One thing I really miss at this time of year is fresh corn on the cob. They call it Sweet corn here . . . not sure why that is, only that it is. You can get corn on the cob here in the shops . . . but it really isn't very good. They don't seem to understand that corn begins to turn starchy as soon as it's picked . . . or that you shouldn't completely husk it.
The shelves in the grocery shops have sweet corn, already husked, or partially husked . . . been sitting there for days. It's not good. Having eaten corn right off the waggon and fresh out of the fields for most of my life, I am spoilt as far as corn goes.
We tried to grow our own one year. Peaches and cream. You would think that would have been relatively easy enough . . . just plant the seeds, but . . . it just didn't work. We got only a few cobs . . . and they were very small. Tasty, but hardly worth the effort.
I keep saying that some year I am going to go home to visit during corn season . . . so that I can enjoy a good feed of it, and one year I will. It's a promise I have made to myself. Back home you know your corn is ready to pick as soon as the raccoons help themselves . . . that's one things raccoons know well . . . perfectly ripe corn.
Here I make do with tinned sweet corn. It's better than any you can buy fresh, or perhaps I should say any that you can buy in the shops fresh. I have never seen it for sale at the side of the road like we do back home. It might be different if they did. Perhaps it would taste just as good, fresh picked as the stuff I am used to.
I fear I will never find out. In any case this casserole today is a beautiful side dish which makes good use of tinned sweet corn, two varieties . . . and cheese. The pasta cooks in the corn, soaking up all of it's flavour. that makes for one mighty tasty casserole. Your family will eat this one up. I promise! If they like corn, they'll love this.
Recipe clarification just in case there is some confusion:
You use the empty tin of creamed corn to measure the milk. It is not tinned milk, just ordinary milk. Also you add the pasta dry to the mix and it cooks in the oven, absorbing most, if not all of the liquid!
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