Homemade Kettle Corn

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This is my hack for making sweet and salty country fair popcorn at home.When critics catalog the myriad culinary wonders produced by the American dessert masters known as the Pennsylvania Dutch, kettle corn is consistently ignored. And that’s messed up because the idea of popping corn in a sugar syrup, which then forms a thin, candy coating perfectly balancing the texture and flavor of the corn (the exact salty/sweet gestalt that makes bacon bacon) is a profound expression of genius.Temperature control is key, and the eponymous vessel goes a long way toward making this miracle possible. As I don’t own a large copper kettle, I employ a slightly unorthodox method that entails popping a small amount of corn and using that audible as a prompt to add the remaining kernels along with the sugar. It’s not an elegant hack, but it gets me where I want to go: back to the windy roads around Lancaster, Pennsylvania.There are essentially two varieties of popcorn: snowflake and mushroom. Mushroom popcorn pops smooth and round and kind of resembles the tops of mushrooms. I like this type for kettle corn because the smooth, firm texture provides a good surface for the candy coating to form. This recipe first appeared on altonbrown.com.

By: Aidas Ciziunas (via Altonbrown)
Original Publish: Aug 21, 2020
Last Updated: Mar 4, 2026
Prep: 5 mins
Yields: 4, 4 to 6 servings
Finished Homemade Kettle Corn

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Place the oil and a few popcorn kernels in a 6-quart metal mixing bowl. Cover with heavy-duty aluminum foil and poke 10 slits in the top with a knife.

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