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elote

Authentic Elotes Locos

39 · Sep 10, 2020 · 1 Comment

This shop has been compensated by Inmar Intelligence and its advertiser. All opinions are mine alone. #McCormickMayonesa #MayonesaAtKroger 

Elotes locos are a variation on the traditional elotes sold by street vendors, but dressed with a spicy topping on the outside.

corn cobs covered in butter, mayonnaise, crushed spicy corn chips and cotija cheese, on a blue and white talavera plate, surrounded by limes

Traditional elotes, also known as Mexican street corn, are either grilled or boiled and then slathered with mayonnaise and sprinkled with chile powder and cotija cheese. Mexican street corn sold in a cup is called either elote en vaso or esquites.

What makes this version called elotes locos (literally: crazy corn) is actually the fuego-flavored hot corn chip crumbs they’re rolled in. But in general, any topping that is not the traditional version can be called elotes locos. These are a very popular snack among Mexico City street food stalls and roaming vendors, especially with teenagers! When we lived in Los Angeles, they were also easy to find at small Mexican family-owned food businesses, street cart vendors, food trucks and even at some restaurants that cater to Mexican customers or mainstream customers who love Mexican food.

Since we moved back to Chicago from Los Angeles, I do a lot of my shopping at Mariano’s because they have a great selection of my favorite Mexican products, and they even stock my McCormick® Mayonesa with Lime Juice, which I use for making these elotes locos. Flavored mayos are HUGE in Mexico, and McCormick® Mayonesa with Lime Juice is the O.G.!

What’s also great about using a flavored mayonnaise in this recipe is that there’s no added moisture from lime juice since it’s already in there. This means the consistency of the mayonnaise suspends the chip crumb coating without making it soggy.

McCormick Mayonesa with lime juice on a marble countertop with a lime leaning against the jar and corn cobs in the background

Ingredients you’ll need for this recipe

This recipe is very simple and I purchased all my ingredients at Mariano’s, which is part of the Kroger family of stores. You should be able to easily find all the ingredients at just about any grocery store.

Butter – I prefer salted butter for this recipe, but you can swap for unsalted butter if you prefer. The way it melts and emulsifies with the mayonnaise is pure magic.

McCormick® Mayonesa with Lime Juice – This mayonnaise comes with the lime juice already built in for a tangy twist that brightens the flavor. If you’ve ever eaten this product in Mexico, you’ll be happy to know that it’s the same exact formula and is imported from Mexico.

Cotija cheese – This dry, aged salty cheese has a strong flavor and aroma, similar to parmesan cheese (but its consistency is different). Look for either a whole block of cotija you can crumble by hand or one that’s already grated or crumbled into little pebbles. You don’t want to use cotija that’s grated so fine that it resembles sawdust.

Fuego-flavored spicy corn chips – You can choose whatever fuego-flavored hot and spicy corn chips you like best. The idea is to crush them down to a crumb so you can roll the corn in it after you’ve covered it in salted butter and McCormick® Mayonesa with Lime Juice.

How to make elotes locos

Start by preparing your corn. Make sure you remove as much of the corn silk as possible. A vegetable brush is a great tool to do this, but if you don’t have one, you can rub the corn ear with your hands under running water.

You’re going to also get all your ingredients out in advance and have them ready to go, as once you pull the corn out of the boiling water, you want to finish dressing them as quickly as possible so they’re still warm while you eat it.

I recommend that you bring your butter to room temperature ahead of time, or microwave it in 15-second increments until soft, but not melted.

There are two ways to get your fuego-flavored hot corn chips down to a crumb state: you can either put them in a zip-top bag and crush them by hand, or pulse them in your food processor. Either way is fine depending on what tools you have in your kitchen! Mix your hot corn chip crumbs and cotija cheese while the corn is cooking to make application easy.

Once your corn comes out of the pot, you’ll want to also have a pair of kitchen tongs handy. Turn the corn cob on one side and use a sharp knife to cut a half-inch X-shaped slit in the middle of the cob. This will allow you to easily insert the popsicle stick handles.

Aluminum foil is my secret weapon for assembling elotes locos without making a big mess! Put the foil down on your countertop, put the cooked corn on top of it, add the butter and McCormick® Mayonesa with Lime Juice and turn the corn cobs against each other to help evenly distribute the ingredients and make sure they’re fully covered.

Then all that’s left to do is roll each corn cob in the chip crumb and cotija cheese mixture and you’re ready to eat!

Corn cobs covered in McCormick Mayonesa with lime juice, spicy corn chip crumbs and cotija cheese, sitting on a blue and white talavera plate on top of a white dish towel and surrounded by a mayonnaise jar and limes

PRO TIP: If you don’t like to eat the corn straight off the cob, you can also make this recipe following all the directions and then turn the corn upside down with the popsicle stick handle facing up, and cut the corn off the cob with a serrated knife onto a plate or into a bowl.

For more ideas on how to use McCormick® Mayonesa with Lime Juice to liven up your recipes and to find it at a store near you, visit mccormick.com.

Mexican elotes locos on a blue and white talavera plate on top of a white kitchen towel surrounded by a mayonnaise jar and limes
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Authentic Elotes Locos

  • Author: Maura Wall Hernandez
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 6-7 minutes
  • Total Time: 27 minutes
  • Yield: 4 servings 1x
  • Category: Snacks
  • Cuisine: Mexican
  • Diet: Vegetarian
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Description

This easy version of Mexican street corn called elotes locos gets its name from the spicy corn chip crumb coating.


Ingredients

Scale
  • 4 ears of corn
  • 1 cup spicy corn chips, such as fuego-flavored
  • 2 tablespoons grated or crumbled cotija cheese
  • 2 tablespoons salted butter, divided
  • 4 tablespoons McCormick® Mayonesa with Lime Juice, divided

You’ll also need:

  • 4 popsicle sticks

Instructions

  1. Bring a large pot of water to a boil over high heat. While you’re waiting for it to boil, clean your ears of corn so they’re free of corn silk.
  2. Once the water has come to a boil, add your 4 ears of corn and boil for 6-7 minutes. Do NOT salt the water – this will make the corn kernels tough rather than plump and juicy.
  3. While the corn is boiling, crush corn chips in a bag or in a food processor until they’re in a medium-fine crumb. Transfer to a dish and mix with 2 tablespoons grated or crumbled cotija cheese until well incorporated.
  4. Once the corn is done, remove it from the water and transfer to a cutting board. Using a sharp knife, make an X-shaped cut on one end of each ear and insert a popsicle stick for the handle.
  5. After all your popsicle sticks are inserted, transfer 2 ears of corn to a square of aluminum foil and add 1 tablespoon of butter in the middle of the 2 ears. Rotate the cobs against each other by the popsicle stick handles until they’re fully coated in butter. Repeat with the remaining 2 ears of corn.
  6. Add 2 tablespoons of Mayonesa between 2 ears of corn and rotate the cobs against each other to evenly distribute. Repeat with the remaining Mayonesa and corn.
  7. In the dish with the corn chip mixture, roll each corn cob by the handle to fully coat each one.
  8. Serve immediately while still warm.

Notes

These do not reheat well, as storing them in the refrigerator will make the chip crumb coating soggy. It’s best to eat these immediately after preparing.


Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 1 ear of corn

Keywords: corn, elotes, elotes locos, McCormick® Mayonesa with Lime Juice

Did you make this recipe?

Tag @maurahernandez on Instagram and hashtag it #TOSOTT

Enjoy this recipe? You might also like my recipe for homemade chipotle mayonnaise.

Recipe, Snacks elote, vegetarian

How to make Mexican street corn

8 · Aug 3, 2019 · 1 Comment

Elotes are a very popular snack in Mexico City and other parts of Central Mexico. But this Mexican street corn is easy to make at home, even without a grill!

Although Mexican street corn is often cooked over a charcoal grill by a street vendor, this recipe made in the oven or a convection toaster oven will give you elotes that taste just as good.

…

Read More

Recipe, Snacks, Street food, Vegetarian/Vegetariano corn, elote, vegetarian

Calabacitas con elote

9 · May 22, 2013 · 3 Comments

This is a sponsored post in collaboration with Latina Bloggers Connect and the California Milk Advisory Board.  The recipe and opinions are my own.

Calabacitas con elote is a traditional Mexican side dish, typically baked in the oven in a casserole dish or olla de barro. But I’m giving it a summer makeover by cooking it in easy-to-make foil packets for the grill.

Calabacitas con elote is a traditional Mexican side dish, typically baked in the oven in a casserole dish or olla de barro. Give the dish a makeover by cooking it in easy-to-make foil packets for the grill.  Recipe via theothersideofthetortilla.com

We’re spending tons of time outside with family and friends now that summer grilling season is here and this is a great dish to take to any parillada! This vegetarian dish is one of my favorites for serving as a quick dinner side dish as well as for taking to parrilladas (barbeques) that are typically full of meats but lacking enough veggies. If I’m making it for just the two of us, I refrigerate half the recipe and grill it later in the week so that it’s fresh off the grill at dinnertime.

Now that we live in California and have such a variety of fresh, local dairy, produce and meats available to us year-round thanks to the climate, I’ve been consciously trying to eat more locally (and by that, I mean seeking out locally grown produce at the farmers markets and other foods made in my new home state). California is the country’s leading producer of Hispanic dairy products, which are sold nationally, and is the nation’s second largest producer of cheese. In fact, California produces more than 25 kinds of Hispanic cheeses and many other dairy products. A Real California Milk seal means your dairy products are made from 100 percent California milk.

This is what the calabacitas should look like inside the foil packet when it’s done or almost done cooking:

calabacitas_con_elote_grill_packet_TOSOTT…

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Recipe, Sponsored, Vegetarian/Vegetariano calabacita, California Milk Advisory Board, cebolla, chile poblano, corn, crema Mexicana, elote, grilling, onion, parrilla, parrillada, queso Chihuahua, queso Quesadilla, receta vegetariana, vegetables, vegetarian

Easy Esquites

10 · May 9, 2011 · 5 Comments

Easy, healthy esquites recipe (roasted corn, chile piquin, cotija cheese, lime juice) from theothersideofthetortilla.comThe weather is getting warmer and that can only mean one thing: an explosion of Mexican street food carts popping up on every corner in the neighborhood where I do all my grocery shopping.

Among the carts that make my mouth water the most is one from which the sweet smell of roasted corn wafts through the spring air – and through my car window enticing me to stop for a quick treat. Yep, you guessed it: esquites.

The key ingredients of this antojito are roasted corn, lime juice, salt and dried ground chile piquin. And then there are the customizations and variations on the snack that can make it so unique from place to place. Sometimes sauteed with butter or onions and epazote, it can also be topped with mayonesa or crema Mexicana. And my favorite touch: a sprinkle of queso cotija, a dry, crumbly cheese with a little bite.

It’s usually served in a Styrofoam or plastic cup on the street, but don’t let the simple presentation fool you. Serve this at a spring or summer backyard barbecue and impress your guests with this simple treat they’re sure to love. Or just make it at home as a weekend snack!

Part of the beauty of this dish is that you can make changes or adjustments to your own tastes very easily without compromising any kind of measurements or balance so long as you follow the base of the recipe by roasting the corn either with butter or by adding a little water to the corn once you’ve cut it to help create a little juice. The portions of the lime juice, chile and toppings is up to you. The end result should be a sweet, sour, salty and spicy taste in every bite….

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Recipe, Snacks, Street food, Vegetarian/Vegetariano butter, chile piquin, corn, elote, esquites, lime, limón, mantequilla, queso cotija, tajín

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¡Bienvenidos!

Hi, I'm Maura Hernández. Welcome to my kitchen! I'm an award-winning food and travel blogger, recipe developer, and former journalist sharing my passion for all things Mexico. Married to a Chilango, I've traveled Mexico extensively over the last 15 years. Here, you'll find a mix of traditional and modern Mexican cooking, along with my advice on where to eat, stay and play on your visit to Mexico! READ MORE

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