Dictionary Definition
popcorn
Noun
1 corn having small ears and kernels that burst
when exposed to dry heat [syn: Zea mays
everta]
2 small kernels of corn exploded by heat
User Contributed Dictionary
see Popcorn
English
Alternative spellings
Noun
popcorn (uncountable)Translations
- Chinese: 玉米花 (yùmǐ huā)
- Dutch: gepofte maïs , pof-maïs , popcorn
- Finnish: popcorn, paukkumaissi
- French: popcorn , maïs soufflé italbrac Canadian French
- German: Popcorn , Puffmais
- Hungarian: pattogatott kukorica
- Icelandic: poppkorn
- Japanese: ポップコーン (poppukōn)
- Korean: 팝콘 (papkon)
- Malay: bertih jagung
- Portuguese: pipoca
- Russian: попкорн (popkórn)
- Spanish: palomitas de maíz , cabritas italbrac Chile, cancha , canguil italbrac Ecuador, cocaleca italbrac Dominican Republic, cotufas , crispetas italbrac Colombia, esquites italbrac Northwestern Mexico, gallitos italbrac Northwestern Venezuela, maíz pira italbrac Colombia, millo italbrac Panama, pipoca italbrac Bolivia, pochoclo italbrac Argentina, pop italbrac Uruguay, popcorn , poporopo italbrac Guatemala, pororó , pururú italbrac Northern Central Argentina, rosetas de maíz , rositas de maíz italbrac Cuba, tostones italbrac Southeastern Spain
- Swedish: popcorn
See also
Extensive Definition
Popcorn or popping corn is a type of corn which explodes from the
kernel and puffs up when heated. Special varieties are grown to
give improved popping yield. Some wild types will pop, but the
cultivated strain is Zea mays averta, which is a special kind of
flint
corn. The process of making popcorn was first discovered by
aboriginal Americans thousands of years ago.
History
Popcorn was first discovered by the native Americans, who believed that the popping noise was that of an angry god who escaped the kernel. Popcorn was very popular in the 1890s, until World War I. As corn crops became more depleted during this war, nuts were used instead of corn. During the Depression, popcorn was a luxury at 5-10 cents a bag. When some of the other businesses failed, the popcorn business thrived. An example is "an Oklahoma banker who went broke when his bank failed, bought a popcorn machine, and started a business in a small store near a theater. After a couple of years, his popcorn business made enough money to buy back three of the farms he'd lost." During World War II, Americans ate three times more popcorn than they had before because of the sugar that was going overseas.At least six localities (all in the United States
of America) claim to be the "Popcorn Capital of the World":
Valparaiso,
Indiana; Van
Buren, Indiana; Marion,
Ohio; Ridgway,
Illinois; Schaller,
Iowa; and North
Loup, Nebraska. According to the USDA, most of the
maize used for popcorn
production is specifically planted for this purpose; most is grown
in Nebraska and
Indiana,
with increasing area in Texas.
As the result of an elementary school project,
popcorn became the official state snack food of Illinois.
Some of the most popular brands of popcorn today
are Act
II, Pop Secret,
Pop
Weaver, Jiffy Pop,
Kroger, and
Orville
Redenbacher's.
How popcorn pops
Each kernel of popcorn contains a certain amount of moisture and oil. Unlike most other grains, the outer hull of the popcorn kernel is both strong and impervious to moisture, and the starch inside consists almost entirely of a hard, dense type.As the oil and the water are heated past the
boiling point, they turn the moisture in the kernel into a
superheated pressurized steam, contained within the moisture-proof
hull. Under these conditions, the starch inside the kernel gelatinizes,
softening and becoming pliable. The pressure continues to increase
until the breaking point of the hull is reached: a pressure of
about 135 psi
(930 kPa)
Producers and sellers of popcorn consider two
major factors in evaluating the quality of popcorn: what percentage
of the kernels will pop, and how much each popped kernel expands.
Expansion is an important factor to both the consumer and vendor.
For the consumer, larger pieces of popcorn tend to be more tender
and are associated with higher quality. For the grower,
distributor, and vendor, expansion is closely correlated with
profit: vendors such as theaters buy popcorn by weight and sell it
by volume. For both these reasons, higher-expansion popcorn fetches
a higher profit per unit weight.
Popcorn will pop when freshly harvested, but not
well: its high moisture content leads to poor expansion and chewy
pieces of popcorn. Kernels with a high moisture content are also
susceptible to mold when stored. For these reasons, popcorn growers
and distributors dry the kernels until they reach the moisture
level at which they expand the most. This differs by variety and
conditions, but is generally in the range of 14–15%
moisture by weight. If the kernels are over-dried, the expansion
rate will suffer and the percentage of kernels that pop at all will
decline.
Two explanations exist for kernels which do not
pop at proper temperatures, known in the popcorn industry as
"old
maids". The first is that unpopped kernels do not have enough
moisture to create enough steam for an explosion. The second
explanation, according to research led by Dr. Bruce Hamaker of
Purdue
University, is that the unpopped kernel may have a leaky
hull.
Popcorn varieties are broadly categorized by the
shape of the kernels, the color of the kernels, or the shape of the
popped corn. While the kernels may come in a variety of colors, the
popped corn is always white as it is only the hull (or pericarp)
that is colored. "Rice" type popcorns have a long kernel pointed at
both ends; "pearl" type kernels are rounded at the top. Commercial
popcorn production has moved mostly to pearl types. Historically,
pearl popcorns were usually yellow and rice popcorns usually white.
Today both shapes are available in both colors, as well as others
including black, red, and variegated. Commercial
production is dominated by white and yellow.
In popcorn jargon, a popped kernel of corn is
known as a "flake". Two shapes of flakes are commercially
important. "Butterfly" flakes are irregular in shape and have a
number of protruding "wings". "Mushroom" flakes are largely
ball-shaped, with few wings. Butterfly flakes are regarded as
having better mouthfeel, with greater
tenderness and less noticeable hulls. Mushroom flakes are less
fragile than butterfly flakes and are therefore often used for
packaged popcorn or confectionery, such as
caramel
corn.
Cretors' invention introduced the first patented
steam-driven popcorn machine that popped corn in oil. Previously,
vendors popped corn by holding a wire basket over an open flame. At
best, the result was a hot, dry, unevenly cooked confection. The
Cretors' machine popped corn in a mixture of one-third clarified
butter, two-thirds lard and salt. This mixture could withstand the
450°F temperature needed to pop corn and it did without producing
much smoke. A fire under a boiler created steam that drove a small
engine; that engine drove the gears, shaft, and agitator that
stirred the corn and also powered the attention-attracting clown –
the Toasty Roasty Man. A wire connected to the top of the cooking
pan allowed the operator to disengage the drive mechanism, lift the
cover and dump popped corn into the storage bin beneath. Exhaust
from the steam engine was piped to a hollow pan below the corn
storage bin and kept freshly popped corn uniformly warm for the
first time ever.
An equally ingenious popcorn making device can
still be seen on the streets of some Chinese cities today. The corn
is poured into a large cast-iron cannister which is then sealed
with a heavy lid and slowly turned over a curb-side fire in
rotisserie fashion. When a pressure gauge on the cannister reaches
a certain level, it is removed from the fire, a large canvas sack
is put over the lid, and the seal is released. With a huge boom,
all of popcorn explodes at once and is poured into the sack.
Individual consumers can also buy and use
specialized popping appliances which typically generate no more
than a gallon of popped corn per batch. Some of these appliances
also accept a small volume of oil or melted butter to assist
thermal transfer from a stationary heating element, but others
(such as the one shown above) are "air poppers" which rapidly
circulate heated air up through the interior, keeping the unpopped
kernels in motion to avoid burning and blowing the popped kernels
out through the chute. However, the great majority of popcorn sold
for home consumption is now prepackaged with various flavoring
agents for use in a microwave oven. One of these common
artificial-butter flavorants, diacetyl, has been implicated
in causing respiratory ailments.
The Boy Scouts of America sell popcorn door-to-door
as a primary fund-raiser, similar to Girl
Scout cookies.
Old popcorn can be eaten the day after as a
breakfast cereal and is essentially one of the first breakfast
cereals. Corn flakes
are said to have come about as a solution to market old popcorn as
a breakfast item. Leftovers for this purpose should be unseasoned
and kept in a sealed storage container.
Other uses
Popcorn, threaded onto a string, is used as a wall or Christmas tree decoration in some parts of North America, as well as on the Balkan peninsula.Some shipping companies have experimented with
using popcorn as a biodegradable replacement
for expanded
polystyrene packing material. However, popcorn has numerous
undesirable properties as a packing material, including
attractiveness to pests,
flammability, higher cost and greater density than expanded
polystyrene. A more processed form of expanded corn foam has been
developed to overcome some of these limitations.
The world's largest popcorn ball was unveiled in
October 2006 in Lake
Forest, Illinois. It weighed 3,415 pounds (1550 kilograms),
measured 8 feet (2.4 m) in diameter and had a circumference of 24.6
feet (8 m).
Nutritional Value
Air-popped popcorn is naturally high in fiber, low in calories and fat, contains no sodium, and is sugar free, which makes it an attractive snack unless one is limiting carbohydrates. The actual fat, sugar, and sodium content depends on how the popcorn is prepared though and a naturally healthy snack can quickly become unhealthy.Popcorn is included on the list of foods that the
American Academy of Pediatrics recommends not serving to
children under four, because of the risk of choking. It is one of the top
causes for children choking to death (along with hotdogs and
balloons). Special "hulless" popcorn has been developed that offers
an alternative for small children and for people with braces or
other dental problems who may otherwise need to avoid
popcorn.
See also
Notes
References
- Specialty Corns
- Snack Foods Processing
- Popped Culture: The Social History of Popcorn in America
External links
popcorn in Arabic: بوشار
popcorn in Catalan: Crispeta
popcorn in Czech: Popcorn
popcorn in Danish: Popcorn
popcorn in German: Popcorn
popcorn in Spanish: Palomitas de maíz
popcorn in Esperanto: Krevmaizo
popcorn in French: Pop-corn
popcorn in Indonesian: Berondong Jagung
popcorn in Icelandic: Poppkorn
popcorn in Italian: Pop corn
popcorn in Hebrew: פופקורן
popcorn in Hungarian: Pattogatott kukorica
popcorn in Dutch: Popcorn (voedsel)
popcorn in Japanese: ポップコーン
popcorn in Norwegian: Popkorn
popcorn in Polish: Popcorn
popcorn in Portuguese: Pipoca
popcorn in Quechua: Kankil
popcorn in Russian: Попкорн
popcorn in Simple English: Popcorn
popcorn in Slovenian: Pokovka
popcorn in Serbo-Croatian: Kokice
popcorn in Finnish: Popcorn
popcorn in Swedish: Popcorn
popcorn in Thai: ข้าวโพดคั่ว
popcorn in Turkish: Patlamış mısır
popcorn in Ukrainian: Попкорн
popcorn in Chinese: 玉米花