hog. ... :(

  • @BroadShouldersFarm
    @BroadShouldersFarm 4 роки тому +12

    This is fascinating! Thanks for taking the time to record the whole process!

  • @trevor6485
    @trevor6485 Рік тому

    You’ve got a great channel, I wish all the best for you and yours!

  • @DrHenley
    @DrHenley 4 роки тому +17

    Thanks for the video. Using wood ash predates agriculture and goes back to hunter gatherers who used wood ash and water to make acorns edible by neutralizing the tannic acid. Recipes using acorns and bear meat were carried over into the agricultural age substituting corn and pork but preparing everything the same way, including soaking in lye. To them it just made the corn more tasty and easier to eat. They of course did not have sweet corn like we do today.

    • @thewintergardener
      @thewintergardener 2 роки тому +1

      that is awesome to learn James, thanks for sharing. do you have any resources on that info (like a book or museum?) i'd love to show my students.

    • @vizprave6721
      @vizprave6721 2 роки тому +2

      actually nixtamalisation was an Aztec and Mayan procedure which was done in preparing corn to grind into a flour. It came from the Nahuatl word of Nixtamalli which was a compound word of Nextli which meant lime ashes or calcium oxide and tamalli which meant unformed/cooked corn dough. When corn was brought from the New World to the Old World, the process was not used by those who consumed it as they didn't know it and so corn was considered an unhealthy grain associated mostly with the poor and one which caused pellagra. Fun fact, corn was supplied to Ireland during the Irish Potato Famine but it had only worsened the condition due to it not being Nixtamalised.

    • @alfredfabulous3640
      @alfredfabulous3640 Рік тому

      Bear Meat. ......mmmmmhh!

  • @jc-qw5si
    @jc-qw5si 2 роки тому +1

    Finally someone who uses ashes

    • @MarianLuca-rz5kk
      @MarianLuca-rz5kk 3 місяці тому

      Isn't the corn impregnated with the potassium carbonate from the ash? Is that healthy? Can we nixtamalize more gently with sodium bicarbonate ?

  • @jedw9496
    @jedw9496 3 роки тому

    Thanks man. This is the second time I am doing it with wood ash. I used hickory, apple and oak to make the ashes. For sure the Hickory makes good Cal.

  • @sappysamurai5170
    @sappysamurai5170 5 років тому +2

    A most excellent explanation of corn and nixtamalization! Thank you sir! Just subscribed! 👍👍 And the Hopi heirloom corn is beautiful!!!

  • @urbanhomesteadpgh9949
    @urbanhomesteadpgh9949 4 роки тому +1

    Very cool video, thanks! We're growing a lot of flint corn this year so we'll have to try the old fashioned method a couple times instead of just using cal.

  • @lyyliesther984
    @lyyliesther984 10 місяців тому +1

    Thankyou looks yummy 😋

  • @notmyname3883
    @notmyname3883 2 роки тому +2

    "Scott Glenn nixtamalizes corn"
    There, fixed the title for ya !

  • @suzz1776
    @suzz1776 4 роки тому +3

    just came across ur channel and subbed. it is very interesting and full of information. so thx u for the video. and btw, I never knew there was pink corn. that looks like candy in a jar :)

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      Thanks! There are some many wonderful corn varieties. I rotate between three. In addition to this Hopi pink, I grow a Hopi blue, and a Oaxacan green. I grow them in different years to avoid cross pollination and genetic degradation.

  • @batwork4031
    @batwork4031 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you very much, I have been reluctant to use lime. This is perfect.

  • @blueskye23
    @blueskye23 4 роки тому +2

    Thank for the tutorial! If you press the center of the tortilla with a dish cloth or wadded up paper towel when it is almost finished cooking, it will usually puff up. That gets rid of the raw center and gives it a toastier flavor. (be careful: dishcloth + 🔥 could be dangerous)

  • @jakehenning9483
    @jakehenning9483 2 роки тому +3

    Could you then dehydrate the masa (after nixtamalized) and turn it into cornmeal or flour? Could you jar these in mason jars to store as canned corn? I'm very new to this entire subject! Thanks for the great video!

    • @g-whiz286
      @g-whiz286 Рік тому

      Cornmeal is not nixtamalized.

  • @danielwilliams1400
    @danielwilliams1400 4 роки тому +1

    I have many pounds of the minerals from wood ash, after percolating rain water through it, filtering and cooking the water off until it's a solid crystalline form. Now I have to figure out how much to add back into water. It is very concentrated, obviously. lol My main reason for doing it initially, was in case I wanted to make soap, and also for bio-diesel production if I could make that work reliably. But now I have grown field corn, and with harvest time approaching fast, I am just now finding out that it's best to process it with lye or lime. lol

    • @danielwilliams1400
      @danielwilliams1400 4 роки тому

      I finally realized who you sound like. Peter Weller a.k.a. Robo Cop. ha ha

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      Daniel Williams Ha! Robo Cop. What you have made is lye. By dissolving that into water you can process corn. I know that the proper strength for soap will float a fresh egg. Probably half that strength for nixtamal.

  • @xstreemfishing
    @xstreemfishing 5 років тому +1

    Great video. You have inspired me to try the whole process.

  • @tybrady1935
    @tybrady1935 2 роки тому +1

    I visited Guatemala about thirty five years ago. Every meal had corn tortillas made from fresh corn grown a few hundred feet away. They were so good! The food was sold by natives by the side of the road using wood fires. One woman was always making tortillas using a stone metate and then using their hands to form the tortilla. I wonder if they used lime or if they used wood ash. I hope they used wood ash.

  • @sammichmanjr
    @sammichmanjr 5 років тому

    Wow. Just from ashes and corn. Impressive, sir.
    Also, for what it's worth, if you have a single "tamale" it's called a "tamal" (nix-TAMAL-ization... I leanred something else tonight!) and if you have more than one tamal, they're tamales.
    Keep up the great work! And from what I saw in this video, I'm quite jealous of your kitchen.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  5 років тому +1

      Thank you! I did the kitchen remod in the late fall of '18. Those granite counters came out of a tile job I did. There was a good bit of tile chipping off of a concrete slab, crack repair, and leveling to get a nice floor. It's a joy to work in.

  • @clambert2020
    @clambert2020 5 років тому

    Great video. Wonderful content. Well presented. I also read the related article from your website. You are a gifted writer who is sharing priceless information. Thank you so much.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  5 років тому

      clambert2020 wow! Thanks for making my day! I’m planning big things for 2020!

  • @booon-booon
    @booon-booon 10 місяців тому

    curious to learn more about nixtamalizing other grains maybe or the effect on using wood ash or calcium hydroxide on other possible food sources. I think Noma has done it with pine cones? would be really curious on what that does or how that works.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  10 місяців тому +1

      That’s a good avenue of experimentation

    • @booon-booon
      @booon-booon 10 місяців тому

      @@radicalgastronomy is it something you can see yourself experimenting with in the future? if so i'd like to tune in for sure

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  10 місяців тому +1

      @@booon-booon You bet. Sourgum is a good candidate.

    • @booon-booon
      @booon-booon 10 місяців тому

      @@radicalgastronomy awesome. Subscribed and curious to hear what you find! Not much well written stuff on the subject currently besides "sometimes fancy restaurants nixtamalize other things" but there isn't much else there. At some point I'd like to get into making fresh masa but would love to know if I can do it with other stuff too before delving down that rabbit hole, y'know? Especially if it can be cool local/foraged stuff here from Missouri. We've got some pine trees which is why I was curious about the cones

  • @PedsNephroUIC
    @PedsNephroUIC Рік тому

    thanks! I learned something today! very imformative :)

  • @dinahscarlett307
    @dinahscarlett307 2 роки тому +1

    In the video you mention using hardwood wood ash from deciduous trees, can one use wood ash from non-deciduous trees such as eucalyptus? We use pine as kindling and the logs are all Eucalyptus.
    Thanks from 'down under' for a very interesting video.

    • @richardjacques1731
      @richardjacques1731 2 роки тому

      He did specify hard wood, I think any oily wood would leave a pitchy taste. I was wondering if fruit wood like peach or apple tree would would work. Easy enough to get prunings or firewood when orchards upgrade their trees.

    • @rd6203
      @rd6203 2 роки тому

      Isn't eucalyptus toxic to burn?

  • @crowcrow1032
    @crowcrow1032 4 роки тому +1

    Nice one mate ! very informative - any chance of a video on the growing of the heritage corn ?
    I would luv to try to grow here in Australia and also on land I have in Philippines

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +1

      Crow Crow thanks! That video will happen, but not this season, as I’m building a new farm and have no time for field crops. Some basic tips: I plant during the first thunderstorm of the season. Keep it wet until it germinates. Plant it 25 cm apart, so the leaves get plenty of sun. Leave it on the stalk as long as possible, as long as the birds aren’t eating it. Good luck, mate!

  • @arthorim
    @arthorim 4 роки тому

    In some parts of Mexico people still use ash for making nixtamal. This masa is use for especial dishes like dirty tamales .it's a very simple recipe corn masa made with ash spread on banana leaves wrap it and cook it as usual it goes very hood with mole or chile colorado pork ribs.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      arturin im Super cool.

    • @alfredfabulous3640
      @alfredfabulous3640 Рік тому

      'Dirty -Sanch- ...err, Tamales' , eh?

    • @arthorim
      @arthorim Рік тому +1

      @@alfredfabulous3640 look at tamales nejos from guerrero. Nejo means dirty

  • @CampLJNC
    @CampLJNC 3 роки тому

    Wow. So cool. Thanks for sharing!

  • @hawkowleditorial5551
    @hawkowleditorial5551 2 роки тому +1

    Thank you for posting this. I have been looking for guidance on how to perform this process because I've been growing Hopi blue corn for years and relatively recently realized we should have been doing this. We have just been grinding the dry corn in a hand crank grain mill (hard work) and making delicious cornbread. I still have so many questions, such as is it necessary to bleach the color out (which seems to happen when boiling for an hour, but not when boiling only 10 minutes)? And are blue corn tortilla chips not good for us then, because they must not have been nixtamalized to this extent? I have seen others say to process the corn in the lye solution for shorter periods and that it brings out the color. But if the color ends up going away, what's the point of the colored corns?
    Thanks also to Paul McWhorter for sharing his observations of native peoples' techniques.

    • @Aspen7780
      @Aspen7780 Рік тому +1

      You should use juniper ashes from the green twig parts of the trees. Put a little of the sifted ash powder in the water you use cooking the blue corn meal. It makes it more nutritious and returns the original color so that it’s more blue again.
      Oh and you should be first toasting your cornmeal so that it’s more grayish than purple before doing the boiling in ash water. If you toast it till it’s beige you’ve gone too far.

    • @julieh6396
      @julieh6396 Рік тому

      @@Aspen7780 thank you for your reply. I’ve not heard of the toasting step before. What is your source for this wisdom? And you are saying to burn green, wet wood and leaves and use a “little” (how much?) of the sifted ash from this? We had a bunch of cedar/juniper that we had to cut back and it dried in our driveway. I wanted to burn it to collect the ash, but we don’t have a copper pit and I was concerned about mixing the ash with other ash… I’ve been using pickling lime since I first posted here.

    • @Aspen7780
      @Aspen7780 Рік тому

      @@julieh6396 hi there. I’m Tewa from one of the pueblos in NM. Once we grind the blue corn down, you can either use it as cornmeal (unroasted) or roast it. I mean toast it. Some people put the cornmeal in a big pan on the stove top. Others put it on a baking sheet in the oven. You just have to keep stirring it to not burn it. When it turn a bluish gray and you can smell it, it’s done. Take it out and keep up with occasionally stirring it cause it will continue cook even removed from the heat. This roasted blue corn meal is atole flour. You can make a drink with it for the morning like coffee or when you are sick. You can make porridge out of it.
      Our people used to use ashes, though not so much now. I have Navajo relatives who still do. The fine shifted ashes turn the gray meal back to a bluish color when cooking.
      The ashes are best made on an outside grill. You need the green twigs of the juniper. That will burn to fine white ash. The woody branch is ok but doesn’t burn as completely to ash as the green and might stay chunky and black. The green juniper twig ash will be nutritious. You don’t need a lot of ash for most applications. A teaspoon or so mixed in the water for most dishes like porridge. Just make sure it’s been sifted to get rid of solid black stuff beforehand. They also used to make cooking ash from corn cobs and saltbrush. Look up some Navajo cooking youtube videos.

  • @neosky9
    @neosky9 7 місяців тому +2

    Thank you

  • @David-kd5mf
    @David-kd5mf 3 роки тому

    Great video

  • @natemorlock2379
    @natemorlock2379 4 роки тому +2

    I loved the video, spectacular content. I am curious, did they have any noticeable ashy taste? Were they just OK? Or were they delicious like they appeared to be?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +5

      Nate Morlock They are fabulous. They have a deeper, earthier flavor than lime processed corn, but more faintly smoky than ashy. To me, this method is superior in every way but convenience (and convenience is never my standard ;).

  • @paulousley6042
    @paulousley6042 2 роки тому +1

    Can you dry after Nixtamalization and store the flour or would just use this process for fresh dough?

  • @datbihhneah
    @datbihhneah 3 роки тому +1

    My tribe mixes in juniper ash with the blue corn meal 🙂

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому +1

      Nice. I don’t have those ways, but I want to check it out!

    • @rd6203
      @rd6203 2 роки тому +1

      🖤🤤🖤

  • @TaLeng2023
    @TaLeng2023 4 місяці тому

    If I leave the ash in the lye water overnight, would it result in a more alkaline solution?

  • @Dr.Sciatica
    @Dr.Sciatica 3 місяці тому

    Hello, i find it intresting. Why reverse osmosis with rain water or distiled water ?

  • @GreatFutureBand
    @GreatFutureBand 3 роки тому

    Can i make corn flour out of sweet corn dried kernels?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому

      That depends on what you mean by “corn flour”. In the US, what we call corn starch is called corn flour in the rest of the world. If this is what you mean, then yes. Soak the dried kernels for a couple hours, purée with water and let the corn settle, for 30 minutes. Pour off the liquid. Pour this liquid through a flour sack. Let the liquid settle until the water is clear, then pour it off. The remainder, in the bottom of the bowl, is your corn flour. Spread it out and let it dry.

    • @GreatFutureBand
      @GreatFutureBand 3 роки тому

      @@radicalgastronomy Thanks very much for the reply and info. I am growing a lot of corn and I want to try and dry and store it without needing to can it. I would like to try and use a grinder at home and use the "corn flour" (not sure the proper name) to make corn tortillas or anything else i can make out of it. Basically to try and use it as more of a grain. Would it be a different process to achieve this than what you describe above for "corn starch" Thanks again

  • @tyronlockwood1080
    @tyronlockwood1080 4 роки тому +1

    Wow just absolutely great job, you deserve more subscriber...instant like and subscribe.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +1

      tyron lockwood Thanks, friend! I’m still a noob, but growing!

  • @richardarroyo598
    @richardarroyo598 3 роки тому

    Why not soak the corn in the full lye solution if it is going to be rinsed anyway? Too concentrated, taste? Great video!!!

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому +1

      Thanks! One could do that. This approach is born of the desire to understand the “prehistoric” origin, and to find a way to unlock the beauty of field corn with something that is a surplus, on my farm. It’s handy to know how, particularly in these times of supply chain collapse. I hear Target has been out of stock on canning lids, of all things. If one wanted to simplify the process, you could certainly stock up on calcium hydroxide. The wood ash is always in the hearth, so I like this method for that reason, and that the poetry of the experience, from planting the corn, to making tamales, is precious. I plant when the first thunder shakes the sky, in spring. Smelling the wood ash slaking reminds me of the rain. Thunder, rain, water, fire, corn. Sodium hydroxide does not belong in this poem.
      One could make ash lye water at full concentration, but the corn would dissolve before the reaction reached the core of the kernel. One could, also make full strength lye water for soap making, and dilute for nixtamalization.

  • @gottmituns1938
    @gottmituns1938 4 роки тому +1

    Very cool! I always wondered how to do this with wood ash. Thanks to you, now I know.
    Have you run across a recipe for making hominy with lye? I have sodium hydroxide from making soap. Not sure if it is food grade, but I'll find out before using it.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +2

      The water produced by boiling the ashes is lye water, so it will totally work. You just need to get the portions correct. I am not aware of specific measurements for sodium hydroxide, but calcium hydroxide is two tablespoons to a gallon of water. I’d start there. If the corn dissolves, too strong. If the kernel skins don’t slip, too weak (you’ll know right away, if it’s too weak, as the corn won’t change color in the first minute. I imagine your soap making lye is fairly pure, and I doubt you’ll find it sold as “food safe” though I could be wrong.

  • @blackcitroenlove
    @blackcitroenlove 5 років тому +1

    This is how I do it at home :) yum yum

  • @MarianLuca-rz5kk
    @MarianLuca-rz5kk 3 місяці тому

    Isn't the corn impregnated with the potassium carbonate from the ash? Is that healthy? Can we nixtamalize more gently with sodium bicarbonate ?

  • @Ancientinian
    @Ancientinian 3 роки тому +1

    Two questions: How far apart are your different varieties of corn grown as to keep the strains from cross pollinating? Why hard wood ash and not pine?

    • @eyesofthecervino3366
      @eyesofthecervino3366 3 роки тому +1

      I've heard that pine ash has too much tar to be useful as lye.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому +3

      Corn can be separated either in space, or time. I'd have a minimum 500 feet to assure no cross polination of seed stock, but you can plant them right next to each other as long as they are not flowering at the same time. the pollen window is only about 10 days, in most varieties. if you know days to flower for your varieties, you can stagger your plantings accordingly. Personally, I grow one variety per year, and rotate between three or four types.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому +2

      Pine will work, but you must used more ash, and concentrate the lye water through reduction (boiling it down to increase the strength). I have never done this, so can't offer measurements. Let me know if you give it a shot.

  • @NayrbRellimer
    @NayrbRellimer 4 роки тому +1

    Have you tried making masa flour with washing soda (sodium carbonate)? If you can't find washing soda at the store, you can make it by heating baking soda around 400°F in the oven for a few hours.

  • @shomina2982
    @shomina2982 Рік тому

    you should use some cloth bag to put ash inside when you cook it

  • @bonsummers2657
    @bonsummers2657 3 роки тому +1

    What's the purpose of getting the skins to separate? Do you keep the skins. I'd like to keep the corn whole, and not eliminate the skins.

  • @susannehager1092
    @susannehager1092 6 місяців тому

    Wonderful video. Do I need ash from hardwood, or can I take every ash? Thank you!

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  6 місяців тому

      @@susannehager1092 Thanks! Hardwood is preferred, but if all you have is pine it will work. Just use a third more ash.

    • @susannehager1092
      @susannehager1092 6 місяців тому

      @@radicalgastronomy Thank you very much from Germany for your quick answer. I wish you all the best!

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  6 місяців тому +1

      @@susannehager1092 Gern geschehen. Viel Glück!

  • @officialLWH
    @officialLWH Рік тому

    Can you use olive wood for this? I am from the Mediterranean.

  • @CROSpunkie
    @CROSpunkie 5 років тому +1

    Here in GT I'm always seen them drip water directly into the mill feed with the kernels. I wonder if you could do the same with your setup and skip the need for further blending in the food processor?

  • @o5245607
    @o5245607 4 роки тому +1

    Brillant, something I have been thinking about for quite some time thanks. Have you checked the PH of the water when finished simmering and cooling down or what the % of alkalinity is with the amount of wood ash you are using in your recipe?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      jager meister I don’t use litmus strips to check it, but that would be interesting. I just rely on how the corn reacts. If there is a quick color change, I know it’s strong enough. There is an egg test used by soap makers, also, but if a fresh egg floats in it, it’s too strong for this, and the corn would just disintegrate.

    • @o5245607
      @o5245607 4 роки тому

      @@radicalgastronomy Thank you appreciate your help.

  • @bricarri
    @bricarri 5 років тому

    Awesome Bob! Thanks.

  • @mountaingator001
    @mountaingator001 3 роки тому +1

    THANK YOU

  • @arsenbaic
    @arsenbaic 2 роки тому

    Thank You.

  • @vegasbattleborn1594
    @vegasbattleborn1594 5 років тому +1

    Finally found a true traditional method of making hominy!
    Enjoyed your interpretation of how this process came about but who would've thought.... I'll take these wood ashes & use it to make this corn better? I'm always amazed at how we as humans came up with these things. Subbed ✌️

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +1

      Thanks, gurl! I love these old, simple technologies. Thanks for the sub.

  • @DGTLbeats
    @DGTLbeats 3 роки тому +2

    that smell you described about the ash is called petrichor and it is a very pacific northwest smell. this video is amazing thank you for your knowledge

  • @jaredmurphy3939
    @jaredmurphy3939 2 роки тому

    Do you have a dedicated stainless steel pot for this, or could you still use it for normal cooking after this process?

  • @ftmhlcv4645
    @ftmhlcv4645 3 роки тому

    great content dude. When you say wood ash could we also use briquette coal ash? Or should it be natural coal only...

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому

      Charcoal ash may work, but I haven’t tried it. In theory, charcoal is just wood that is not done burning, so it’s ash should have the same alkaline properties ash while wood ash. If you try it, let me know how it goes!

    • @ftmhlcv4645
      @ftmhlcv4645 3 роки тому

      @@radicalgastronomy ill give it a go. im just trying to make nachos so will be frying the tortillas. İ wonder if this nixtamalization method has any benefit to the taste for nachos... for tortillas they make they more elastic...

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому

      @@ftmhlcv4645 the flavor is superior, with this method. I’m sure they will be exceptional nachos.

    • @notmyname3883
      @notmyname3883 2 роки тому +1

      I would NOT. You have any idea all the additives in your store-bought charcoal? Yuck!

  • @tycer7
    @tycer7 4 роки тому

    Howdy. Great video!
    How many cups of finished product do you think you end up with?

  • @ssc_1
    @ssc_1 2 роки тому

    Can we use ash from the oven

  • @BassDroppah
    @BassDroppah 4 роки тому +2

    Does making it with ash add any flavor?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +3

      Bass Droppah it makes it more earthy, and more corny. Not so much smokey.

  • @suzz1776
    @suzz1776 4 роки тому

    when they say that u have to use hard wood ash for this. what is hard wood. like what types of wood ash can u use and what types r not ok to use. I know poisonous and probably really resinous woods like pine would not b good. but what exactly is hard wood?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      Any wood will work, and is safe. “Hard wood” refers simply to wood from leafy trees. In other words, not evergreens like pine. These also work, but make a weaker alkaline solution, thus requiring more ash. I have never used them, for this, so I can’t offer correct ratios.

  • @zerocel
    @zerocel 3 роки тому

    does this work with the commercial corn they sell for popcorn??
    Nice Video!!

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому +1

      I have not tried this with popcorn. If you try it, reduce the simmering time, as popcorn kernels are much smaller than field corn.

    • @zerocel
      @zerocel 3 роки тому

      @@radicalgastronomy thank you for the reply!! I will try it and let you know! Thanks

  • @dangraf4612
    @dangraf4612 Рік тому

    G'day team, Dan here from Australia. Question. Once you've made the wood ash solution/lye. Have you ever tested it for heavy metals? I had some test strips left from when i tested our drinking water and thought I'd test the lye solution. I was shocked. With 3 different hardwoods , I reduced to ash separately then boiled in water, cooled then proceeded to dunk the testing strips in solution. I was shocked to find a high lead indication across all 3 hardwood ashes. Am I missing something? A reaction with stainless steel saucepan??

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  Рік тому +1

      Interesting. Stainless shouldn’t react. The high pH could effect a strip designed to test drinking water, but we would need to know more about how the strips work.

  • @hellogreen7074
    @hellogreen7074 3 роки тому

    How do you figure out how much ash to corn ratio. Also water? What happens if too much ash is used/ too little?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому

      Some trial and error got me to the ratios shown here. Too much ash, and the corn dissolves. Not enough, and the corn won’t swell and soften properly.

  • @arielvicencio7984
    @arielvicencio7984 4 роки тому

    Awesome, thank you for the wonderful video! I have a question, would I by any chance use fresh corn to do this process or should I stick to dried corn? Thanks in advance!

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +1

      ariel vicencio You need dry corn, for this. Thanks and good luck!

  • @presidentoxford
    @presidentoxford 2 роки тому

    This a how to post or a shared experiment ?

  • @sharonsessler
    @sharonsessler 4 роки тому

    Do you think I could add juniper wood ash to stone ground heirloom blue cornmeal to make tortillas, with decent results? I know it would not be nixtamalization, but possibly give me some good flavor in a pinch.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      Sharon Sessler Sadly, no. Corn meal will never behave like masa. Tortillas would be pretty scetch. Also, juniper ash is going to be chemically and culinarily unpleasant. Ash + saliva = lye, so, I wouldn’t. Someday I’ll post a baller corn bread recipe, but that is the best thing to do with such a fine product. It’s about time for field corn to be harvested. Ask around a farmer’s market for some nice heirloom corn, whole. Good luck!

    • @sharonsessler
      @sharonsessler 4 роки тому

      Thank you. I will scratch the idea.

    • @morgensellier7816
      @morgensellier7816 4 роки тому

      There must be some way to make juniper ash taste good. The Navajo people add it into their corn. I've had juniper ash corn cookies and they're tasty. I wonder if there's a technique we're missing? www.npr.org/sections/thesalt/2017/08/21/544191316/to-get-calcium-navajos-burn-juniper-branches-to-eat-the-ash

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +2

      Morgen Sellier I will report back with my findings. I suppose that some ash would be palatable. My big concern was the risk of over alkalizing the dish and risking eating drain cleaner.

  • @xiraoit9342
    @xiraoit9342 7 місяців тому

    Can i use flour corn for making flour instead dent corn / horse teeth corn?

  • @garyplatt-hepworth8792
    @garyplatt-hepworth8792 3 роки тому

    I suspect that we use only the light grey coloured wood ash and exclude the black ?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  3 роки тому

      Yes, I sift it, and use the charcoal in my compost, ash for the corn.

  • @billbryan761
    @billbryan761 4 роки тому +1

    Wait a minute...if red corn turns yellow after nixtamalization. Is red corn tortillia chips not nixtamalized?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +1

      Different corn. There are endless varieties or corn. The red chips are made from a corn which has a kernel that is red all the way through.

    • @billbryan761
      @billbryan761 4 роки тому

      @@radicalgastronomy Okay, thanks for clearing that up. I heard about using wood ash, but never came across someone doing it. Will be trying this out here in ontario. Cheers

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      @@billbryan761 Great! Good luck.

  • @loaleen
    @loaleen 4 роки тому

    Thanks for this video - I have unlimited access to sweet corn and I'm super excited to try this process! Did you start off by just hanging the corn to dry right after picking, to get the kernels?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому +4

      I like to let the corn dry on the stalk, for as long as possible, then harvest and shuck. I let it dry another couple weeks before stripping. Good luck!

    • @johne7123
      @johne7123 3 роки тому +1

      @@radicalgastronomy thanks 👍

  • @Trevkongable
    @Trevkongable 4 роки тому

    Awesome video, I just subscribed

  • @kermitlohry4888
    @kermitlohry4888 4 роки тому

    Great Video. We used to be able to buy the Hopi Pink at our farmers market, but not any longer. Do you have some for sale?

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      Kermit Lohry I have garden level seed quantities, but not really poundage. I didn’t grow any, last year. I run a rotation of that, blue, and Oaxacan green.

    • @kermitlohry4888
      @kermitlohry4888 4 роки тому

      @@radicalgastronomy No worries. I have about 20 pounds each of blue, 0axacan green and yellow, but getting low on the Hopi Pink. Hopefully someone will grow it around Boulder this year. I really like the Pink for corn bread. This is my first attempt at wood ash nixtamalization.

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      Kermit Lohry Try Masa Seed Foundation. I’m sure Rich has a bunch. 😉👍🌽

    • @kermitlohry4888
      @kermitlohry4888 4 роки тому

      @@radicalgastronomy Thanks. That's where I originally got all my heirloom corn (Abbodanza). I used to do electrical work for Rich and I saw him at the Farmers Market last spring with the new Masa Seed

    • @radicalgastronomy
      @radicalgastronomy  4 роки тому

      Kermit Lohry He is the source of my seed, originally.