Grow popcorn yourself: Instructions & expert tips

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Whether sweet or salty: Popcorn is the favorite among cinema snacks. But did you know that you can also easily grow popcorn corn yourself?

Colorful corn on the cob in yellow and red
Popcorn corn comes in many different colors [Photo: Candus Camera/ Shutterstock.com]

Crispy and preferably still warm, that's how we like to eat popcorn. Whether in the cinema, at the fair or at a movie night at home, the corn kernel snack is a must. Sometimes it has been a trend for a few years to make the corn pop in the pan yourself at home. The fact that you can also grow popcorn in the garden easily and without much care is still new territory for many.

Maize originally comes from South America and therefore needs a lot of warmth. The plant has been cultivated for many thousands of years and is now an integral part of our global diet. Popcorn corn, also called puffed corn, is just one variant of the many varieties and types, but it is a particularly tempting one. The corn plant itself is content with little space, is easy to care for and carries masses of kernels on two to four cobs, so that growing your own popcorn in the garden is really worthwhile. Here you can find out everything about the varieties, the cultivation and the preparation of popcorn corn.

contents

  • Popcorn corn: the choice of variety
  • Sow and plant popcorn corn
  • Fertilize and care for popcorn corn
  • Harvesting and drying popcorn corn
  • Preparation of popcorn corn

Popcorn corn: the choice of variety

At the corn (Zea mays), belonging to the grass family (Poaceae) belongs, separate groups of varieties are subdivided depending on the intended use. A distinction is made between vegetable, Sugar, roasted, flour, polenta and popcorn corn. The latter typically has a crack-resistant, hard shell around the grain. Only under high pressure from heat and the expansion of the water inside does the corn burst open and form the well-known fluffy white mass. Other types of corn only tear open slightly on the surface in the pan. Or they don't react to the heat at all because the water content is too low. Therefore, when buying corn seed, you should look for the designation Puffmais or Popmais (Zea mays convar. microsperm) respect, think highly of.

Popcorn corn is available in every imaginable color variant, although you usually only find it in the classic golden yellow variant in stores. But how about blue, red or green popcorn corn? After preparation, the colorful variants are also white, but each variety has its own unique taste. Here we have put together a selection of the best and firm popcorn varieties for the home garden:

  • 'Golden Butter': Forms the classic golden yellow corn cobs on plants that are about 1.50 meters tall. This typical popcorn is best prepared with butter in a pan, then sprinkled with a little sugar and enjoyed.
  • 'green pearl': As the name suggests, a rare play of green tones can be admired here - lime green, grass green and sea green variants can be found on a single cob; pops very well and delivers very good quality on plants that are only 1.20 meters tall.
  • 'Heavenly Blue': This 1.50 meter high popcorn develops light blue, pinkish and almost black kernels. Already fascinating when harvesting, all the better in the pan: 'Heavenly Blue' is particularly suitable for hearty and salty popcorn.
Corn on the cob colorful close
A real play of colors can be experienced with the variety 'Caritas' [Photo: Arvind Balaraman/ Shutterstock.com]
  • charity: One looks in vain for monotony with this maize, which can be up to 1.20 meters tall. No cob is pure color, but always very brightly peppered with orange, blue, yellow and pink grains; wonderful as a decoration and then as fine popcorn to snack on.
  • 'Indian Berries': Colorful strawberry corn in the main colors red, violet and light yellow to white. It forms short, thick cobs, the shape of which is somewhat reminiscent of a strawberry. The corn stalks, which are up to 1.80 meters high, produce up to four cobs per plant.
  • 'Ruby Red': Tall plant, up to two meters tall, with long, beautiful crimson spikes. After preparation in the pan, you get comparatively large, fluffy popcorn.
  • 'Purple Popcorn': Up to two meter tall corn with long deep purple cobs. Very productive and productive. The grain pops very well and forms quite large popcorn with an aromatic, nutty taste.

Sow and plant popcorn corn

Maize generally needs a lot of warmth and should therefore only go outside after the last frosts from mid-May. Either the grains are then sown directly into the ground or the corn is grown indoors from the end of April to the beginning of May. The biggest advantage compared to no-till is the time advantage of about two to three weeks that the young plant already has. If it gets cold and wet early in the autumn, it can happen that the maize stalks that were only sown in mid-May no longer reach full maturity. As a result, the kernels pop very poorly and the quality is often not the same. So if you have a little space on the window sill, it is advisable to bring it forward. To do this, fill a seed container or multi-plates with seed soil or, in an emergency, with garden soil - corn is not particularly demanding. The grains are then placed about two to three centimeters deep in the soil and watered carefully. After just three to seven days with enough heat, the tender shoots shoot out of the ground.

Young corn plants in the bed
Popcorn corn may move outdoors from mid-May [Photo: Allexxandar/ Shutterstock.com]

From mid-May after the ice saints, the young plants are then placed outdoors. Corn can be grown both in beds and in pots. With a distance of about 30 centimeters, the plantlets are now planted directly in potting or garden soil, for example the peat-free soil Plantura organic universal soil. However, care should be taken not to plant them deeper than they were sitting in the seed pot. Maize should be quite close together so that wind pollination works well and as many grains as possible form.

Fertilize and care for popcorn corn

Maize is one of the so-called heavy feeders that like to be fertilized and absorb a lot of nutrients. It is therefore best to give a charge directly when planting compost or other primarily organic long-term fertilizers such as ours Plantura organic universal fertilizer added. The corn does not require any special care.

However, once flowering begins, you can manually ensure an even better harvest by pollinating yourself. The plant forms the male flower at the top and thus also the pollen on the so-called flag. The female flower sits in the leaf axils and shows itself in light green to dark red stigmas that push out from the bracts of the future cobs. If these are about three to five centimeters visible, you can collect yellow pollen grains on a piece of paper by shaking the flag vigorously at the top and then distribute them on the stigmas. Although corn is self-fertile, better pollination takes place with pollen from another plant. After pollination, the stigmas dry up and form hair-like brown-black tufts on the tip of the cob. Now it's time to wait for autumn.

popcorn corn
When the whole plant has dried up, it's time to harvest

Harvesting and drying popcorn corn

You can tell corn is ready to harvest when the entire plant has turned dry and brown. The bracts around the cobs must also have dried up. Now you can remove the corn cobs from the leaf axils either with pruning shears or with a twisting motion. Then you defoliate the cob or bend the husks backwards to hang up the corn to dry. It is best to let the grains dry gently for a few weeks before twisting them off the cob and storing them in mason jars. Only completely dry one avoids fungal infestation and secures good popcorn for later preparation.

Preparation of popcorn corn

After a few months of patience, it's finally time to prepare the little delicacies. In a large pan with a lid, heat some oil or butter until small bubbles can be seen. Now put in the dried popcorn corn, close the pan with the lid and let it get hot. From time to time you should swirl the pan so that the grains do not burn. After a few minutes, small explosions of bursting grains begin to shake the pan. Here you should shake the contents of the pan well again. After about five minutes, all the grains should have burst open and can be salted or sweetened directly while warm. The grains can also be easily prepared in the microwave in a suitable bowl with a lockable lid. The corn is packed into the bowl with a little water and, depending on your taste, sugar or salt and made to pop for about five to seven minutes at 600 watts. It doesn't matter whether it's from the pan or the microwave: Home-grown popcorn simply tastes wonderful and rewards the relatively small effort of planting in several ways. Just try it.

Popcorn in pan with corn on the cob
The warm popcorn smells tempting – especially when it comes from your own garden [Photo: Chamille White/ Shutterstock.com]

Who is now also for that planting sweet corn If you are interested in gardening, you can read more here.

And if you are also interested in other strange plants, then take a look at our article on Cultivation of Mexican mini cucumbers past.