Fresh pods & legumes·Foundational·Summer peak

Sweet corn

Zea mays var. saccharata (botanically a grain)

Distinctly sweet when fresh-picked; starch-sugar conversion at picking causes rapid sweetness decline; corn within hours of picking is dramatically sweeter than 2-day-old corn.

Category
Fresh pods & legumes
Peak form
Boiled corn on the cob with butter and salt; grilled in husk
Common uses
5
Cross-refs
8

About Sweet

Sweet corn — botanically a grain (Zea mays), culinarily a fresh summer vegetable — is the quintessential American summer crop. Fresh corn on the cob defines summer cookouts, July 4th celebrations, and Midwestern corn-belt cuisine; sweet corn distinguished from field corn (grain corn) by the cultivar's higher sugar content, picked at the immature 'milk stage' when kernels are sweet and tender rather than dried for grain processing. The encyclopedia includes sweet corn as a boundary case — it occupies vegetable culinary contexts despite its grain botanical classification (paralleling the inverse for tomatoes and peppers). Genuine peak season is roughly 4-6 weeks in mid-summer when corn is harvested locally and eaten within hours; the sugar-to-starch conversion that begins at picking dramatically reduces sweetness over days.

Variety profile

Botanical
Zea mays var. saccharata (botanically a grain)
Flavor
Distinctly sweet when fresh-picked; starch-sugar conversion at picking causes rapid sweetness decline; corn within hours of picking is dramatically sweeter than 2-day-old corn.
Texture
Juicy crisp kernels when fresh; tough and starchy when old; cooks quickly (3-5 minutes boiling, 7-10 grilling).
Peak form
Boiled corn on the cob with butter and salt; grilled in husk; cut off and used in succotash, salsa, or salad.
Season window
Summer peak (July-August); freshness is everything — eat within 24-48 hours of picking for peak quality.

Common uses

Editorial notes

Worth knowing

Locally-grown corn within hours of picking is dramatically sweeter than corn shipped over days. The 'farm-to-table' concept matters more for sweet corn than for almost any other vegetable.

Cross-references

Related seasonality

Related pairings