if you count making the corn edible,than yes, if not than you actually need to think again about can you eat straight corn, I guess you can, but it mighty gross.So that's it. Thanks
It would be a chemical change/reaction.
All corn plants are corn, but the various "varieties" and hybrids have widely different characteristics, both of the plants and of the corn produced. The largest cultivars for human consumption are hybrids (sweet corn) rather than the field corn which is native to North America.
From the Karo syrup web site, we see it is possible that the syrup may contain fructose, possibly a large proportion... What is corn syrup? Corn syrup is a mildly sweet, concentrated solution of dextrose and other sugars derived from corn starch. It is naturally sweet. Corn syrup contains between 15% to 20% dextrose (glucose) and a mixture of various other types of sugar.
Corn is known scientifically as Zea Mays. It is a phytonutrient rich food that provides anti oxidant benefits. Corn as a sweet, yeasty smell.
Crops like wheat, oats, barley and sweet corn are all monocots
cook sweet corn until you can cook sharks
Corn doesn't sweat. But sweet corn is sweet.
Sweet corn is a monocot.
Sweet corn is way higher in protein than regular corn.
Sweet corn is above ground. It is the fruit of the corn stalk.
You can, but if they pollinate at the same time, the sweet corn will taste all starchy and not sweet because it crossed with the field corn.
Physical. All you did was change the shape- it is still corn.
No. people grow crops of sweet corn, and feed corn. humans eat sweet corn (how ever they want) and cows get the feed corn. it's not a weed. but there are lots of different types of sweet corn too.
There are 150 ears of sweet corn in a bushel.
The corn crackles and expands as the water is evaporated by heating - Hence Popcorn.
It would be a chemical change/reaction.
The values on the package are for the corn when it is cooked. No one would eat the corn frozen. Microwave the corn with a little water and no salt, and use the per-serving values on the package.