I'm an average guy in my mid 30's who has never really cooked much of anything, yet this is one of my favorite things to watch. Love the old cookbook show - and everything else you produce as well. Love the history and the fact that you seem to truly understand and always explain things within the context of their times, whether it's the 1700s or the 1930s. Excellent production quality, personable presentation, and just an all around pleasure to watch. Thanks!
My family still makes a version of this for the holidays. I usually whirl about half of the corn in a blender to make it creamier. As it happens, I live near Allegan.
Based on the addresses of other recipes you showed, plus the fact that the private home of Chas. P. Schuler of Schuler Coal is now a bed and breakfast - The Allegan Country Inn, this is certainly from Allegan, Michigan. Allegan County is still quite rural in 2021. I live about 25 miles from Allegan. When I was young, my adoptive dad, born in 1932, made “corn gravy” regularly, which was similar to the recipe you made but had no eggs, and was not baked. It was identical to what you had before you added the eggs. We love the Old Cookbook Show and look forward to a new episode every week!
I love the little almost dance Glen does and the joyful chuckle with that first bite. I think I will make this tonight but add a little cheese on top because , well I love cheese!
Glen, would love to see your mother's tomato bake recipe. Always looking for good tomato options especially if there is cheese involved. Thank you for all the wonderful shows.
I'm from Iowa. I've been making this for decades... I used to freeze 500 ears of corn in a day a few times per season. I had two 17-cubic ft freezers on the farm. My kids got tired of plain boiled frozen corn. This casserole made a nice side for a change. Sometimes I'd throw in a box of Jiffy cornbread mix- they're only $1 now. In the 70s/80s... you could get them 3 or 4 boxes for $1. I called that Corn Pudding.
Jiffy cornbread is around 50 cents a box here in Texas - but sometimes HEB and Kroger will run 3 for $1. I have tauvht myself how to put up canned foods - mostly preserves. Is canning corn difficult?
My grandma and my mom made very similar dish called scalloped corn, often with a sprinkle of pimentos on top before baking for color. We have an evolved dish now we have on holidays with corn meal, and creamed corn, with red peppers and onions as well. It was dubbed Corny Corn by the grandkids, and that name has stuck for years!
The city of Allegan according to wikipedia is in Allegan township and is the county seat of Allegan county! I think I see a trend here.... And it is very near Grand Rapids Michigan.
My dad made the cracker crumb baked corn and called it “scalloped corn”. We weren’t too excited about it but he said that they used to make it during the Depression and it stretched the corn out for a heartier dish. I may try this thanks
Our holiday tables were not complete without a big pan of scalloped corn, using the cracker crumb recipe. My grandmother cooked on a fuel stove/oven, but they used corncobs rather than wood. As we grew up and became more affluent and urbanized, things like sour cream, cheese and chives have found their way into the recipe, and it is still a must-have on all holiday tables in our family, most particularly thanksgiving.
My grandmother made a similar corn dish. The only difference is that she separated the eggs, beat the whites stiff and folded them in. She called it Corn Soufflé.
I often wonder what your cookbook library must look like. I imagine a room with floor to ceiling cookbooks. Heavenly! Thanks for sharing your happy corn dance!
Without the jalapenos, we made something like that a couple of years ago for Christmas brunch. We added sausage (in our case, turkey sausage crumbles for convenience) and it made a good main dish for the family buffet.
My family makes almost the same recipe every year for Thanksgiving. Over the years we have introduced a package of jiffy cornbread mix and shredded cheddar to the top! But your recipe was basically the one my great grandmother from Grand Rapids used to make!!
I'm going to make this for Thanksgiving for sure. I believe this is the corn "casserole" my mom made a few times. She didn't remember it unfortunately but I certainly do! It was delicious!
Need to try this! Although, the one you mentioned with crackers sounds more like the recipe that I'm looking for. My Grandmother was born in 1916 and used to make the best baked corn. She called it escalloped corn though. I've been hitting family members up to find the recipe in the books and boxes of recipes that we all have, but no one seems to have the corn recipe! I will be trying this, but would love to get the recipe with crackers in it!! Thanks for sharing Glen! 💚🌞
BAKED CORN Mrs. Anna M. Lewis, 216 Fox St. S. W. Grand Rapids 1 can yellow corn with kernels. 1 1/2 cups bread of[sic] craker crumbs. 2 eggs, may be omitted "better with." 1 cup milk. 2 tablespoons butter. Mix all together, season with salt and pepper, place in a casserole, cover top with crumbs and dot gen- eously with butter; bake until it puffs up and is light brown. A glass of milk for the kiddies, a cup of hot tea or coffee and a dough- nut will make this a very hearty lunch.
Loved Glen's happy jig! My parents grew up in 30s but rural South vs city North. Food available very different. Also chickens can't be counted on for as many eggs as temps drop, even in the South. Michigan chickens were prob even less dependable. Recipe reminds me that Mom made Dad pancakes with corn when I was a kid. Only he liked them though
My family (from KY) makes something similar to this for the holidays but we call it corn pudding. It's baked in a bain marie and has a little nutmeg, grated onion, and diced pimentos.
I make something that is so similar to this. Just 7 eggs, half a cup of milk and what ever left overs are in the fridge mixed in and any cheese that you have, bake about twenty five minutes, done. This type of recipe is such a great way to use up what you already have at home.
Hey Glen, have you ever had the opportunity to cook on a real wood/coal burning stove? The whole top of the stove is hot, heating up the pan evenly and usually very quickly. Hence "stir continuously". My grandmother used her wood stove continuously until 1967 when my grandfather and aunt gave her an electric stove. They slid the woodstove over to make room for the electric. But gma continued to use the woodstove except in the summer.
My father who grew up in England, remembers as a boy, the food cooked in a Wood Oven. He said, that the flavour was so much better than Electric or even Gas!
This is similar to a dish my Chilean girlfriend taught me called Pastel del Choclo, admittedly the South American version has a little different flavor and texture due to the difference in the corn grown in both places. Fresh corn is traditional but frozen will also do. Great vid! Don't forget to consider electric appliances! It honestly wasn't that long ago, all things considered.
Like some others have mentioned, my family also still has a a version of this. I love the buttery and elevated corn taste in this over a traditional corn bread.
Made this last night for dinner. I added some browned ground beef, onions, topped it with a butter/cracker crust and made it our main course. Delicious! Thank you!!
I love it for its simplicity. I imagine that it would thicken up nicely as it cools. If you added cheese and ham and filled a pasty shell you might end up with a kind of corn quiche.
Glen we need IE You needs to Compile an "Glenn And Friends Sunday Old Cook Book Show " Cookbook. As all ways Amazing simple but good recipie born out of a time when life was hard. Made even more relatable given what we are still facing now.
My great Aunt would make scalloped corn every year for Christmas dinner and it was to die for. It was the first casserole to go empty and rarely made it around the table. Oh how I miss that.
I live in Grand Rapids, MI and my grandmother used to make something almost identical to this whenever she'd make a soup or a stew. She called it "Dutch cornbread".
Definitively from Allegan, Michigan. I appreciate the Allegan County Fair, and, yes, the farm boys do eat their corn pudding with coffe and donuts as a meal in the field.
Grew up with my Dad's baked corn. A dinner side dish. He used creamed corn when we had it available . Went to a NewYorker's house for thanksgiving a few years ago. Asked what 1 dish I wanted. BAKED CORN! Got a can of corn thrown in a dish and baked.sigh. she tried.
If a recipe earns Glen’s “happy dance” then I’m making it! Thanks for these Glen and Jules, y’all make me laugh quite often and this is one of the few cooking channels from which I have actually have made recipes from. So far, y’all are batting 100…or is it 1000? I never can keep track if it’s 100 or 1000, either way, your recipes have all been great!
Loved this! My mom made scalloped corn, that's what she called it. Whole kernel and creamed corn, salt, pepper, sugar, butter, and cracker crumbs. After it was halfway baked, she would add some milk. No measurements, of course!
My old recipe (from about that era) was always baked in a loaf pan, which would make a thicker product, and sometimes it was actually turned out onto a plate and then sliced. When I made it years later, I just served it out with a spoon. Haven't made this in at least 30 years. Brought back some memories. I used to put cracker crumbs over the top before baking it.
Your reaction, when you taste it and obviously remember your moms dish (and probably some situations where you ate it) is the best part of the video! :-) Dishes that can do that are priceless.
We make a version of this on my mom's side of the family. My great-grandmother made this and called it corn pudding. We still make it for Thanksgiving and Christmas. Our version is canned corn and canned creamed corn with eggs and milk/cream and salt and pepper. It's kind of a souffle, really.
A side Grandma used to make and delicious if you like corn. Noticed the recipe contributor lived in Hamilton and there is a Hamilton in Allegan County, MI. Thanks, Glenn.
My home town in rural Southern Nebraska, didn't get electricity until 1950. I can remember grandma ice box, then getting a refrigerator. I also know where the ice house for my town was.
This is a tradition for our Thanksgiving dinner down south! We call it spoonbread. The only thing different besides the quantity of ingredients is that we add Jiffy Mix cornbread to the batter, then bake! I spice it up sometimes by adding onions, peppers, pimento and cheese. We love this dish! Oh! And of course fresh corn from our garden!
At 1:32 he shows the alternative recipe which contains the ladies number and address. I typed that address in to Google maps and saw a picture of the home. Very cool. It makes me wonder about her story. I think that's what I like about this channel the most is exploring the history that goes along with the food.
Mom made this rarely,but it was a school cafeteria favorite. I can still taste it. They use diced potatoes,hard boiled eggs,onion,celery,milk butter and a top crust. Salt and pepper. I had it with half cream corn a d half niblets. That was good. Oops I am describing corn pie.
I'm an average guy in my mid 30's who has never really cooked much of anything, yet this is one of my favorite things to watch. Love the old cookbook show - and everything else you produce as well. Love the history and the fact that you seem to truly understand and always explain things within the context of their times, whether it's the 1700s or the 1930s. Excellent production quality, personable presentation, and just an all around pleasure to watch. Thanks!
Spot on!!
So, you haven't cook before?
"How did I get on to that?". Haha, Glen in a nutshell. And the stories are the reason we love to watch!
My family still makes a version of this for the holidays. I usually whirl about half of the corn in a blender to make it creamier. As it happens, I live near Allegan.
Do tell, was Glen correct in some of his musings about the community?
Fascinating! All is connected. The past is present.
Yep we do too? We call it blender corn pudding. Use for side dish for holiday meals.
@@cynthiamorton3583 Still holds true today.
Interesting we make this as a side dish here in Barbados. We call it corn pie and I like to use a mix of canned cream style corn and whole corn.
Ok, now you have to do a show with your mom’s Tomato Bake. I’m intrigued by that!
Same here Maddy
Yes, please!
Definitely!
Ditto!
Yes! Tomato Bake, please.
Based on the addresses of other recipes you showed, plus the fact that the private home of Chas. P. Schuler of Schuler Coal is now a bed and breakfast - The Allegan Country Inn, this is certainly from Allegan, Michigan. Allegan County is still quite rural in 2021. I live about 25 miles from Allegan. When I was young, my adoptive dad, born in 1932, made “corn gravy” regularly, which was similar to the recipe you made but had no eggs, and was not baked. It was identical to what you had before you added the eggs.
We love the Old Cookbook Show and look forward to a new episode every week!
I’ve watched Glenn for a few years now- never expected to hear him talk about Allegan!
I love the little almost dance Glen does and the joyful chuckle with that first bite. I think I will make this tonight but add a little cheese on top because , well I love cheese!
you knows it's good when the butt wiggle dance comes out!
Yum!!
Windy everything is better with a little or a whole lot of cheese.
Me too haha!
Glen, would love to see your mother's tomato bake recipe. Always looking for good tomato options especially if there is cheese involved. Thank you for all the wonderful shows.
Glen danced, he really liked it
We got the Glen "dance, wiggle & giggle" of delight when he took the first bite. Must be an absolute winner!
I am waiting for the Airplane version of that dance!
The best show on Sunday mornings!
Love the little dance there Glen, cute. :D
Ate this growing up. We called it scalloped corn
green chili's!...little monterey jack?...
LOVE Glen's happy dance! Means it's my kind of food 🧡
@6:33 O Glen is at his happy place.... :) I'm game, thanks for sharing...
I'm from Iowa. I've been making this for decades... I used to freeze 500 ears of corn in a day a few times per season. I had two 17-cubic ft freezers on the farm. My kids got tired of plain boiled frozen corn. This casserole made a nice side for a change. Sometimes I'd throw in a box of Jiffy cornbread mix- they're only $1 now. In the 70s/80s... you could get them 3 or 4 boxes for $1. I called that Corn Pudding.
I was looking to see if anyone else called it Corn Pudding. That's what I'm familiar with.
Wow, in PA Jiffy cornbread is still about 50 cents in Target's grocery section.
Jiffy cornbread is around 50 cents a box here in Texas - but sometimes HEB and Kroger will run 3 for $1. I have tauvht myself how to put up canned foods - mostly preserves. Is canning corn difficult?
My grandma and my mom made very similar dish called scalloped corn, often with a sprinkle of pimentos on top before baking for color. We have an evolved dish now we have on holidays with corn meal, and creamed corn, with red peppers and onions as well. It was dubbed Corny Corn by the grandkids, and that name has stuck for years!
The city of Allegan according to wikipedia is in Allegan township and is the county seat of Allegan county! I think I see a trend here.... And it is very near Grand Rapids Michigan.
My dad made the cracker crumb baked corn and called it “scalloped corn”. We weren’t too excited about it but he said that they used to make it during the Depression and it stretched the corn out for a heartier dish. I may try this thanks
My mom still makes scalloped corn all the time.
Our holiday tables were not complete without a big pan of scalloped corn, using the cracker crumb recipe. My grandmother cooked on a fuel stove/oven, but they used corncobs rather than wood. As we grew up and became more affluent and urbanized, things like sour cream, cheese and chives have found their way into the recipe, and it is still a must-have on all holiday tables in our family, most particularly thanksgiving.
@@AverageJoeHotRodShow scalloped corn is a regular side dish with certain entrees in our (58/F, 63/M) household...yummy!
Sounds like my mom's scalloped corn, but no eggs.
kinda like a corn quiche with a bit of thickener but without the crust...and glen's happy dance, of course, says it all :)
Yum. Maybe an elote flavored variation?
Garlic, cilantro, chipotle powder, lime and cotija cheese.
Just what I was thinking…
My grandmother made a similar corn dish. The only difference is that she separated the eggs, beat the whites stiff and folded them in. She called it Corn Soufflé.
I was thinking this looks just like a frozen meal Stouffer's used to sell, that they called Corn Soufflé. Definitely going to give this a try.
I often wonder what your cookbook library must look like. I imagine a room with floor to ceiling cookbooks. Heavenly! Thanks for sharing your happy corn dance!
Maybe someday he'll do a bookshelf tour, it'd be great!
I would love this with some bacon, strong cheddar, and chopped jalapenos mixed in as well. Possibly on top of a shredded hashbrown crust
@@moniquem783 Either way sounds pretty good!
@@moniquem783 Either way sounds pretty good!
Without the jalapenos, we made something like that a couple of years ago for Christmas brunch. We added sausage (in our case, turkey sausage crumbles for convenience) and it made a good main dish for the family buffet.
I was thinking the same, but with sweet peppers and maybe parmesan.
just had our office appreciation dinner last night...something called baked corn was on the buffet..and now this...
Baked corn = Happy dance. This is definitely on the to do list.
Seems tasty and easy, two of my favourite things!
I've eaten this many times. At church in our part of Michigan as well as the years I spent in Nebraska. Always a "Pot Luck" standard!
My family makes almost the same recipe every year for Thanksgiving. Over the years we have introduced a package of jiffy cornbread mix and shredded cheddar to the top! But your recipe was basically the one my great grandmother from Grand Rapids used to make!!
This recipe strikes me as a good place for covert leftovers. Diced ham, diced steamed cabbage, diced potatoes etc.
so good to see Glen dancing his happy dance
It's from Allegan, Michigan for sure. Towns listed next to people's names in the cookbook, like Grand Rapids, Hamilton, and Pullman are in the area.
I love old cookbooks. Really enjoy reading them especially the community cookbooks in different states.
I'm going to make this for Thanksgiving for sure. I believe this is the corn "casserole" my mom made a few times. She didn't remember it unfortunately but I certainly do! It was delicious!
Your oven is so beautiful and clean.
Need to try this! Although, the one you mentioned with crackers sounds more like the recipe that I'm looking for. My Grandmother was born in 1916 and used to make the best baked corn. She called it escalloped corn though. I've been hitting family members up to find the recipe in the books and boxes of recipes that we all have, but no one seems to have the corn recipe! I will be trying this, but would love to get the recipe with crackers in it!! Thanks for sharing Glen! 💚🌞
BAKED CORN
Mrs. Anna M. Lewis, 216 Fox St.
S. W. Grand Rapids
1 can yellow corn with kernels.
1 1/2 cups bread of[sic] craker crumbs.
2 eggs, may be omitted "better with."
1 cup milk.
2 tablespoons butter.
Mix all together, season with salt
and pepper, place in a casserole,
cover top with crumbs and dot gen-
eously with butter; bake until it
puffs up and is light brown. A
glass of milk for the kiddies, a cup
of hot tea or coffee and a dough-
nut will make this a very hearty
lunch.
Loved Glen's happy jig! My parents grew up in 30s but rural South vs city North. Food available very different. Also chickens can't be counted on for as many eggs as temps drop, even in the South. Michigan chickens were prob even less dependable. Recipe reminds me that Mom made Dad pancakes with corn when I was a kid. Only he liked them though
Your story telling of history is one of the things we all like about you Glen.
My family (from KY) makes something similar to this for the holidays but we call it corn pudding. It's baked in a bain marie and has a little nutmeg, grated onion, and diced pimentos.
I thoroughly enjoyed the analysis of the stove situation in Allegan. Also, the recipe looks very tasty.
I make something that is so similar to this. Just 7 eggs, half a cup of milk and what ever left overs are in the fridge mixed in and any cheese that you have, bake about twenty five minutes, done. This type of recipe is such a great way to use up what you already have at home.
Interesting recipe I have never heard of before.
Love the old cookbook series that you do with the history and stories.
Hey Glen, have you ever had the opportunity to cook on a real wood/coal burning stove? The whole top of the stove is hot, heating up the pan evenly and usually very quickly. Hence "stir continuously". My grandmother used her wood stove continuously until 1967 when my grandfather and aunt gave her an electric stove. They slid the woodstove over to make room for the electric. But gma continued to use the woodstove except in the summer.
My father who grew up in England, remembers as a boy, the food cooked in a Wood Oven.
He said, that the flavour was so much better than Electric or even Gas!
Our Thanksgiving traditional version used crushed saltines. We called it Scalloped Corn. I blend up about have the corn to make creamy.
I love the bits of historical context. That's why I love shows like this, Townsends, and English Heritage (Mrs. Crocombe).
This is similar to a dish my Chilean girlfriend taught me called Pastel del Choclo, admittedly the South American version has a little different flavor and texture due to the difference in the corn grown in both places. Fresh corn is traditional but frozen will also do. Great vid! Don't forget to consider electric appliances! It honestly wasn't that long ago, all things considered.
THANKS for finding and sharing a 'homey' simple dish.
There are several cookbooks that were printed in the south that use the same ingredients and call this dish corn pudding.
The little Glen wiggle dance just makes it so fun. Peppers and onions would make it a lovely breakfast dish or lunch casserole mmmmmm
Like some others have mentioned, my family also still has a a version of this. I love the buttery and elevated corn taste in this over a traditional corn bread.
Made this last night for dinner. I added some browned ground beef, onions, topped it with a butter/cracker crust and made it our main course. Delicious! Thank you!!
This looks like great comfort food. Thanks for the informative and interesting video!
I love it for its simplicity. I imagine that it would thicken up nicely as it cools. If you added cheese and ham and filled a pasty shell you might end up with a kind of corn quiche.
I was expecting Glenn to stir the white sauce for 10 hours
Ha!
I believe with this recipe, you can get away with stirring for 5 hours or less... 🤔 But no shaking. That's a different recipe.
Glen we need IE You needs to Compile an "Glenn And Friends Sunday Old Cook Book Show " Cookbook. As all ways Amazing simple but good recipie born out of a time when life was hard. Made even more relatable given what we are still facing now.
This is a great idea!
Glen's happy dance after eating the first bit is adorable
My great Aunt would make scalloped corn every year for Christmas dinner and it was to die for. It was the first casserole to go empty and rarely made it around the table. Oh how I miss that.
oh this looks tasty. I'm thinking some cheese and some bacon to go into it!
I like when Glen dives off into one of his food history rabbit holes.
I live in Grand Rapids, MI and my grandmother used to make something almost identical to this whenever she'd make a soup or a stew. She called it "Dutch cornbread".
Oh yeah, that book is DEFINITELY from Michigan.
Definitively from Allegan, Michigan. I appreciate the Allegan County Fair, and, yes, the farm boys do eat their corn pudding with coffe and donuts as a meal in the field.
Grew up with my Dad's baked corn. A dinner side dish. He used creamed corn when we had it available .
Went to a NewYorker's house for thanksgiving a few years ago. Asked what 1 dish I wanted. BAKED CORN! Got a can of corn thrown in a dish and baked.sigh. she tried.
As a corn pudding fan, I look forward to trying this.
If a recipe earns Glen’s “happy dance” then I’m making it!
Thanks for these Glen and Jules, y’all make me laugh quite often and this is one of the few cooking channels from which I have actually have made recipes from. So far, y’all are batting 100…or is it 1000? I never can keep track if it’s 100 or 1000, either way, your recipes have all been great!
Loved this!
My mom made scalloped corn, that's what she called it. Whole kernel and creamed corn, salt, pepper, sugar, butter, and cracker crumbs. After it was halfway baked, she would add some milk. No measurements, of course!
Serve this with bacon or sausage and over-easy eggs for a hearty winter breakfast!
A simple dish but it sounds pretty nice. Definitely a treat in tough times.
My old recipe (from about that era) was always baked in a loaf pan, which would make a thicker product, and sometimes it was actually turned out onto a plate and then sliced. When I made it years later, I just served it out with a spoon. Haven't made this in at least 30 years. Brought back some memories. I used to put cracker crumbs over the top before baking it.
Looks great, and I'd bet it would be amazing if you did 1/4th each of corn, tomato, onion, and jalapenos.
Right on. My mid -atlantic family does a similar 'corn pudding" for holidays and Sunday dinner.
Glen at 7:30 teaching us all about cooking :D Thank you Master Glen !!
I just made this---almost exactly the same recipe. Mine asked for a tablespoon of butter. This is great with potatoes.
I think your right about it being Allegan County in Michigan, one of the recipes was submitted by some one from Grand Rapids
Your reaction, when you taste it and obviously remember your moms dish (and probably some situations where you ate it) is the best part of the video! :-) Dishes that can do that are priceless.
My puppy gets the same sort of wiggle when she sees her favourite food! 😆😆😆😆
We make a version of this on my mom's side of the family. My great-grandmother made this and called it corn pudding. We still make it for Thanksgiving and Christmas. Our version is canned corn and canned creamed corn with eggs and milk/cream and salt and pepper. It's kind of a souffle, really.
My grandpa (who LOVES corn) would go nuts for this
The “Glen giggle” lets us know he likes it.
5:42 by going off on a very educational and entertaining tangent... more please! 🙏
Including donuts!! They made it their own too!😎👍👍
I’ve had something along those lines, but it was called “ Corn Pudding “ or “ Corn Casserole “ . Thanks for the old recipe shows!
The BEST Glen dance yet!
Another winner. I love community cookbooks.
Our family has made something very similar for generations but use dried corn -- Johnny Cope's dried corn to be exact.
Cool story! My wife's grandfather was superintendent of schools there during that very time.
Well done,👌🏻 nice & the best recipe , looks so delicious ,I liked it 👍
I've been making corn pudding for years. I really like adding some cayenne to it for "sweet heat." Always a hit at the family gatherings.
A side Grandma used to make and delicious if you like corn. Noticed the recipe contributor lived in Hamilton and there is a Hamilton in Allegan County, MI. Thanks, Glenn.
My home town in rural Southern Nebraska, didn't get electricity until 1950. I can remember grandma ice box, then getting a refrigerator. I also know where the ice house for my town was.
I live near Allegan, and yes, that's in Michigan. 😁
I wish I could find that book! That's a great recipe!
I'm from central Michigan. My family used canned creamed corn.
My grandmother made her corn pudding exactly that way, and I still make it now, by her recipe..
I have almost the same recipe, but add 1/4 cup cornmeal that has been cooked in 1.5 cups of milk for 5 minutes.
This is a tradition for our Thanksgiving dinner down south! We call it spoonbread. The only thing different besides the quantity of ingredients is that we add Jiffy Mix cornbread to the batter, then bake! I spice it up sometimes by adding onions, peppers, pimento and cheese. We love this dish! Oh! And of course fresh corn from our garden!
At 1:32 he shows the alternative recipe which contains the ladies number and address. I typed that address in to Google maps and saw a picture of the home. Very cool. It makes me wonder about her story. I think that's what I like about this channel the most is exploring the history that goes along with the food.
I love when you do these old recipes
Mom made this rarely,but it was a school cafeteria favorite. I can still taste it. They use diced potatoes,hard boiled eggs,onion,celery,milk butter and a top crust. Salt and pepper. I had it with half cream corn a d half niblets. That was good. Oops I am describing corn pie.
Glad to see you enjoyed the baked corn Glen.How about making the Corn Beef next??All you need is 100 lbs of beef 8 lbs salt etc....