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A-Maize-Ing Endings with Corn.


Corn and History

Visit the pueblos of New Mexico New Mexico, state in the SW United States. At its northwestern corner are the so-called Four Corners, where Colorado, New Mexico, Arizona, and Utah meet at right angles; New Mexico is also bordered by Oklahoma (NE), Texas (E, S), and Mexico (S).  and watch for bunches of dried, multi-colored corn hanging in kitchens to protect the houses and bless their inhabitants
:This article is about the video game. For Inhabitants of housing, see Residency
Inhabitants is an independently developed commercial puzzle game created by S+F Software. Details
The game is based loosely on the concepts from SameGame.
. Corn is sacred in Native American culture. The cycle of a person's life is thought to resemble that of corn, from green youth to parched parch  
v. parched, parch·ing, parch·es

v.tr.
1. To make extremely dry, especially by exposure to heat: The midsummer sun parched the earth.
 old age.

An ear of corn is a giant seed pod seed pod
Noun

Bot a carpel or pistil enclosing the seeds of a plant, esp. a flowering plant
; peel back the husk and the silk and find the seeds. Each seed is enclosed in an individual outer skin (the kernel) which contains the endosperm (the meat of the kernel) and the germ (where a lot of the nutrition is). The corn's endosperm determines the flavor and texture of the ear.

There are five kinds of native Indian corn from which all the hybrids have been created. These are pop, flint, dent, flour, and sweet. Popcorn pops because of its ability to hold in moisture; when you heat popcorn you create steam inside each kernel. When enough pressure builds up, the skin explodes and turns the endosperm inside out. Now you know why popcorn pops! Flint is the variety with the most protein and the hardest starch, most difficult to digest. Dent has waxy waxy (wak´se)
1. composed of or covered by wax.

2. resembling wax, especially denoting some combination of pliability, paleness, and smoothness and luster.
 starch and is easier for humans and animals to digest. Flour corn has a high ratio of starch, and sweet corn has a high ratio of sugar. All varieties of corn can be eaten raw or cooked.

Corn Vocabulary

Fresh corn is available several months a year, but frozen, dried, canned, and milled varieties of corn are available year round. "Green" corn, fresh corn that is just ripe, is usually the type sold to be eaten fresh. It can be eaten raw, shaved into salads, used as a garnish, cooked on or off the cob to be eaten alone, or used as an ingredient. The sweet corn variety is the type most often sold fresh.

Because in many parts of the US, the summer season is short and the winter is long, Native Americans began the practice of allowing most of the corn crop to be harvested when mature--when the sugar had turned to starch. It would then be hung to dry, and later rehydrated by cooking in liquid, or the kernels eaten dry, like nuts.

Corn contains vitamins and amino acids locked into fibers that make them unavailable to humans and animals. The Native American invention of processing corn with ash (made from burning fragrant wood, such as juniper) or limestone added calcium that corn was missing and released the nutrients it contained. Processed with ash (as in corn flour), corn becomes a highly nutritious food. In addition, ash acts as a sweetener Sweetener

A special feature added to a debt obligation or preferred stock to promote marketability.

Notes:
Warrants and convertibles are two popular sweeteners.
See also: Convertible Bond, Kicker, Warrant



Sweetener
 and a leavener for corn doughs. Modern baking aids, such as baking powder and cream of tartar cream of tartar, white crystalline powder. Chemically it is potassium hydrogen tartrate, KC4H5O6, the acidic potassium salt of tartaric acid. It is used as the leavening agent in baking powders. , are the cousins of Native American ash.

Hominy hominy [Algonquian], hulled corn with the germ removed and served either ground or whole. The pioneers in North America prepared it by soaking the kernels in weak wood lye until the hulls floated to the top. Hominy is boiled until tender and served as a vegetable.  is dried corn that is soaked or boiled with lime or ash to remove the hull. This processing gives hominy the "exploded kernel" look. Hominy can be chopped and used in corn bread corn bread or corn·bread
n.
Bread made from cornmeal.
 or corn muffins for extra texture.

Corn grits grits

coarsely ground hominy served in traditional Southern breakfast. [Am. Culture: Misc.]

See : Southern States
 are ground hominy, which can be coarse or fine. Grits make an excellent hot breakfast cereal breakfast cereal, a food made from grain, commonly eaten in the morning. The oldest type of cereal, known as porridge or gruel, requires cooking in water or milk. The modern breakfast cereals, however, are entirely precooked and eaten in cold milk. . Leftover cooked grits can be used in baking recipes to substitute for some of the flour and liquid. Sweeten sweet·en  
v. sweet·ened, sweet·en·ing, sweet·ens

v.tr.
1. To make sweet or sweeter by adding sugar, honey, saccharin, or another sweet substance.

2. To make more pleasant or agreeable.
 left-over grits with syrup, allow to set, and then slice and bake or fry. Serve with sliced fruit for a corn dessert.

Masa is freshly ground corn meal made from wet hominy (hominy that has been soaked to rehydrate re·hy·drate
v.
1. To cause rehydration of something.

2. To replenish the body fluids of an individual.
 it). Masa is the "binder" in tamales and is often available commercially. Masa harina is masa mixed with flour. Both can be used to prepare sweet tamales, which are sweetened sweet·en  
v. sweet·ened, sweet·en·ing, sweet·ens

v.tr.
1. To make sweet or sweeter by adding sugar, honey, saccharin, or another sweet substance.

2. To make more pleasant or agreeable.
 with chopped pineapple, raisins, coconut, and cinnamon, rather than savory tamales, flavored with chilies, pepper, and onion. Masa and masa harina have neutral, slightly sweet corn flavors and can be used for sweet or savory dishes. Masa is perishable, so if you purchase or prepare it yourself, refrigerate re·frig·er·ate  
tr.v. re·frig·er·at·ed, re·frig·er·at·ing, re·frig·er·ates
1. To cool or chill (a substance).

2. To preserve (food) by chilling.
 until ready to use.

Atole and pinole Pinole (pĭnōl`), city (1990 pop. 17,460), Contra Costa co., W Calif., on San Pablo Bay; inc. 1903. Primarily residential, it manufactures concrete and chemicals.  are toasted white or yellow cornmeal corn·meal also corn meal  
n.
Meal made from corn, used in a wide variety of foods. Also called Indian meal.

Noun 1.
, ground very finely. Atole is left plain, and pinole is sweetened and spiced to be used with heated milk as a breakfast item. You can create your own pinole by thickening heated soy or rice milk with fine corn meal and a sweetener of your choice. Additional ingredients can be vanilla, cocoa powder Noun 1. cocoa powder - the powdery remains of chocolate liquor after cocoa butter is removed; used in baking and in low fat and low calorie recipes and as a flavoring for ice cream
chocolate - a food made from roasted ground cacao beans
, cinnamon, and raisins. You can find packages of "Maizena," a powdered mix of cornstarch cornstarch, material made by pulverizing the ground, dried residue of corn grains after preparatory soaking and the removal of the embryo and the outer covering. It is used as laundry starch, in sizing paper, in making adhesives, and in cooking. , salt, and calcium carbonate calcium carbonate, CaCO3, white chemical compound that is the most common nonsiliceous mineral. It occurs in two crystal forms: calcite, which is hexagonal, and aragonite, which is rhombohedral. , at Hispanic grocery stores. Available in several flavors, it is mixed with hot milk, sweetened, and simmered until it thickens. Served with bread and fruit, this makes a complete breakfast. Or, you can allow it to thicken thick·en  
tr. & intr.v. thick·ened, thick·en·ing, thick·ens
1. To make or become thick or thicker: Thicken the sauce with cornstarch. The crowd thickened near the doorway.

2.
, add cooked rice and raisins, and serve it as a sweet dessert.

Beyond the Cob

Cornmeal is the product of grinding dried corn. The grinding can be done by hand, with a mortar and pestle A mortar and pestle is a tool used to crush, grind, and mix substances. The pestle is a heavy stick whose end is used for pounding and grinding, and the mortar is a bowl. The substance is ground between the pestle and the mortar. , or done with stone rotation grinders or steel disks. Wet milling is done with dried corn that has been soaked. Ground between metal disks, the germ is removed for oil, and the gluten separated for processing into corn starch and corn syrup corn syrup

Sweet syrup produced by breaking down (hydrolyzing) cornstarch (a product of corn). Corn syrup contains dextrins, maltose, and dextrose and is used in baked goods, jelly and jam, and candy.
. Dry milling crushes dry corn kernels Corn kernels are readily available in bulk throughout maize producing areas. The price as of 2005 is only about $1.80 per bushel in the U.S. This makes it the most inexpensive of all pelletized fuels. Pelletized fuels are used for corn and pellet stoves and furnaces.  and removes the germ and the hull to make a meal with a texture between grits and flour. Cornmeal can be yellow, white, or blue, depending on the type of corn used, and is available in coarse or fine textures. The color of cornmeal does not influence the flavor. Finely-ground meal gives more tender baked goods, with coarse-ground giving more texture. The choice is yours.

If you would like a sweet and nutty flavored cornmeal (excellent for use in desserts and baked goods), look for stone-ground cornmeal. Some of the germ is re-rained when the corn is stone-ground, so the flavor and more of the nutrients are left in. Fresh-ground whole cornmeal should be stored in the refrigerator to keep it fresh.

Sweet Corn Tips

The Zuni Indians prepare a corn dessert consisting of cornmeal, sweetener, and water, which is boiled and eaten with nuts. Another Zuni corn dessert is a sweet pudding which is made by wrapping cornmeal in corn-husks and allowing it to ferment ferment /fer·ment/ (fer-ment´) to undergo fermentation; used for the decomposition of carbohydrates.

fer·ment
n.
1.
. The natural fermentation develops the sugar in the corn. Fresh "green" corn can be parched by toasting it in oil until it takes on the texture of nuts, and then sweetened and eaten like peanuts. Navajo kneel-down bread resembles a corn pudding Noun 1. corn pudding - pudding made of corn and cream and egg
pudding - any of various soft thick unsweetened baked dishes; "corn pudding"
, made with mashed fresh corn and dried fruit and nuts, wrapped in husks and baked. Blue corn griddle cakes, made in the Southwest, are prepared with blue cornmeal, wheat flour, baking powder, and milk. Cornbread can be sweet or savory, made with cornmeal (any color will do), wheat flour, baking powder, milk, eggs (use blended tofu tofu

Soft, bland, custardlike food product made from soybeans. Believed to date from China's Han dynasty (206 BC–AD 220), tofu is today an important source of protein in the cuisines of East and Southeast Asia.
 or egg replacer), and raisins. Fresh corn can also be added for additional texture and sweetening.

Polenta po·len·ta  
n.
A thick mush made of cornmeal boiled in water or stock.



[Italian, from Latin, crushed grain, barley meal.]

Noun 1.
 is the Mediterranean version of cornmeal mush. Cornmeal and water are combined over heat to form a hot cereal, which can be thick or thin, depending on your preference. Polenta can be sweetened with syrup or chopped fresh or dried fruit. Leftover polenta can be left to set, and sliced or cut out with cookie cutters, then baked or fried for a dessert, served with soy- or rice-based frozen desserts or sorbet.

Spoon bread is a Southern American regional dish, prepared in a skillet with cornmeal and hot water or milk. Steamed on top of the stove, spoon bread, also called hot water cornbread, can be a sweet or savory side dish. Try a sweet spoon bread served with fruit preserves.

Indian Pudding is a cornmeal and molasses molasses, sugar byproduct, the brownish liquid residue left after heat crystallization of sucrose (commercial sugar) in the process of refining. Molasses contains chiefly the uncrystallizable sugars as well as some remnant sucrose. , oven-steamed dessert that originated in New England. This rich-looking dessert can be served hot or cold, served with fruit or sorbet, and is a good way to use molasses in cooking. Indian pudding can also be a sweet breakfast meal in a bowl, served with hot milk and fruit.

Fresh corn, cornmeal, and other corn products are excellent ingredients for the sweet part of the meal. Try the following corn recipes and you will be a-maize-d!

CRUMIRI (HORSESHOE-SHAPED COOKIES)

(Makes 2 dozen cookies)

These crumbly crum·bly  
adj. crum·bli·er, crum·bli·est
Easily crumbled; friable.



crumbli·ness n.

Adj. 1.
, tender cookies come from the Piedmont region of Italy. They are traditionally made on Saturday evenings to be enjoyed on Sunday. Leave them plain or top them with toasted sesame seeds.
7 ounces vegan margarine, softened (if
  unsalted is available, use it)
3/4 cup granulated sweetener
3 teaspoons egg replacer whisked with 7
  Tablespoons water
1 3/4 cups all-purpose flour
2/3 cup fine yellow cornmeal
Vegetable oil spray (to grease pans)


Preheat oven to 325 degrees.

Cream the margarine and sweetener together until light and fluffy. Add egg replacer and water, slowly, mixing thoroughly so that mixture is fluffy.

Sift the flour and cornmeal together. Add to margarine mixture and combine well.

The dough can be piped through a pastry bag or shaped by hand. By hand, roll out logs of dough, 4 inches long and 1/2-inch wide, and place on greased cookie sheets two inches apart. Shape into horseshoes.

Bake for about 12 minutes or until golden. Cool before serving.

Total calories per cookie: 132

Carbohydrates: 17 grams

Sodium: 90 milligrams

Fat: 7 grams

Protein: 1 gram

Fiber: [is less than] 1 gram

CORNMEAL CAKE OF LOVE

(Makes 3 loaves made in 10-inch pans)

Called "amor polenta" in the Italian region of Briazana, near Como, this cornmeal pound cake can be eaten plain; sliced, toasted and served with fruit preserves; or made ahead of time and frozen.
3/4 cup plus 3 Tablespoons margarine
  (unsalted or low salt is best)
1 cup granulated sweetener
6 teaspoons egg replacer whisked with
  1/4 cup water
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
3/4 cup sifted all-purpose flour
1/2 cup yellow cornmeal
2 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon lemon zest
Vegetable oil spray
Cornmeal to coat pan


Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

Cream the margarine and the sweetener with an electric mixer (this recipe can be done by hand, but you'll use all your muscles!), using the whisk attachment if you have one. Cream until light and fluffy (about 5 minutes on medium speed). Add the egg replacer and water slowly, beating fully after each addition. The batter should turn a lemony yellow. Stir in the almond extract and combine.

Sift the dry ingredients (flour, cornmeal, baking powder, salt, and zest) and fold into the batter. Combine just to wet the ingredients and remove lumps.

Spray loaf pans with oil and coat with cornmeal. Pour batter into pans. Bake for about 30 minutes or until knife inserted in the middle comes out clean.

Remove from the oven and allow to cool slightly. Remove from pans while still slightly warm.

Notes: For authenticity, replace almond extract with 3 Tablespoons of maraschino liqueur. The key to this recipe is to get the margarine and egg replacer very fluffy and then to mix the remaining ingredients as minimally as possible to obtain a smooth batter. Egg replacer is a powdered vegan vegan /veg·an/ (ve´gan) (vej´an) a vegetarian whose diet excludes all food of animal origin.

ve·gan
n.
 product. Contact Ener-G Foods at <www.ener-g.com> or (800) 331-5222 for information on product distribution. (Thank you, Chef James Lisanti, for sharing your knowledge and expertise with this recipe.)

Total calories per slice (1/8 loaf): 121

Carbohydrates: 14 grams

Sodium: 198 milligrams

Fat: 7 grams

Protein: 1 gram

Fiber: [is less than] 1 gram

CORNMEAL WAFFLES

(Makes eight 6-inch waffles)

Kids will enjoy these waffles!
2 cups cake flour
2 cups yellow cornmeal
2 Tablespoons baking powder
3 Tablespoons granulated sweetener
6 teaspoons egg replacer whisked with
  1/4 cup water
2 cups soy or rice milk
1/2 cup melted vegan margarine
2 teaspoons vegetable oil


Sift all dry ingredients together. Set aside.

In a separate bowl, beat egg replacer and water, and stir in milk and margarine. Mix in the oil.

Mix dry and wet ingredients together and beat until mixture is fluffy. Spoon onto preheated oiled waive iron and bake until golden and crispy.

Total calories per waffle See WAFL. : 357

Carbohydrates: 51 grams

Sodium: 539 milligrams

Fat: 15 grams

Protein: 6 grams

Fiber: 3 grams

CORNMEAL PUDDING (INDIAN PUDDING)

(Makes twelve 1/2-cup servings)

This dish is delicious!
6 cups soymilk (plain or vanilla)
1 cup yellow cornmeal
1/2 cup molasses
1/4 cup granulated sweetener
1 teaspoon powdered ginger
1 teaspoon orange zest
1/4 teaspoon baking powder
3 teaspoons egg replacer whisked with 7
  Tablespoons water


Preheat oven to 300 degrees.

In a double boiler, heat milk until just below boiling. Reduce heat and slowly add cornmeal. Stir and allow to thicken for 15 minutes. Add remaining ingredients and stir to combine.

Remove from heat. Pour into a baking dish (cake pans or muffins tins are tine tine (tin) a prong or pointed projection on an implement, as on a fork.

tine
n.
1. The slender pointed end of an instrument, such as an explorer used in dentistry.

2.
) and bake for 2 1/2 hours or until knife inserted in middle comes out clean. If using muffin tins, grease and flour them first, and bake at 275 [degrees].

Total calories per serving: 139

Carbohydrates: 26 grams

Sodium: 31 milligrams

Fat: 3 grams

Protein: 5 grams

Fiber: 3 grams

SWEET POLENTA

(Makes 5 cups)

Sweet Polenta can be served as a breakfast cereal plain or with chopped fruit and nuts. Leftover polenta can be packed into a loaf pan, allowed to set, and fried in slices with cinnamon, nutmeg, and ginger. It can also be baked whole and then sliced Serve with soy- or rice-based frozen desserts, sorbet, or sliced fresh or canned fruit.
4 cups soy or rice milk
2 teaspoons salt
1 cup cornmeal
1 Tablespoon apple juice concentrate


In a double boiler, bring milk to a boil. Reduce heat to simmer. Add salt and mix. Add cornmeal SLOWLY (or it will dump), stirring constantly. Add concentrate and mix to combine. Stir until smooth (30 minutes). Allow to simmer, covered, for 1/2 to 2 1/2 hours, depending on desired consistency.

Total calories per cup serving: 172

Carbohydrates: 26 grams

Sodium: 955

Fat: 4 grams

Protein: 8 grams

Fiber: 5

CORN AND NUT BREAD

(Makes 8 servings from a 2-quart baking dish)

You'll absolutely love this bread!
1 cup white cornmeal
1 cup boiling water
1 cup soymilk
2 teaspoons lemon juice
1/3 cup soft tofu
3 teaspoons vegetable oil
3 Tablespoons softened vegan margarine
4 ounces cooked corn
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 cup finely ground nuts
Vegetable oil spray


Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

Place cornmeal in a bowl, pour water over, and allow to soften (about 2 minutes).

Blend milk, lemon juice, tofu, and vegetable oil together and add to cornmeal. Combine well. Add in the margarine and corn and stir well.

Stir together the salt, baking powder, soda, and nuts and add to corn mixture. Mix to combine.

Place batter in sprayed 2-quart baking pan or casserole. Bake for 45 minutes, or until top is golden brown and knife inserted in middle comes out dean.

Total calories per serving: 184

Carbohydrates: 17 grams

Sodium: 559 milligrams

Fat: 12 grams

Protein: 4 grams

Fiber: 2 grams

Nancy Berkoff is a chef and regular contributor to Vegetarian Journal, as well as the VRG VRG Varig (Viacao Aerea Rio-Grandense, Brazil, ICAO code)
VRG Vegetarian Resource Group
VRG Ventral Respiratory Group
VRG Vaccinia-Rabies Glycoprotein (gene)
VRG Vision Research Group
VRG Vortex Ring Gun
 Food Service Advisor. She resides in California.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Vegetarian Resource Group
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Author:Berkoff, Nancy
Publication:Vegetarian Journal
Date:Jul 1, 2000
Words:2537
Previous Article:Audrey Fluke Vegetarian Award.
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