Perfect Popcorn from Simply Recipes

Elise from Simply Recipes made this awesome post about making the perfect batch of popcorn.  I was actually looking for information of popcorn machines when I came across her website but when I took a look at it I couldn’t turn away.  Her food blog is absolutely delicious!  My mouth was watering with every recipe I saw and she has 100s of them.

Anyway, back to her post about making the perfect batch of popcorn from scratch. She mentioned a lot of things I didn’t know as I always used a popcorn maker or microwave (yuk) to make mine.  Its interested because the way she does it pops almost every kernel instead of leaving like 15% of it behind.

Perfect Popcorn Recipe

Ingredients

  • 3 Tbsp canola, peanut or grape seed oil (high smoke point oil)
  • 1/3 cup of high quality popcorn kernels
  • 1 3-quart covered saucepan
  • 2 Tbsp or more (to taste) of butter
  • Salt to taste

Method

1 Heat the oil in a 3-quart saucepan on medium high heat.

2 Put 3 or 4 popcorn kernels into the oil and cover the pan.

3 When the kernels pop, add the rest of the 1/3 cup of popcorn kernels in an even layer. Cover, remove from heat and count 30 seconds. (Count out loud; it’s fun to do with kids.) This method first heats the oil to the right temperature, then waiting 30 seconds brings all of the other kernels to a near-popping temperature so that when they are put back on the heat, they all pop at about the same time.

4 Return the pan to the heat. The popcorn should begin popping soon, and all at once. Once the popping starts in earnest, gently shake the pan by moving it back and forth over the burner. Try to keep the lid slightly ajar to let the steam from the popcorn release (the popcorn will be drier and crisper). Once the popping slows to several seconds between pops, remove the pan from the heat, remove the lid, and dump the popcorn immediately into a wide bowl.

With this technique, nearly all of the kernels pop (I counted 4 unpopped kernels in my last batch), and nothing burns.

5 If you are adding butter, you can easily melt it by placing the butter in the now empty, but hot pan.

6 Salt to taste.

Makes 2 quarts, a nice amount for two people, or for one hungry one.

Additional tips: From the comments section

a If you add salt to the oil in the pan before popping, when the popcorn pops, the salt will be well distributed throughout the popcorn.

b Fun toppings for the popcorn – Spanish smoked paprika, nutritional yeast, cayenne powder, chili pepper, curry powder, cumin, grated Parmesan cheese.

I tried this recipe and it worked great.  It did not leave any kernels behind.  And the taste was fantastic.  Loved it.  I’m surprised it came out as good as it did because I cannot cook.

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Popcorn Makers Changed Popcorn Forever

Popcorn itself has been around for a very long time.   Americans eat more than 16 quarts of popcorn every year but popcorn has been around long before America as we know it today was even a concept.  One of the first written accounts of popcorn is by Hernan Cortes when he saw the Aztecs eating it.  It was a brand new item at the time because corn did not exist in Europe.  But it was not until the late 1800s that popcorn really became popular and that was due to the invention of the popcorn maker.

The very first machine expressly for making popcorn with hot air was created by Charles Cretors in Chicago.  He came up with the idea, obtained a special peddler’s license to sell popcorn on the streets, and sold tons of it.  Pretty soon people copied his idea and popcorn machine vendors sprung up all over the place.  The popcorn makers were than moves to fairs, parks, expos, and of course movie theaters.

During the second world war when sugar was being rationed popcorn became even more popular.  Eating popcorn became a duty to one’s country or was promoted that way.  After the war it remained a popular snack embedding its way into our way of life.

It was ingenious how this machine actually works.  The device uses oil heated by a small steam engine inside to pop the kernels.  What most people do not know is that there is a little bit of moisture in each kernel.  When the moisture, or water, becomes hot it expands and bursts the kernel open.  This machine was the preferred way of popping popcorn until the microwave came into the marketplace is the late 70s/ early 80s.  With this machine popcorn became even more accessible though the taste is not nearly as good.

The associatation with popcorn makers and theaters cannot be overexagerated.  That positive feeling from being in your seat and taking a handful of buttered popcorn is complete euphoria.

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