Called sữa bắp in Vietnamese, this creamy, slight sweet refresher comes together easily with just a few ingredients. Use the sweetest corn that’s in season. Including the corn silk, husks, and cobs during cooking pumps up the corn-y flavor. Recipe source: Ever-Green Vietnamese (2023) by Andrea Nguyen. This recipe makes 4 cups.
Servings: 6
Ingredients
2large ears corn(choose yellow or bicolor for vibrancy)
4cupswater,plus more as needed
½cupfull-fatunsweetened coconut milk (whisk before measuring)
Fine sea salt
½tspvanilla extract,plus more as needed
1 to 4Tbspsweetened condensed milk(coconut, if preferred), agave syrup, mild honey, or granulated sugar (optional)
Instructions
Shuck, cut, and boil the corn
If the corn is not shucked, trim the dark, wizened portions of the corn silk, then shuck the corn, saving most of the corn silk and six to eight of the inner pale green husks (it’s okay if some silk lingers on the cob). Encase all the reserved silk in the husks, fold the husks over to tidy up the bundle, and tie tightly with kitchen string. Put into a 4-qt saucepan.
Cut the corn kernels off the cobs, then break the cobs in half. Add both to the saucepan, along with the water, coconut milk, and 1⁄4 tsp salt. Set over high heat and bring to a boil, then lower the heat to medium and maintain a gentle boil. Cook, uncovered, for 15 minutes. Remove from the heat and, using tongs, lift out and discard the cobs and husk bundle. Let cool for about 10 minutes.
Blend, strain, and season the milk
Transfer the contents of the saucepan to a blender and whirl at high speed for a good 1 minute, until creamy and milky. Pour the corn through a fine-mesh strainer set over a bowl or a large liquid measuring cup, pressing on the solids with a wooden spoon to extract as much milk as possible. Stir in the vanilla. If the corn milk is too thick, add up to 1⁄2 cup water to thin it out.
Corn milk intensifies in flavor and sweetness as it cools; especially once it is chilled. Refrigerate for about 4 hours, then taste and add pinches of salt, drops of vanilla, and, if needed, sweetened condensed milk by the tablespoon. Your tweaks depend on your corn, palate, and serving method (make it strong if serving over ice). Stir before serving.
Notes
Lifespan: Refrigerate for up to 1 week.To make pandan corn milk: In the last 5 minutes of simmering, add 1.5 to 2 ounces of washed and snipped thawed, frozen pandan leaves to the pot. (The amount of pandan used depends on the quality of the leaves and your preference. If you like pandan, use 2 ounces.) Once simmering time is over, turn off the heat, remove the husks and cobs, then let the pandan bits steep in the hot liquid for 10 minutes. Then blitz it in a high-speed blender and pass through a mesh strainer. It is fibrous so you may need to add a splash of water to loosen things up.