Guest guest Posted August 6, 2008 Report Share Posted August 6, 2008 Hi Roseta, Ahhhhh.......very, very interesting! You sound very knowledgeable on what you are doing and it sounds fascinating. Unfortunately, I don't know of a source for the red corn. I have never had any of the dried red corn. All Cortez Milling had was dried blue corn and I had to do some talking and begging the first time I bought 50 lbs. from them. And, as I said, they have changed hands, about last October, when I got my last 50 lb. bag from them and the lady I had worked with in the past is no longer with them. They normally grind the dried corn they buy, and package it for sale in retail outlets. I saw it originally in a grocery store in Cortez, Colorado. I had purchased a Blue Corn Cookbook out at the Cliff Dwellings gift shop and wanted some of the blue cornmeal to take home. When we got home, I called Cortez Milling up and basically talked them into selling me a 50 lb. bag. Since I have a stone grinding grain mill, I knew it would be much cheaper in the long run.....especially since you don't see blue cornmeal in east Texas. We were on vacation when I found the blue cornmeal and the cookbook. I have made blue cornmeal tortillas but not blue cornmeal tamales. I don't know why it would not work though as the cornmeal is just like any other stone-ground cornmeal. Blue tamales would be really a neat thing to make. And, yes, those Pilgrims learned a lot from the local Native Americans.... corn was a definite " good thing " as Martha says. Too bad we (white men in charge) treated the Native Americans so terribly later on, isn't it. Not a nice thing to do to anyone but especially to your hosts in the New World. If the white man owes anyone anything, I would sure vote to compensate the Native Americans in some way for what we (White men in charge) put them through. Good luck with your future experiments....keep us updated, would you, please? Night, Nancy C. Nancy, I did not give details as to the nature of the experiment, and I am aware corn is very native. I think the seed I have is for Hopi blue corn. I also purchased Inca purple corn but these seeds did not sprout. I would be very interested in the red corn if you know of a seed supplier. I am interested in companion planting, so part of the experiment was to see how well this works in our gardens, the indian trinity of corn, beans and squash. The corn provides the shade for the squash and the support for the beans to climb on. The squash supposedly acts as living mulch for the corn, and the beans nitrogenate the soil which is advantageous since corn is a heavy depleter. The other part of the experiment was to see if we would like it fresh, when to harvest for what, and how can I use it with my limited equipment to make blue corn tamales. I mean limited since I do not have a grain mill, this is why I used the food processor. My corn was mature but the grain was not dried, so I could make a paste with the processor. Hybridizing part of it was not the plan, but since it happened this became part of the experiment as well (tasty part). Native Americans practiced selective breeding and hybridization on corn for many centuries, before any European knew corn existed. Roseta > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted August 7, 2008 Report Share Posted August 7, 2008 Nancy, I am not very experienced growing corn and this is my fist somewhat successful year. Reading a lot about it helps, mainly figuring out how crops reproduce is key....did you know corn is really a mutated grass that could not reproduce by itself but need human intervention? Fascinating. A stone grinding grain mill? Does that take up a lot of space? I will let you guys know how the tamales turn out when I make them. I want to stuff them with peppers but I am waiting for the right peppers to mature. Roseta Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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