Does anyone have any tips for how to easily and quickly remove silk from ears of corn? I find that it takes a long time to pick it all out.
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1I'm excited for an answer to this one. Drives me crazy.– Michael NatkinCommented Aug 5, 2010 at 17:01
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2FYI if you save the silks til they turn black, they are quite satisfactory to smoke as a tobacco substitute. Apparently this was quite common when my father-in-law was growing up. Tastes a bit like almond!– DougCommented Sep 1, 2011 at 17:32
11 Answers
If you're cooking it on the cob, remove the silk after you've cooked it. I typically microwave my corn in the inner husk, when you pull it out the silk just slides right off.
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3I grill mine in the husk (this works great btw), and the same thing holds true. The silk comes right off. Commented Aug 5, 2010 at 17:29
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I've never thought of microwaving it before... do you put it in a dish with water? Covered? About how long do you cook it? I'd like to try this. Commented Aug 5, 2010 at 20:58
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2If your corn is fresh then it should have plenty of moisture of it's own. With fresh corn I simply take it down to it's inner husk and throw it unadorned in the microwave. My old microwave took about 80s for one ear, my new one is about 45s. Two ears takes a little less than twice as long. Beyond that it's kind of trial and error. Each ear added adds less to the cooking time than the one before. If your corn is meh, you can place it on a couple of damp paper towels.– hobodaveCommented Aug 5, 2010 at 21:08
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I also find it much easier to remove corn silk after it's cooked. My preferred method is by oven in the husk. Usually when I go to strip off the husk all the silk goes with it. Commented Aug 5, 2010 at 22:48
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2There's actually a video from America's Test Kitchen recommending essentially this (also chopping the end off): youtube.com/watch?v=35TsFXYfpB0 I was pretty surprised at how well it works.– Cascabel ♦Commented Jul 11, 2012 at 1:22
I use a soft brush (technically, it was sold as a mushroom brush).
Just brush along the length of the ear, towards the stem end, and it removes almost all of the silk. (way more than I'd get done using any other method).
update : So I was husking corn with my step-father, and noticed that I have much less silk left on the corn I was working on that needed to be brushed off, so I think some of it is the initial husk-removal technique:
If you attempt to peel off each leaf of the husk, you'll end up with almost all of the silk still on the corn. If you grab with both hands at the top of the ear, then pull in opposite directions to tear the husk, and pull down (I aim for taking off about 1/3 of the husk at a time), most of the silk will stick to the husk, leaving only a little bit of silk left that can be taken care of with a brush.
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I haven't found that to work so well for me (I have both soft and slightly firmer brushes). Will try again now that I know someone else swears by it. Commented Aug 5, 2010 at 17:02
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@Michael : it might be all about finding the right brush, and using the right amount of pressure. I also don't know if corn fresh from the farmstand might be easier to clean that corn that's sat around for a day or two. Mine looks like this : amazon.com/Clipper-Mill-Mushroom-Brush/dp/B0000CFOTH (although it doesn't have the white thing under it, it looks like it was molded from a single piece of plastic)– JoeCommented Aug 5, 2010 at 18:17
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The brush didn't work very well for me, though it did mean I could remove the silk from hot, cooked corn w/o burning my fingers. Commented Aug 10, 2010 at 19:43
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2The husking technique, of grabbing at the top and pulling apart, also works for just the silk. If most of the silk is still on the corn, you can grab the top, pinch half (or a third) in each hand, and pull apart. Most of it comes right off. I do it this way because I tend to cook sweet corn while husked - baked usually - so I peel leaf-atta-time-gently so as not to scorch my fingers.– MeghaCommented Aug 1, 2018 at 3:03
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1Both of these techniques are what works for me as well. Almost all the silk should come off when peeling the husk off initially. After that I use a vegetable brush to get the rest. That's if I have to use the corn for some off-the-cob preparation, that is. For corn on the cob, cook the corn in the husk.– Alex MCommented Apr 16, 2019 at 16:14
:-) Rachel Ray has a suggestion... Use a rubber band to "thread" it off.
If after taking out of the microwave you cut off the stem end with a large knife, and include a little of the bottom row of corn, it all just slips off clean as a whistle.
Running it under cold water while rubbing it helps a lot. For informal meals, I just use dental floss to pick it out of my teeth later.
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Ditto. I figure that 15 seconds wasted on teeth-cleaning is better than 15 minutes wasted on picking the damn things apart.– AaronutCommented Aug 5, 2010 at 17:13
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1I'm trying to imagine the formal meals at which you serve corn on the cob :). Commented Sep 1, 2011 at 16:06
I also refrigerate it for a bit before I clean the corn. Sticky things get less sticky when they're cold. If the corn's at room temp or higher, the silk is going to stick more.
I find that running towel down the cob helps to pull all the silk away from the corn. It would help to wet the corn first, but it's not necessary.
Basically, you're just trying to get a better grip on it. I'm sure you've used towels before to help you open a jar or can - it's the same idea here.
Use a couple of wet paper towels under cold running water, and rub toward the stem end for a few seconds. Works like a charm.
Corn Silk Removal using "Norwex" Vegtable cleaning cloth (size of dish cloth). Directions:
After cob is husked, and easliy removed silk is pulled off, place cobs in tub of water.
Place the vegtable cleaning cloth product in one hand, cob in the other, keep submerged, rotate in spining motions, then linear movements (two cobs per minute).
Then it's done - 99% effective for silk removal. Blows the doors off of brushes, burning over a gas flame and microwaving.
I know this is an old post but I have found a wonderful corn brush just recently. It works better than I hoped it would!
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1The single review on that says that it doesn't work at all. I'm not sure whether to believe them or you.– Cascabel ♦Commented Jun 12, 2013 at 22:11
Easy way to remove Silk from corn. Use a cornsilker machine!!. Can do 15 ears a minute, removes silk from husked corm and does not damage kernels.
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2This does actually answer the question (though I'm not sure it's something anyone would do at home) so I'll leave it here.– Cascabel ♦Commented Jul 3, 2014 at 19:57