Hand drawn image of Sweetcorn

Sweetcorn

Zea mays

Golden sweetcorn on the cob. We deliver it with the leaves intact to keep it fresh – natural packaging at its best. Invest just 5 minutes, a pan of boiling water and a generous smear of butter for one of the great finger-licking joys of the summer.

Image of Sweetcorn being produced

In the kitchen

How to store Sweetcorn

Leave sweetcorn cobs wrapped in their protective husks and store in the salad drawer of the fridge. Sweetcorn benefits from being eaten before its natural sugars turn to starch, reducing its sweetness. Ideally, eat within a day or two, though they’ll last for up to a week.

Prep & Cooking tips

You can boil them, unrobed, in salted water for 12-15 mins until tender. BBQ'd or boiled, they can just be munched straight from the cob with whatever additions you see fit.

If you want to cook them directly on a BBQ then they are best kept in their husks and soaked for 20-30 mins before cooking. Once soaked, they’ll take 15-20 mins on a glowing BBQ. For all other purposes you’ll need to remove the husk – just rip off the leaves then pull off the silky threads, or rub them off with a clean tea towel. You can remove the kernels by holding it vertically and running a sharp serrated knife from top to bottom as close to the core as possible.

If you're stripping the kernels from the cob, don't throw them away! The tough husks will release a sweetcorn infused sweetness into a stock - low and slow is the key to release the best flavour - a perfect summery stock.

Easy ideas

1. BBQ or griddle

One for the outdoors. Soak some corn (still in their husks) for half an hour in cold water. Place them on a BBQ and cook over medium coals for about 15-20 min, until the husk has started to burn and the kernels are tender. Peel the husk back and rub the corn with your favoured flavour; salt, lime and chilli work well. Devour your barbecued sweetcorn straight from the cob using the bunched husks as a heatproof handle.

2. Boiled & buttered

Strip away and discard the husks and stringy silks, and boil the corn for 12-15 mins until tender. Rub with salted butter and gnaw from the cob. You can flavour the butter with any number of herbs and spices; try paprika and chilli, lemon zest and parsley or just a few turns of black pepper.

3. Braised

Strip away and discard the husks and stringy silks. Hold the corn vertically and strip away the kernels with a sharp knife. Braise them with some onions and garlic in a little white wine and stock until they are tender, about 15 mins. Try adding chopped spinach, chilli & lime or even a swirl of cream at the end to enrich. This makes a great base for a chowder if you lengthen it with a little more stock or milk. Finish with some roasted squash and smoked cheese, cooked ham hock and watercress or smoked fish, crab and parsley.

Goes well with

Alliums (Garlic, Leeks, Onions)

Herbs (Basil, Chervil, Coriander, Parsley, Thyme)

Bacon

Beans

Butter

Chilli

Citrus

Courgettes

Shellfish

Squash

Tomatoes

Sweetcorn recipes

View all Sweetcorn recipes

In the field

  • The farm team at Riverford Vendee farm standing beside crates in a field of summer green vegetables.

    Meet the grower: Riverford in the Vendée , Le Boutinard, France

    Our brilliant French grower team, led by Marco Altamirano, supply our boxes with loads of colourful veg throughout the year. There’s lettuces, sweet mini peppers, cucumbers, broad beans, aubergines, autumn squashes – plus some of our favourite unusual treats of the year, including Padron peppers, cape gooseberries and tangy Mexican-style tomatillos.

UK seasonality

jan
feb
mar
apr
may
jun
jul
aug
sep
oct
nov
dec

Sweetcorn varieties

  • Picture of Sweetcorn

    Sweetcorn

    Bright yellow sweetcorn on the cob is a sign of late summer, an iconic seasonal star.

  • Picture of Speckled sweetcorn

    Speckled sweetcorn

    This pretty golden variety of sweetcorn is speckled with white kernels amongst the classic yellow. At Riverford we grow the variety Raquel for its extraordinarily sweet flavour.

More in the A-Z

View all A-Z