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Grilled Corn on the Cob with Glove-Box Recado

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Grilled Corn on the Cob with Glove-Box RecadoAlex Farnum

Chilly as July and August can be in San Francisco, you know it's summer when this delicious corn hits the Tacolicious menu. (It is so good that it transports you to sunshine, even if the city is socked in by fog and you're wearing a scarf.) If you already have the recado ready to go, this recipe is a cinch to make. Although the smokiness of the grill imparts great flavor, you can instead briefly boil the corn ears, halve them, and toss them with the recado-lime juice mixture. With the lime and the spices, no butter is needed. Try swapping out the corn for another vegetable, such as summer squash. To keep this recipe in the snack realm, chop the ears into thirds.

Recipe information

  • Yield

    4 servings

Ingredients

4 ears corn, shucked and silk removed
2 tablespoons El Jefe's glove-box recado, plus more if needed
1 tablespoon freshly squeezed lime juice, plus more if needed

Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Prepare a medium-hot fire for direct-heat cooking in a grill. Place the ears of corn on the grill rack and grill, turning them as needed to color evenly, for 10 minutes, until they have a bit of char to them but haven't cooked so much that the kernels have wrinkled. You want to maintain the sweet, fresh corn crunch. Remove from the grill and cut in half crosswise.

    Step 2

    In a large bowl, mix together the recado and lime juice. Add the corn and toss until evenly coated. Take a bite of one ear and adjust the remaining ears with more recado and lime juice to taste. Serve hot.

Reprinted from Tacolicious, by Sara Deseran and Joe Hargave, Copyright © 2014, published by Ten Speed Press, an imprint of Random House LLC. Photographs copyright © 2014 by Alex Farnum. Sara Deseran is the co-owner of restaurant Tacolicious and Chino with her husband Joe Hargrave, as well as the editor-at-large at San Francisco magazine. The author of three cookbooks, she has contributed to Food & Wine, Sunset Magazine, and Food Arts and has a forthcoming blog about life in the restaurant industry at saradeseran.com. Tacolicious has three locations in San Francisco and a third in Palo Alto, California, as well as a stand at the legendary Ferry Plaza Farmers Market.
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