What’s New for Super Bowl Food? Popcorn

What’s old is new.  Are you looking for something good and simple and cheap for your Super Bowl watching on Sunday?  One word:

POPCORN!

popcorn Yeah, super-simple and super-cheap.  This is a knack we all had “back in the day”.  Just take out a sauce pan with a cover, turn on the burner, pour in a bit of oil, drop a couple of handsful of popcorn, cover and let it pop.  (Hmmm, I just now remembered that white popcorn kernels always popped up lighter and fluffier than yellow!)  But that was 35 years ago.

So, recently for some obscure reason, I have taken it upon myself—and now enlisted my wife, Carolyn’s, active participation—to make popcorn the “old fashioned” way.  On the stove.  In a pan.  (I’m not going all the way back to one of those baskets that you filled with corn and stick into a fire and pop that way).

popcorn in an old pan So the first time, I just grabbed a sturdy sauce pan, drizzled a bit of oil in it, turned on the stove, and put some popcorn in.  Not bad except for a couple of things.  Too much oil, too much popcorn, too much heat, too small a pan.  It scorched into the bottom of the pan. There were way too many “old maids” and it tasted stale and it stank.

We tried again a few days later.  Same pan, less popcorn.  Still too much heat and it scorched again.  Carolyn went on a scavenger hunt in the cupboards for a long forgotten, larger pan and found it.  We tried again.  Too much heat and not enough corn.  I’m getting good at scraping burned black popcorn residue out of a sauce pan.

an old pan works best for popcorn

An old, lightweight pan works best for popcorn!

After much trial and error we’ve got it down (we think).  A thin skim of oil in the bottom of the pan.  Temperature on the stove set at “6 o’clock”—a solid medium.  One third of a cup of popcorn.  Shake the pan liberally as it’s popping.  Voila!  We have popcorn.  After about 6 or 7 abortive attempts to replicate the popcorn we could make “in the old” days automatically, without thinking, perfectly every time.

We haven’t saved any money yet.  But—you can buy popcorn at Frasier Farms (a local grocery featuring organic and fresh stuff which is a good reason to charge more) for 69 cents a pound.  (And microwave popcorn costs about $.75 a serving!) That’s enough for about 5 servings of popcorn—or about 15 cents each.  We just got some more today.  Let’s see if we can do it right this time.

popcorn ready to eatIt’ll be right when we can pop up the corn in about 5 minutes from the time I open the cupboard reaching for the popcorn and pan until I rinse out the pan and carry the bowl (one of my TexasWare mixing bowls) to the living room, plop down on the couch with Carolyn, feet up on the edge of the coffee table, each of us with a napkin and the bowl resting between us on the cushion still hot, not too salty, fresh tasting, ready for the rest of today’s “Monk Marathon” on USA or for the Super Bowl on Sunday.

That’s the Cheap Bastid Way:  Eat Good. Eat Cheap. Be Grateful!

About Walter Blevins

My wife started to call me Cheap Bastid a while back because I enjoyed coming up with dinners that cost next to nothing--and making them taste good. Yeah, I love to cook. And I love to cook good food cheap. I'm not a chef and I'm definitely not anything close to a gourmet. I'm just a home cook who grew up in a home where cooking was from scratch and was a little bit Midwest and a little bit country. That's because my Mom was from Michigan and my Dad was from Kentucky. I started sharing recipes when my daughter called me in 2006 and asked for my recipe for Swiss Steak. That year for Christmas I put together a cookbook for my 2 kids called "Dad's Everyday Cookbook and Kitchen Survival Guide". And I heard back that they both use it regularly. It was full of basic recipes that I had cooked for them when they were growing up. I work hard at creating recipes that are original and creative and inexpensive. You won't find a foo-foo foodie approach to my recipes and style. I believe that it's OK for food to go up the side of a plate. Food is for eating--it doesn't have to be pretty. And I write about my cooking and my recipes so that I can share them. I hope you enjoy these posts. Leave me a comment--that you liked something or that you didn't, it doesn't matter. I'd love to hear from you.
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