It's summer and the corn is everywhere. On the cob, off the cob, in a chowder, in a quesadilla, in a pudding, on a pizza with pesto.
And in corn fritters.
Especially in corn fritters.
My generic (or sweet) fritter batter is a simple flour-baking powder-egg-milk mixture, with a LOT of corn thrown in.
As my grandmother used to say, "The more you put, the more you find."
This recipe should have at a minimum, one cup of corn kernels. But it will easily accommodate up to 3 cups or more. The texture and nature of the fritters will be different, of course, but that's part of the pleasure. The mixtures in which the corn is just
barely held together by the batter make the best fritters.
1 1/2 cup flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 1/2 tsp salt
2/3 cup milk
1 egg
1 to 3 cups corn kernels (can be raw right off the cob, or cut from leftover steamed or boiled ears, or in a pinch or out of season, frozen or canned)
The batter.
Combine ingredients.
Mix well. Spoon or scoop about 1/3 cup for each fritter into shallow oil. (I use an ice cream scoop.)
Fry in ½ inch of oil
over medium heat, turning when brown on one side. Be careful not to fry in oil that is too hot
as the interior will remain uncooked while the exterior is overcooked.
Gently frying over moderate heat in shallow oil.
The finished fritters, ready for butter and warm maple syrup.
For the savory fritters, I use the same base, but add lots of other stuff to enhance the savoriness -- onions, garlic, cheese, cumin, pepper, salt, cilantro.
1 1/2 cup flour
2 tsp baking powder
1 1/2 tsp salt
1 1/2 cup milk (or buttermilk, if you have it)
1 egg
5-6 scallions, chopped (or equivalent finely chopped onion)
2 cloves garlic, crushed
1 tsp black pepper
2 tsp ground cumin
8-10 shots Tabasco or Frank’s Red Hot sauce
1 Tbp Worcestershire sauce
1/2 cup chopped cilantro (or 2 tsp ground coriander seeds)
1/2 cup grated pecorino or parmigiano cheese
3 cups corn (about 6 ears)
The final batter will require a bit of your own judgment, so the amount of milk you add can vary according to your own tastes and experience. A more viscous batter will produce thicker fritters, but ones that will have to fry over more moderate heat so the interiors cook fully. A less viscous batter will spread in the pan more, producing thinner, crisper fritters.
If you're so inclined, add 1/2 cup corn meal to the mix, and increase the baking powder by 1 tsp, and milk by about a half cup. The corn meal will give the fritters a bit more crunch to them and a very pleasing texture. At this point, you're very close to a hushpuppy, though hushpuppies don't typically contain corn, and are fried in small balls in deep fat.
If you're the sort who shies away from frying like this, even shallow frying, an option is to add 2 Tbp oil to the batter, then fry the fritters in a pan that has been barely filmed with oil. The fritters will be less greasy, and more pancake-y, but less crisp. Still quite good, but different in texture.
The savory fritters make an excellent side dish, and can be served as-is, or with a dollop of sour cream or Greek yogurt. Mix some finely chopped herbs (basil, parsley, chives, cilantro), a glug of olive oil, salt, and pepper into the yogurt or sour cream. Or a dollop of pesto. Or a spoonful of za'atar. Or, yes, maple syrup. Very nice.