I am genuinely delighted by your experience roasting sweet corn at a blues festival. Your ability to combine such a delightful culinary activity with the vibrant energy of the festival reflects your passion for creating memorable moments. Your enthusiasm and the joy you bring to these occasions are truly inspiring. And I am Floating Village Life.
The only thing better than corn on the cob is corn on the cob with a homegrown tomato sandwich. If I had to live up north, hands down it would be in Pennsylvania. Beautiful country.
Welcome back my friend and as always beautiful sharing adventure documentary updated resume countryside content video and a very interesting video to watch .. gorgeous filming edition camera work looks super awesome super amazing and super sharp and clear .. thanks again Logan
Really nice vid Logan, Hi Sammi, Dad and Pap, Amazing garlic harvest this year. Nice. You know Logan, we here in the States look forward so much for first batch of sweet corn and first ripe tomato. Thanks for sharing. 😊👍
Wow Logan, there is enough garlic to supply every Italian Restaurant across America there... LOL. My mouth was watering watching him eat that corn.. is it the corn we call Peaches & Cream up here in Canada? The drone footage is amazing.. what beautiful land that all is.. the green is so green! Absolutely beautiful. Thanks be to God for such a bountiful harvest and fruitful soils. God bless you all :)
Easy way for roasting corn. Just submerge your corn with husk into a bucket of water. Let it soak for ten minutes then just place them in your bbq pit and let the aroma of the corn tell you they're done. Usually twenty minutes.
Great stuff and footage Logan! I was just watching last years festival last night at work! Love the roasted corn deal y’all got going on…so yummy looking. Great to Sam again and the parents too. You are my go too videos on Utube these days. Great family and just hard working farm content….awesome! Hope y’all have a good week! God bless
Looks like everyone was having fun. I live in the city now but was raised on a farm. In Okla we tried to have corn coming off by the 4th of July. I remember roosting corn with the shuck on and no water. Here is an 'idea' cook the corn the same. Now cut the base of the corn cobb off and squeeze the cobb out of the bottom of the husk. The cobb come out clean as a whizzle. Looks Great.
Corn is 🌽 it tastes just wonderful eather way. I love tuxedo 🌽. Please treat your workers with the most respect please they are hard working Men who don't get proper housing and pay... Without them you would be lost without workers
Awesome video!! where is this? Im in Thornton NH we have the White Mountain Boogie and Blues fest in 4 weeks and the corn is a great idea, We have awesome local grown corn and no venders like this!!! we have between 4 to 5k people each year thanks for posting
@@daveklein2826 How? It's steamed. Roasted would be directly over a fire with a grate. Is it just a regional thing that steamed corn is called roasted?
@@devinsullivan7233 How so? Just because I called corn cooked in water and steamed with burlap steamed? You obviously have a hateful personality. Maybe you can answer my question. Probably not, though.
Because it doesn’t really matter. But is for sure roasted. They are using the burlap as a lid to make a sort of oven. A roasting oven. The water is in there to keep the corn from drying out or burning and to make sure it cooks evenly. Putting corn directly on a grill over a fire would be called grilled corn. It can’t be called steamed corn either because steamed corn would be suspended above water in a basket or grate and only the steam would be cooking it.
Really cool with the corn, nice barn. as you start ot pick up the corn to be shucked add water as you are unloading, this way it will heat some and with the air temp corn it will heat up and not slow your cooking. Or if you had a pot of water boiling you could fill from that and add cold to that not affecting your cooking time. Love the wood fire but i would have that on the prep side for safety.
I grew up in Iowa nothing like fresh sweet corn , with butter , salt and pepper. Now living in Arizona for the last 20 years people out here also put mayo on it. Try it !
Idea got you. I have big pig roasts and make 200 ears at a time. My idea. We melt two sticks of butter and float the butter in a tall spaghetti tupperware over warm water. Then you just dip the ear to cover in butter
Hey Logan the garlic looks great! How long do you cure them? We cure ours for a few weeks and store in our cool mud room. We harvested 220 this year, not bad for a small homestead. That steamed corn looks so good. God bless
We cure them in our barn until we start pulling them apart for our planting for next years garlic. I would say around end of September to early October. WOW that’s a ton of garlic for a smaller scale farm! Good for you! 😁 thanks for watching Mike I hope all is well & God bless
Which crops are your best profit? You can "burp" the refrigerator by turning it over for 24 hours. Then turn back over and turn on. You'll then be able to see whether it's working correctly or not. I do that when it "freezes" when it shouldn't. I've never had a bad power surge though.
IIRC last year the wholesale prices for corn were really high, $8/dozen? Did they come down this year? I kind of skipped around so if I missed that in the video, my apologies.
Bahaha... hearing the conversation about the person who has a new Larry as a boy friend! "That's too many Larrys!" I bet you she'd even agree. I have had 2 husbands named Chris. The 1st has been lovengly nicknamed the has been instead of ex husband. And my last sadly committed suicide (i use his old user name-old joke between us). Awhile ago a man came up to me & started talking to me. He was a bit flirty. When he told me his name was Chris, i had to go!
It feels as if the corn is not all the way filled out, or if I open it the look of it will be they are too young. Smaller, and a really faint yellow. Our corn is yellow and white so it should be darker. Thanks for watching 😁